A passenger jet carrying around 60 in a direct flight from Wichita collided with a Black Hawk military helicopter near the Potomac River.
A plane inbound to Washington D.C.’s Reagan Airport is down following a reported collision with a military helicopter.
An American Airlines flight that departed from Wichita, Kansas, on Wednesday collided with a military helicopter at Reagan National Airport.
When I encountered artist Rachel Epp Buller’s audio piece "Winter Walking," installed outdoors as part of an exhibit, it struck a chord.
The flight appeared to collide with a helicopter just before it was scheduled to land. This is a developing story and will be updated.
Late Wednesday night, CBS News reported that crews recovered at least 18 bodies after an inbound American Airlines flight from Wichita crashed with a military helicopter near Washington, D.C.’s Reagan National Airport.
The plane had departed from Wichita, Kansas and was carrying 60 passengers and four crew members, according to American Airlines.
During a press conference late Wednesday night providing information on a crash of an inbound plane from Wichita, U.S. Sen. Roger Marshall and U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran said several Kansans are likely dead.
Water officials noted that western Kansas became a feedlot and crop production powerhouse, leading producers to believe resources were endless.
A commuter jet and a military helicopter collided near Reagan National Airport on Tuesday night, triggering a massive emergency response, officials said.
Sen. Jerry Moran (R., Kan.), at the early morning press conference at Reagan National Airport, told reporters that the crash of the Wichita plane is a “very personal circumstance.” He [lobbied America