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Home @NYTimes

The Missteps That Led to a Fatal Plane Crash at Reagan National Airport

April 27, 2025
in @NYTimes, Business
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New York Times - Business

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As they flew south along the Potomac River on the gusty night of Jan. 29, the crew aboard an Army Black Hawk helicopter attempted to execute a common aviation practice. It would play a role in ending their lives.

Shortly after the Black Hawk passed over Washington’s most famous array of cherry trees, an air traffic controller at nearby Ronald Reagan National Airport alerted the crew to a regional passenger jet in its vicinity. The crew acknowledged seeing traffic nearby.

One of the pilots then asked for permission to employ a practice called “visual separation.” That allows a pilot to take control of navigating around other aircraft, rather than relying on the controller for guidance.

“Visual separation approved,” the controller replied.

The request to fly under those rules is granted routinely in airspace overseen by controllers. Most of the time, visual separation is executed without note. But when mishandled, it can also create a deadly risk — one that aviation experts have warned about for years.

On Jan. 29, the Black Hawk crew did not execute visual separation effectively. The pilots either did not detect the specific passenger jet the controller had flagged, or could not pivot to a safer position. Instead, one second before 8:48 p.m., the helicopter slammed into American Airlines Flight 5342, which was carrying 64 people to Washington from Wichita, Kan., killing everyone aboard both aircraft in a fiery explosion that lit the night sky over the river.

One error did not cause the worst domestic crash in the United States in nearly a quarter-century. Modern aviation is designed to have redundancies and safeguards that prevent a misstep, or even several missteps, from being catastrophic. On Jan. 29, that system collapsed.


A diagram showing the paths of the helicopter and the plane involved in the crash over a satellite image

Hillcrest

Heights

MARYLAND

Plane path

WASHINGTON

Blue Plains

Last recorded

locations

Helicopter path

313 feet

278 feet

Reagan National Airport

Plane was

headed to

Runway 33

Potomac River

Control

tower

VIRGINIA

Aurora

Highlands

MARYLAND

Plane path

WASHINGTON

Last recorded

locations

Blue Plains

Helicopter path

313 feet

Potomac River

278 feet

Plane was

headed to

Runway 33

Reagan National Airport

Control

tower

VIRGINIA

Aurora

Highlands

WASHINGTON

Plane path

Last recorded

locations

Helicopter path

Potomac

River

313 feet

278 feet

Reagan National Airport

Control

tower

Plane was

headed to

Runway 33

VIRGINIA

Sources: U.S. National Transportation Safety Board Report; Flight data by Flightradar24 (American Airlines jet) and ADS-B Exchange (Army helicopter); aerial image by Google Earth Studio with data from SIO, NOAA, and U.S. Navy.

By The New York Times


At an altitude of 200 feet within the designated route, helicopters fly at 75 feet below airplanes approaching Runway 33. This vertical separation decreases if helicopters are farther from the eastern bank of the river.

800

feet

Flight 5342’s last

recorded position

600

400

MARGIN

Safe approach area

200

Helicopter

route

Runway 33

Potomac River

¼ mile

At an altitude of 200 feet within the designated route, helicopters fly at 75 feet below airplanes approaching Runway 33. This vertical separation decreases if helicopters are farther from the eastern bank of the river.

1,000

feet

800

600

Safe approach area

400

MARGIN

200

Helicopter

route

Flight 5342’s last

recorded position

Potomac River

¼ mile

About ½ mile

to Runway 33

Source: Flightradar24 and FAA

By The New York Times

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