Crash into Potomac River

Wednesday night, a regional jet, meaning not a jumbo, collided with a Black Hawk Helicopter over the Potomac River.

There does not appear to be any survivors.

There are two major airfields in Washington, DC proper.  There is Andrews Air force Base (I think it was renamed) and the Ronald Reagan Internation airfield.  Along with those two airfields, there are several military installations that have helicopter operations.

For perspective, the Aberdeen Proving Grounds had an airfield, 4 helicopter pads “outside the fence” and an unknown number inside the fence.

In other words, there is a bunch of air traffic in the area.

What I would normally see is helicopters flying relatively low over the river.  Runway 33 is pointed at the river.  Many years ago, a pilot dropped a plane into the Potomac because he didn’t de-ice his aircraft.

Even with the lights of the fixed wing aircraft on, the helicopter(s) likely didn’t notice it as it was above, descending to land.

Depending on exactly where the helicopters were, relative to the plane, the pilots of the plane were unlikely to see the helicopters.

Moreover, I doubt that civilian aircraft radar has good detection capabilities for low-flying helicopters.

If anything, it is likely the fault of the air traffic controller.

The plane was a CRJ at 1200 feet just south of the Woodrow Bridge. It was getting ready to land on runway 33.

PAT25 was the helo.  JIA5342 was the CRJ.  The DCQ tower asks, “PAT25, do you have the CRJ in sight?”

The military aircraft does not respond, just a few seconds later tower says, “PAT25, pass behind the CRJ”.

The crash happens a few moments later.

Tower should have ordered CRJ to turn left to heading 270 and to climb to 3000.

Here is the track of the aircraft in the air when the crash took place along with the audio.


Comments

2 responses to “Crash into Potomac River”

  1. James Avatar

    I heard another ATC recording that has the helicopter pilot saying that they have the regional jet in sight and will maintain visual separation. That is an official term well known to me as a pilot who regularly operates within the ATC system. At the point that the pilot says this, all responsibility to see and avoid is on him. It’s likely that he saw other lights that he mistook as the jet until it was too late. The jet pilot had no way to see or know of the helicopter’s presence, and probably didn’t hear any of the radio traffic as military radios use a different frequency band to communicate with ATC than civilian aircraft.

    1. we can “arm chair quarterback” this to death and we will probably not know the true cause even when the official investigation is complete. In my knuckle draggin opinion- stupidity and no accountability is rampant in everything these days. shiite happens and the innocent pay the price

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