Passenger jet with 64 aboard collides with Army helicopter while landing
at Reagan Airport near DC
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[January 30, 2025]
By LOLITA C. BALDOR, TARA COPP and ERIC TUCKER
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) — An American Airlines jet carrying 60 passengers
and four crew members collided Wednesday with an Army helicopter while
landing at Ronald Reagan National Airport near Washington, prompting a
large search-and-rescue operation in the nearby Potomac River. There
were multiple fatalities, according to a person familiar with the
matter, but the precise number of victims was unclear as rescue crews
hunted for any survivors.
Three soldiers were onboard the helicopter, an Army official said.
There was no immediate word on the cause of the collision, but all
takeoffs and landings from the airport were halted as dive teams scoured
the site and helicopters from law enforcement agencies across the region
flew over the scene in a methodical search for bodies.
Images from the river showed boats around the partly submerged wing and
what appeared to be the mangled wreckage of the plane's fuselage.
“We are going to recover our fellow citizens,” District of Columbia
Mayor Muriel Bowser said at a somber news conference at the airport in
which she declined to say how many bodies had been recovered.
The person who told The Associated Press that there had been multiple
deaths was not authorized to publicly discuss details of the
investigation and spoke to on condition of anonymity.
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Sen. Roger Marshall of Kansas said, “When one person dies it’s a
tragedy, but when many, many, many people die it’s an unbearable
sorrow.”
President Donald Trump said he had been “fully briefed on this terrible
accident" and, referring to the passengers, added, “May God Bless their
souls.”
Passengers on the flight included a group of figure skaters, their
coaches and family members who were returning from a development camp
that followed the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Wichita.
“We are devastated by this unspeakable tragedy and hold the victims’
families closely in our hearts,” U.S. Figure Skating said in a
statement.
The Federal Aviation Administration said the midair crash occurred
before 9 p.m. EST when a regional jet that had departed from Wichita,
Kansas, collided with a military helicopter on a training flight while
on approach to an airport runway. It occurred in some of the most
tightly controlled and monitored airspace in the world, just over three
miles south of the White House and the Capitol.
Investigators will try to piece together the aircrafts' final moments
before their collision, including contact with air traffic controllers
as well as a loss of altitude by the passenger jet.
American Airlines Flight 5342 was inbound to Reagan National at an
altitude of about 400 feet and a speed of about 140 miles per hour when
it suffered a rapid loss of altitude over the Potomac River, according
to data from its radio transponder. The Canadian-made Bombardier CRJ-701
twin-engine jet, manufactured in 2004, can be configured to carry up to
70 passengers.
A few minutes before landing, air traffic controllers asked the arriving
commercial jet if it could land on the shorter Runway 33 at Reagan
National and the pilots said they were able. Controllers then cleared
the plane to land on Runway 33. Flight tracking sites showed the plane
adjust its approach to the new runway.
Less than 30 seconds before the crash, an air traffic controller asked
the helicopter if it had the arriving plane in sight. The controller
made another radio call to the helicopter moments later: “PAT 25 pass
behind the CRJ.” Seconds after that, the two aircraft collided.
The plane’s radio transponder stopped transmitting about 2,400 feet
short of the runway, roughly over the middle of the river.
Video from an observation camera at the nearby Kennedy Center showed two
sets of lights consistent with aircraft appearing to join in a fireball.
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Emergency equipment stages at Gravelly Point, north of Ronald Reagan
Washington National Airport, along the Potomac River, Wednesday,
Jan. 29, 2025, in Arlington, Va. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)
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“I know that flight. I've flown it several times myself,” said Sen.
Jerry Moran of Kansas. He said he expected that many people in Wichita
would know people who were on the flight.
“This is a very personal circumstance,” he said.
The collision occurred on a warm winter evening in Washington, with
temperatures registering as high as 60 degrees Fahrenheit, following a
stretch days earlier of intense cold and ice. On Wednesday, the Potomac
River was 36 degrees Fahrenheit, according to the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration. The National Weather Service reported that
wind gusts of up to 25 mph were possible in the area throughout the
evening.
American Airlines CEO Robert Isom expressed “deep sorrow” for the crash
and said the company was focused on the needs of passengers, crew, first
responders and families and loved ones of those involved.
Some 300 first responders were on scene. Inflatable rescue boats were
launched into the Potomac River from a point along the George Washington
Parkway, just north of the airport, and first responders set up light
towers from the shore to illuminate the area near the collision site. At
least a half-dozen boats were scanning the water using searchlights.
“It’s a highly complex operation,” said D.C. fire chief John Donnelly.
"The conditions out there are extremely rough for the responders.”
The U.S. Army described the helicopter as a UH-60 Blackhawk based at
Fort Belvoir in Virginia. The helicopter was on a training flight.
Military aircraft frequently conduct training flights in and around the
congested and heavily-restricted airspace around the nation’s capital
for familiarization and continuity of government planning.
The crash is serving as a major test for two of the Trump
administration’s newest agency leaders. Pete Hegseth, sworn in days ago
as defense secretary, posted on social media that an investigation has
been “launched immediately” by the Army and the Defense Department.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, just sworn in earlier this week,
said at a somber news conference at the airport early Thursday that his
agency would provide all possible resources to the investigation.
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The last major fatal crash involving a U.S. commercial airline occured
in 2009 near Buffalo, New York. Everyone aboard the Bombardier DHC-8
propeller plane was killed, including 45 passengers, 2 pilots and 2
flight attendants. Another person on the ground also died, bringing the
total death toll to 50. An investigation determined that the captain
accidentally caused the plane to stall as it approached the airport in
Buffalo.
Reagan Airport will reopen at 11 a.m. Thursday, the Federal Aviation
Administration announced. The FAA has previously said it would be closed
until 5 a.m. Friday.
Located along the Potomac River, just southwest of the city. Reagan
National is a popular choice because it’s much closer than the larger
Dulles International Airport, which is deeper in Virginia.
Depending on the runway being used, flights into Reagan can offer
passengers spectacular views of landmarks like the Washington Monument,
the Lincoln Memorial, the National Mall and the U.S. Capitol. It’s a
postcard-worthy welcome for tourists visiting the city.
The incident recalled the crash of an Air Florida flight that plummeted
into the Potomac on January 13, 1982, that killed 78 people. That crash
was attributed to bad weather.
____
Associated Press writers Zeke Miller, Meg Kinnard, Chris Megerian and
Michael Biesecker in Washington contributed to this report.
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