A CATALOGUE of errors including staffing issues and use of the wrong flight path could be to blame for the American Airlines plane crash.
Questions are being raised over how the jet collided with a helicopter over Washington DC despite it being a “clear night”.
EPAA Coast Guard vessel with the wreckage of the plane[/caption]
ReutersAn NTSB investigator works on the black box of American Eagle flight 5342[/caption]
Surveillance footage taken from inside the airport captured the moment the plane and chopper crashed
New Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy admitted Wednesday night’s crash that killed 67 people was “absolutely” preventable.
Black boxes that could hold crucial clues about what caused the crash have been dredged up from the plane wreckage in the Potomac River.
Officials say a preliminary report is expected to be issued in 30 days as divers continue to recover debris.
But as the nation grieves, frustrated families of the victims are demanding answers over how what should have been a routine flight to Ronald Reagan Airport ended in disaster.
The finger of blame is being pointed towards a series of apparent failings in safety measures.
It comes as…
All 64 passengers are feared dead with at least 28 bodies pulled from river
CCTV captures moment of the crash
Chilling audio reveals the final moments of flight
World champion figure skaters confirmed to be on board
Figure skater shared final, tragic picture from inside the plane before takeoff
Husband reveals wife’s final text from doomed jet
Rescue efforts hindered by freezing & dark conditions with 12 hours before severe weather comes
American Airlines CEO blames Black Hawk pilots
Trump blames Obama and Biden’s DEI polices at FAA for crash
American Airlines pilots and crew named
Passenger names beginning to be released, including teens, parents, and coaches
Staffing issues
Air traffic control staffing numbers were “not normal”, according to an initial Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) report.
The airport’s control tower had been operating with a third of the recommended staff – just 19 people instead of 30 – for years, The New York Times reported.
And the controller who was directing helicopters was also instructing planes on Wednesday night, when these jobs are typically assigned to two people.
Minutes before it was due to land, air traffic controllers asked the incoming plane if it could land on a shorter runway at Reagan National.
The pilots said they could and controllers cleared the jet to land on Runway 33.
Flight tracking sites showing the jet adjusted its approach.
Less than 30 seconds before the crash, one controller asked the helicopter if it could see the plane.
They said: “‘PAT 2-5, do you have the CRJ in sight?”
The controller made another call to the chopper just moments later, saying: “PAT 25 pass behind the CRJ.”
But seconds later, the plane and helicopter crashed.
Former air traffic controller Michele Robson said instructions from air traffic control could have been clearer.
She said it is possible that the helicopter pilot thought the Airbus, which was 9.2km away, was the much smaller American Eagle plane just 4.5km away
Ms Robson told Sky: “I would expect them to have specified the airline as well so that there wasn’t any confusion.
“In the dark in a city environment with lots of lights, and at that distance, I don’t think the helicopter would have been able to tell what type [of plane] the Airbus was that far away, so may have just assumed.”
An experienced air traffic controller meanwhile said the operator’s instructions to the helicopter were “very ambiguous”.
GettyHis coaches, married Russian skaters Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov, seen competing in 1995, were also killed[/caption]
Facebook/UDFSCAngela Yang and Sean Kay were killed alongside their coach, Alexandr Kirsanov[/caption]
FacebookSam Lilley, 28, was the first officer piloting the plane[/caption]
He told the Mail: “It would have been very ambiguous as far as, “Okay, what plane? Well, where am I looking?”
A former Black Hawk crew member said it is “extremely hard” to see the aircraft.
Mark McEathron wrote on X: “Even when you know EXACTLY where a Blackhawk is, and you have night vision goggles on, it is EXTREMELY hard to SEE the aircraft.
“These birds are designed to be hard to see at night.”
Helicopter on ‘wrong flight path’
Meanwhile it is reported the US Army Black Hawk chopper flew outside its approved flight path.
Sources told the NYT the helicopter appeared to have been flying too high, and the plane pilots may not have seen the chopper as they made a turn towards the runway.
Plane pilots navigating landings at Ronald Reagan Airport have long had to contend with what has been branded the notorious “helicopter alley”.
‘Helicopter alley’
The airport has one of the busiest runways in the US, with more than 800 takeoffs most days.
Experts fear this, coupled with the fact it is close to two other airports and various military bases which launch aircraft, could have contributed to the crash.
Retired United Airlines pilot Captain Ross Aimer told the New York Post: “DCA is one of the most demanding airports in the world.
“It also has what’s known as ‘helicopter alley’ with hundreds of police, military, news and rescue helicopters criss-crossing the Potomac River – it’s crazy out there.”
Near-misses
It has also emerged at least two other pilots reported near-misses with helicopters while landing at the airport in the three years before the deadly crash.
A passenger flight had to abort a landing at the airport just a day before the tragedy.
Republic Airways Flight 4514 was forced to back out of touching down and had to make a second approach after a helicopter appeared near its flight path, the Washington Post reported.
Duffy yesterday said he agreed with Donald Trump that the crash “looks like it should have been prevented”.
Washington DC plane crash victims
A mid-air collision between American Airlines flight 5342 and a military helicopter on January 29, 2025, left dozens presumed dead. The victims include:
Captain Jonathan Campos, 34
First Officer Samuel Lilley, 29
Flight attendant Ian Epstein
Flight attendant Danashia Brown Elder
Spencer Lane, 16
Christine Lane, 49
Jinna Han, 13
Jin Han
Evgenia Shishkova, 52
Vadim Naumov, 55
Alexandr Kirsanov
Angela Yang
Sean Kay
Peter Livingston
Donna Smojice Livingston
Everly Livingston, 14
Alydia Livingston, 11
Inna Volyanskaya
Asra Hussain Raza, 26
Michael Stovall, 40
Jesse Pitcher, 30
Elizabeth Anne Keys, 33
Wendy Jo Shaffer
Kiah Duggins
Black Hawk crew chief Ryan O’Hara
Black Hawk soldier Andrew Eaves
Olivia Ter, 12
He insisted, however, there was “not a breakdown” in communication between the helicopter’s pilots and the American Airlines flight.
American Airlines CEO Robert Isom appeared to put blame on the military chopper.
He said: “At this time, we don’t know why the military aircraft came into the path of the PSA aircraft.”
All 60 passengers on the flight from Kansas and four crew members died when the jet collided with the military helicopter mid-air shortly before 9pm on Wednesday.
Both aircraft then plunged into the freezing Potomac River.
Rescue crews worked tirelessly through the night in a desperate bid to locate any survivors.
But authorities yesterday confirmed all 64 on the plane and three people on the helicopter had been killed.
A newly-engaged pilot, a group of friends on a hunting trip, and teenage figure skaters were among the victims aboard the American Airlines plane.
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