WASHINGTON, Jan 29 (Reuters) - Scores of people were feared dead after an American Airlines regional passenger jet with 64 people on board and a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter collided and crashed into the frigid Potomac River near Reagan Washington National Airport.

Officials provided no death toll from Wednesday night’s collision but U.S. Senator Roger Marshall of Kansas, from where the flight was traveling, suggested most if not all those on board had been killed.

“It’s really hard when you lose probably over 60 Kansans simultaneously,” he told a press conference at Reagan airport in the U.S. capital early on Thursday.

“When one person dies, it’s a tragedy, but when many, many, many people die, it’s an unbearable sorrow. It’s a heartbreak beyond measure.”

American Airlines confirmed 60 passengers and four crew members were aboard the jet. The helicopter, on a training flight, was carrying three soldiers, a U.S. official said.

    • Dessalines@lemmy.ml
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      4 hours ago

      Not enough. And who is getting punished in the military for scheduling all these flights across civilian traffic lanes and wrecklesslyekilling 60 people?

      • Bob Robertson IX
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        3 hours ago

        I suppose we need to punish President Roosevelt for selecting such a terrible place for a civilian airport given the need for so much military air traffic in the general area.

        But seriously, people are complaining about ‘why were they practicing at night’ and ‘why were they flying across known traffic lanes’, and the truth is, they do this ALL THE TIME. Why was it different this time? Who knows. I doubt we’ll ever find out the real truth because the current administration isn’t going to actually investigate itself and will just put out a story of what they want the truth to be. But this isn’t the fault of the air traffic controller (from the audio I’ve heard they were in contact with both pilots and were aware of the potential for impact), and it isn’t the fault of some military leader on the ground for sending a helicopter on this route, since it is a very common occurrence. The fault lies with the pilot of the helicopter, but it could be anything from a medical emergency to inattention to suicide.