Federal officials said that the debris of a military helicopter involved in a mid -wind collision with a passenger jet that killed all 67 people in the two planes was recovered from Potomak on Thursday.
The National Transportation Safety Board said in a statement that additional parts of the American Airlines were also recovered from the Reagan National Airport when it killed the UH-60 Black Hawk on January 29.
The rubble recovered on Thursday will be taken into a seed and taken to a safe place. The agency said Black Hawk is trying to find the right engine and a tail rotor.
The development took place two days later when officials said they had recovered all 67 victims, including many of the aircraft who were returning from a training camp that of the 2025 US Figar Skating Championship in Kansas’s Vikita. Were afterwards.
The US figure Skating said 28 people on the flight were associated with the game.
Officials said they were riding three in the helicopter and were on a training mission from Virginia’s Fort Belveer in Virginia.
The NTSB is working to determine the cause of the collision.
The agency said on Tuesday that the air traffic control display showed that at the time of the collision, the helicopter appears to fly at 300 feet, or at a 200 -foot high of a 200 -foot -high under the rules of Federal Aviation Required
The board said, adding additional information from Black Hawk debris to verify its flight track data.
NTSB said last week that two “black boxes” of the aircraft – a flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder – were recovered and is being estimated in a lab.