WASHINGTON CRASH

No survivors after midair collision near Washington, D.C., officials say

Updated
Recovery mission underway in freezing Potomac River

'We don't believe there are any survivors' of mid-air collision, Washington official says

13 hours ago
Duration 0:46
John Donnelly, fire and EMS chief in Washington, D.C, says officials are shifting from rescue to recovery after a deadly collision between a passenger plane and an army helicopter.

The latest

  • We've paused this page. Scroll down for a recap of the day's news, as it happened.
  • More than 65 people were presumed dead after a passenger jet and military helicopter collided midair near Washington, D.C.
  • 28 bodies have been recovered from the wreckage in the Potomac River.
  • Investigators will focus on why the American Airlines plane and U.S. Army helicopter crashed during otherwise normal flights.
  • Ice skaters returning from a camp in Kansas were among the passengers, including Russian-born former world champions.

Updates

January 30

  • We’re pausing this live page

    CBC News
    Crews on boats are seen on a river on a clear day, with the white U.S. Capitol dome in the background.
    Crews search through debris in the Potomac River, with the U.S. Capitol dome in the background, as seen from Virginia on Thursday. (Carlos Barria/Reuters)

    We'll have more coverage on the crash at cbcnews.ca throughout the day.

    You can also find a fulsome story on the investigation .here

  • Boston's skating community is mourning those who died

    CBC News
    Composite images of Jinna Han and Spencer Lane skating on ice.
    Photo illustration featuring Jinna Han, left, and Spencer Lane in undated stills. (Skating Club of Boston/Instagram, @spencer_lane/TikTok)

    Doug Zeghibe, the chief executive at the Skating Club of Boston, said 14 members of the skating community were killed, including Jinna Han and Spencer Lane. Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov, two highly regarded Russian coaches, are also among the dead.

    Their son, a former U.S. junior champion who has finished fourth at senior nationals the past three years, was not on the plane. Maxim Naumov, 23, left Kansas a few days earlier.

    Olympic medallist Nancy Kerrigan never worked with the Russian coaches, but often crossed their path — including at the Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, in 1994.

    “Everything I’ve heard of them, maybe [they were] being a little tough but with a smile on their face. Anytime I was in, it was, ‘Oh, hi, good to see you.’ Always welcome and happy to see one another,” Kerrigan, who was born outside of Boston, told CBC News Network.

    “To not see that [welcome] would be strange for everybody coming here. ... It’s going to be hard.”

  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has offered condolences

    Rhianna Schmunk

    “My heart goes out to the grieving family members and loved ones who are facing unimaginable loss following the tragedy at Reagan National Airport,” he wrote on X.

    “To the American people: Canadians are mourning with you, and we stand ready to support our neighbours however we can.”

  • Canada’s Transportation Safety Board is sending personnel to D.C.

    Rhianna Schmunk

    Two “accredited representatives" from the Transportation Safety Board are going to Washington to help the U.S.-based National Transportation Safety Board, according to a statement from the former. The northern agency is offering help because of longstanding “international agreements,” though the American Airlines plane was also Canadian-made.

  • Crash sounded like something from a ‘war zone’

    Rhianna Schmunk

    Eyewitness describes hearing collision at D.C. airport

    10 hours ago
    Duration 6:22

    Abadi Ismail heard the collision of an American Airlines regional passenger jet and a U.S. army Black Hawk helicopter near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport and says it was like something out of a war zone.

    Abadi Ismail lives a few kilometres from the airport and heard the crash last night. He said he heard at least two loud bangs seconds apart.

    “It was something you don’t normally hear on a regular basis. Something you only witness in a movie theatre, in a war zone,” he told CBC News Network from his apartment overlooking the Potomac River.

    “[It's] something I’ve never witnessed in my life. It's scary to think about the whole notion that there are victims in the water right now.”

  • 3 takeaways from Trump

    Alexander Panetta
    A man in a blue suit with a long red tie is pictured.
    U.S. President Donald Trump spoke at length on Thursday. (Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters)

    Here are three basic takeaways from President Donald Trump’s eye-popping address at the White House briefing room podium.

    First: He faults everyone but the American Airlines crew for the collision. He says the helicopter was flying straight toward the plane and only started turning too late. He also accused the air traffic control team of failing to deliver a clear warning. He said the instructions were vague, and also too late. “You had a confluence of bad decisions.”

    Second: He’s a fighter, not a healer. Trump seemed to try, maybe, for a couple of minutes. He held a moment of silence. But within minutes, he was trashing the Democrats, diversity initiatives and outgoing transportation secretary Pete Buttigieg, even using a swear word at one point. He then accused CNN of asking an unintelligent question. This is as bodies were still being pulled out of the river near the White House.

    Third: There were victims from several countries. Not just Russia, Trump said. He said he would release more information soon.

  • 2 sides of Trump: the president and the partisan

    Alexander Panetta

    President Donald Trump started his statement by referring to this as the sort of tragedy that unites the country across partisan divides.

    That sentiment lasted a couple of minutes.

    He proceeded to spend most of his public event on Thursday trashing his predecessors for hiring incompetent people to run air traffic control, on the basis of affirmative action for diversity or people with disabilities.

    He complained about Democrats hiring people on the basis of race instead of competence and accused them of discriminating against white people.

    He then trashed the last transportation secretary, Pete Buttigieg. “A real winner,” Trump said. “He’s a disaster. … He’s run [the FAA] right into the ground with his diversity.”

    In a post on X, Buttigieg said Trump’s remarks were “despicable.”

  • Trump: ‘We think we have some pretty good ideas’ about what caused crash

    Alexander Panetta
    A man in a blue suit with a long red tie speaks from a podium.
    U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to reporters in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on Thursday. (Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters)

    U.S. President Donald Trump has shared some theories about what he believes caused the tragic crash.

    “We think we have some pretty good ideas,” Trump said from the podium in the White House briefing room. “We will state certain opinions.”

    He appeared to blame both the helicopter for flying toward the commercial plane, and the air-traffic control crew for failing to warn it off.

    Trump called the tragedy a moment of mourning for people in the United States and elsewhere.

    “This was a dark and excruciating night in our nation’s capital, and in our nation’s history,” he said. “Our hearts are shattered.”

    It was Trump’s first appearance in the briefing room since returning to office. He began his press encounter with a moment of silence.

  • Ottawa says it’s not aware of any Canadians killed in the crash

    Rhianna Schmunk

    Global Affairs Canada said it hasn’t heard about any Canadians on board American Airlines Flight 5342. A statement said “officials are in touch with local authorities and continue to gather more information."

  • There's often a mix of passenger planes and military aircraft at Reagan airport

    Rhianna Schmunk

    Aviation safety expert explains how aircraft move through busy D.C. area

    12 hours ago
    Duration 9:01

    John Cox, a former airline pilot and accident investigator, says there was nothing unusual about the mix of commercial and military aircraft around Reagan National Airport before the mid-air collision of an American Airlines regional passenger jet and a U.S. army Black Hawk helicopter near Washington, D.C. He says a complete investigation into what caused the crash could take 18 months.

    Reagan Washington National Airport is unique in that it's common to see a mix of passenger and military aircraft using the space without issue. Officials have said both aircraft involved last night were following an otherwise normal flight path, so investigators will be trying to figure out why they ran into each other.

    “It’s going to take some time and it’s going to be necessary for us to be patient, but we will understand how these two aircraft came together,” said John Cox, an accident investigator and former pilot based in Florida who has personally landed planes “countless” times at Reagan.

    “Everything was routine until something went terribly wrong, and determining what that something was is going to be the focus for the [National Transportation Safety Board].”