One of three soldiers aboard an Army Black Hawk helicopter that was involved in the deadly midair collision outside Washington, D.C., was identified as Capt. Rebecca Lobach.
Police boats combed the banks of the Potomac River on Friday, slowly scanning the shoreline in the rain as investigators ...
The Black Hawk military helicopter involved in Wednesday’s midair collision was training to evacuate government officials in ...
Forty-one sets of remains have been recovered and 28 of those victims have been positively identified, Washington, D.C., Fire and EMS Chief John Donnelly Sr. said at a news conference Friday. Next of ...
Professionals traveling for work, world-class figure skaters, hunting buddies and flight crew members were among those who ...
Diving crews are still searching the icy waters of the Potomac River looking to retrieve the bodies of all the people killed ...
The remains of 42 people had been pulled from the river by Saturday afternoon, including 38 that had been positively identified.
The Army withheld the name of Capt. Rebecca Lobach, the 3rd Army pilot killed in a disastrous crash on Wednesday, for an extra day.
As shocked bystanders ran for cover and bullets flew, police shot and killed an armed homicide suspect Saturday morning ...
But even before the National Transportation Safety Board completes its investigation—a neurotically thorough process that ...
Recovery crews and divers searched the Potomac River for remains and cleared wreckage Saturday from the midair collision of a passenger jet and Army helicopter that killed 67 people. A Coast Guard ...