Sixty passengers and four crew members from the plane and three Black Hawk helicopter personnel are feared dead as a recovery mission is underway.
A former Navy Seal and aviation expert was taken aback on Fox & Friends when Ainsley Earhardt asked him what he thinks the last moments were like for the victims of the Washington, D.C., midair crash.
Sixty-seven people are believed to have died after a passenger plane hit a military helicopter in mid-air near Washington DC's Ronald Reagan airport on Wednesday evening.
This post was updated with additional information from the Navy. Search efforts continue in the Potomac River after an American Airlines plane with 60 passengers and four crew on board collided in midair with an Army UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter carrying three soldiers near Reagan National Airport outside Washington,
The amphibious command ship USS Mount Whitney at its homeport in Gaeta, Italy, on Jan. 31, 2025. The flagship of U.S. 6th Fleet, Mount Whitney was commissioned in 1971 and is the fourth-oldest commissioned active ship in the Navy. (Alison Bath/Stars and Stripes)
WASHINGTON, D.C. — A shooting in the Navy Yard area left a teenager injured on Friday afternoon, according to officials. The incident occurred around 1:20 p.m. in the 1500 block of 1st Street, Southwest. Responding officers located the teen, who was conscious and breathing, before transporting them to a hospital for treatment.
Find out the details of HII’s REMUS 620 trials on the Navy’s Unmanned Underwater Vehicle Confidence Course—the first successful completion of its kind.
Longtime Navy athletics broadcaster Pete Medhurst has died. He was 55. Navy’s athletic department, which spoke with Medhurst’s family, announced his death on social media Tuesday.
The Washington Nationals were one of many outlets in the Washington D.C. area to pay their respects to Pete Medhurst, who died on Monday of melanoma cancer.
The U.S. Army identifies the two soldiers as 28-year-old Staff Sgt. Ryan Austin O’Hara and 39-year-old Chief Warrant Officer 2 Andrew Loyd Eaves
A Maryland soldier has been identified as one of three US Army crew members presumed dead when a UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter collided midair with a commercial flight near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport,
The Army on Friday released the names of two male aviators who were killed when their Black Hawk helicopter collided with an American Airlines regional jet on Wednesday night. But in an extraordinary step, the Army did not identify the third crew member, a female pilot, citing her family’s request for privacy.