Emergency responders fear no passengers or crewmembers survived a collision involving a commercial jet and a military helicopter late Wednesday night outside Washington, D.C.
Shortly before 9 p.m. EST Wednesday, an American Airlines inbound regional jet from Wichita, Kansas, and a U.S. Army helicopter collided as the plane was preparing to land at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA), the Federal Aviation Administration said.
Sixty passengers and four crewmembers were on board the jet — a Bombardier CRJ700 operated by PSA Airlines, a wholly-owned regional subsidiary of American Airlines.
Three people were on board the helicopter, a Sikorsky H-60, which was on a training mission, according to the U.S. Army.
DC EMS: No survivors expected
The accident prompted a massive emergency response overnight, with crews from across the greater D.C. region and members of the U.S. Coast Guard searching the Potomac River in frigid conditions.
At a news conference Thursday morning, D.C. Fire and EMS Chief John Donnelly shared a grim update:
“At this point, we don’t believe there are any survivors from this accident,” Donnelly said, confirming that the bodies of 27 people from on board the American regional jet, and one person from the helicopter, had been recovered as of early Thursday morning.
Investigation begins
The Amerian Eagle flight, AA 5342 operated by American Airlines’ regional subsidiary PSA Airlines, departed Wichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National Airport (IPT) at 5:19 p.m. CST Wednesday, according to flight-tracking data from FlightAware.
It was due to land at DCA at 8:55 p.m. EST. The midair collision, DC EMS said, was reported by control tower personnel shortly before, at 8:48 p.m. EST.
The accident happened in some of the nation’s most congested and tightly-regulated airspace, with DCA situated just across the Potomac from Washington in Arlington, Virginia.
National Transportation Safety Board investigators were on scene beginning in the early hours of Thursday morning, the agency confirmed overnight.
At Thursday morning’s news conference, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy deferred to NTSB investigators when asked about what might have led to the crash.
“We have early indicators of what happened here,” Duffy said. “Prior to the collision, the flight paths that were being flown from the military, and American — that was not unusual for what happens in the D.C. area, and as this investigation moves forward we will be able to provide more details.”
The accident was the first major crash involving a commercial aircraft on U.S. soil in nearly 16 years.
How American Airlines is responding
American Airlines urged those who may have had family members or friends on board Flight with family members or friends on board to call 800-679-8215.
American CEO Robert Isom flew to Washington overnight, and shared condolences for the victims and families affected by the accident.
“We’re absolutely heartbroken for the family and loved ones of the passengers and crew members, and also for those that were on the military aircraft,” Isom said at Thursday morning’s news conference.
The airline dispatched personnel to the airport to assist family members of the victims, Isom said.
American planned to set up a communications center inside a DCA Admirals Club, airport officials confirmed overnight.
Industry responds
In a statement, the nation’s largest pilots union released a statement late Wednesday that said it was “shocked and saddened by the tragic accident at DCA.”
“Our thoughts are with those affected by this tragedy and ALPA’s accident investigation team is responding to assist the National Transportation Safety Board in their investigation,” the Air Line Pilots Association said.
The captain on board the American Eagle jet had nearly six years of experience with PSA, Isom shared Thursday morning. The first officer in the flight deck had nearly two years’ experience.
How the crash is affecting flight operations
The FAA halted all inbound and departing flights at DCA immediately following Wednesday night’s crash.
Nineteen aircraft that were in the airport vicinity were diverted to nearby Dulles International Airport (IAD), according to Jack Potter, CEO of DCA’s governing body, the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority.
As of 8:30 a.m. EST Thursday, the airport authority planned to re-open DCA at 11 a.m. EST, but warned residual flight disruptions were likely.
As of mid-morning Friday, around 62% of departures had been canceled at DCA, according to FlightAware. Several major U.S. airlines issued travel waivers allowing passengers with flights to or from the airport over the next day or two to make itinerary changes at no cost.
Some of those travel advisories can be found below:
The crash did not disrupt operations at the region’s other major airports, Potter said — including Dulles and Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI).
This is a developing story. Check back for further updates.