REPORT: Authorities Reveal Army Pilot Made Critical Error That Resulted In Black Hawk Helicopter’s Fatal Collision With American Airlines Flight 5342 In D.C.

Black Hawk helicopter (Photo by MENAHEM KAHANA/AFP via Getty Images)

United States officials have announced that the pilot who was flying the Black Hawk helicopter that crashed into American Airlines Flight 5342 last Wednesday made a mistake.

The Army helicopter had three soldiers on board while flying a route near the Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. The unthinkable happened when it collided with the airplane, sending them both into the Potomac River below.

The AA flight was carrying 60 passengers and four crew members, none of which survived.

Washington D.C. officials have since determined that the helicopter was flying too high, with the National Transportation Safety Board having determined that the military aircraft was around 100  feet higher than it should have been.

The crash happened at an altitude of 300-350 feet, but the helicopter wasn’t supposed to have gone higher than 200 feet.


Helicopter Which Collided With American Airlines Flight 5342 Was Put On Alert Twice

Investigators also found that the helicopter might have only registered at 200 feet for Air Traffic Control, so it could have caused some confusion.

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