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Bodies of all victims have been recovered from river where jet collided with Black Hawk

Investigators seek clues in deadly aircraft collision as divers return to frigid river to recover wreckage and remains
February 04, 2025

Washington, DC (CNN) โ€” Crews working at the site of the deadliest aviation disaster in a generation have recovered all 67 victims of the collision between two aircraft over the Potomac River in Washington, DC, officials said Tuesday. Now, their attention turns to clearing the remaining wreckage.

The Bombardier CRJ700 jet operating as American Airlines Flight 5342 and an Army Black Hawk helicopter on a training mission ran into each other over the river nearly a week ago in an accident that remains unexplained.

More parts of the plane โ€“ which will also form pieces of the puzzle investigators are trying to solve โ€“ were pulled from the river Tuesday morning. One section of the planeโ€™s fuselage lay sideways on a barge, a row of cabin windows clearly visible. By afternoon, the planeโ€™s tail โ€“ with its distinctive red, white and blue livery โ€“ was removed from the murky water.

Bodies of all victims have been recovered from river where jet collided with Black Hawk
Crews pull up a part of a plane from the Potomac River near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Monday in Arlington, Virginia.

Officials have said they would likely recover the American Airlines cockpit later Tuesday, wind gusts and tidal levels permitting. As of Tuesday, 66 of the 67 victims recovered have been identified.

For the second day in a row Tuesday, the National Transportation Safety Board โ€“ which has been reviewing data from the Black Hawkโ€™s flight data recorder that was recovered over the weekend โ€“ backed away from announced plans for a public briefing on its investigation.

โ€œNTSB needs additional information to verify data points from the Black Hawk,โ€ the agency said in a post on X, adding that a written update would be released later in the day.

President Donald Trump spoke to American Airlines CEO Robert Isom by phone Monday, a source familiar with the call told CNN. The White House did not comment Tuesday on what was discussed.

CNN obtained a memo from Isom to employees confirming the call with Trump. In it, Isom says the president called to โ€œshare his condolences for our crew members, passengers and their loved ones.โ€ The note also says he asked Isom to relay his โ€œpersonal appreciationโ€ for the work of airline employees supporting the families.

The airline will observe a moment of silence Wednesday to mark one week since the fatal collision, according to the note from Isom.

As a salvage team continues to work in cold winter conditions to lift debris from the frigid water, key questions about the cause of the fatal collision remain โ€“โ€“ though answers may not be immediately clear for weeks.

The former director of the FAAโ€™s Office of Accident Investigation, Steven Wallace, said heโ€™s confident the cause of the disaster will eventually be unambiguous.

โ€œWe have radar data, we have eyewitnesses, and we have all the wreckage,โ€ Wallace told CNNโ€™s Phil Mattingly. โ€œThereโ€™s nothing missing.โ€

By Wednesday, inclement weather will bear down on Washington, with snow, sleet and freezing rain expected to worsen already tough conditions for recovery personnel.

An arduous and slow recovery mission

The mangled wreckage in the Potomac has made the recovery effort especially difficult for dive teams, who have struggled to access parts of the planeโ€™s fuselage.

Divers have been using specialized underwater hydraulic rescue tools capable of cutting metal, but heavier salvage equipment is required to get jet parts out of the way and out of the water.

The recovery effort has been extensive, involving nearly every dive team in the area, including those from the US Coast Guard, the FBIโ€™s Washington Field Office dive team, DC Fire and the International Association of Fire Fighters.

A new phase of recovery began Monday after divers spent the weekend getting a view of the underwater debris to map out a plan to recover the jet wreckage.

The NTSB on Monday said the agency is working to get the airplane out first, before the helicopter, a Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawk, which will take four days longer.

But Mondayโ€™s work was painstaking and slow.

A jet engine was the first to be lifted from the frigid water, slowly raised by a crane. Video taken from shore showed salvage workers guiding it gently to the deck of a barge. From a distance, most of the engineโ€™s cowling and exhaust nozzle appeared intact.

Two hours later, a second piece of the plane was pulled out โ€“โ€“ a jagged portion of the fuselage not immediately identifiable.

Dean Naujoks, the Potomac Riverkeeper for the past 10 years, was granted access to the site of the crash to help investigators search for debris, according to CNN affiliate WRAL.

Naujoks recovered a window panel, a seat, insulation, an airplane manual and a bag of sugar packets. Everything was covered in jet fuel, he said.

โ€œIt was just the saddest day Iโ€™ve ever been on the river,โ€ Naujoks told WRAL. โ€œMy heart goes out to all the families of the victims.โ€

Airplane flight data recorder and helicopter black box reveal new clues

The American Airlines flight data recorder shows the planeโ€™s nose came up just before the fatal collision, an analysis by the NTSB found.

โ€œAt one point very close to the impact, there was a slight change in pitch, an increase in pitch,โ€ NTSB member Todd Inman said at a Saturday evening news conference.

The airplaneโ€™s flight data recorder gives an altitude reading of about 325 feet at the time of impact, Inman said, but air traffic controllers never had an indication the helicopter went above 200 feet.

A key question in the investigation has been focused on whether the Black Hawk helicopter was higher than the 200-foot altitude limit it was supposed to observe as it flew a designed route along the eastern bank of the Potomac.

The NTSB released early findings from the probe Tuesday that say radar displays in the airportโ€™s control tower showed the helicopter at 300 feet before the collision. The radar altitude data is rounded to the nearest hundred feet, the NTSB said in a written investigative update.

The helicopter corridor in use at the time carried an altitude restriction of 200 feet, the NTSB said. The update is more in line with data from one of the airlineโ€™s so-called black boxes.

The NTSB said it pulled the Potomac TRACON โ€“ or terminal radar approach control โ€“ data to help resolve a discrepancy in the initial readings from the radar data gathered for the investigation.

That discrepancy, according to Jennifer Homendy, chair of the NTSB, could be because the radar at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport is updated every five seconds, allowing for significant movements within that frame.

โ€œThereโ€™s a lot that occurs in five seconds, especially when a helicopter is moving at a pretty good clip,โ€ she said Monday after they recovered the helicopterโ€™s black box.

โ€œTheyโ€™re taking that data and making sure that itโ€™s accurate, that the time stamps are right to try to marry it up with the (black box) data from the plane in order to provide that information publicly,โ€ she said.

Later Monday, the NTSB said the flight data recorder for the Black Hawk did not have timestamps and investigators would have to manually create them. A preliminary report from the NTSB will likely be published in a month.

The-CNN-Wire
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