Tragic DC Midair Collision: Did Black Hawk Pilots Miss Critical Instructions? – Guy D. McCardle

On the evening of January 29, 2025, a catastrophic midair collision occurred over the Potomac River near Washington, D.C., involving a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter and an American Airlines regional jet. The accident resulted in the loss of all 67 individuals aboard both aircraft. Emerging details from the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigation suggest that the Black Hawk pilots may not have heard a crucial directive from Air Traffic Control (ATC) to maneuver behind the incoming jet. This article delves into the factors that may have contributed to this tragic event.

The Collision: A Brief Overview

At approximately 8:47 p.m. EST, the American Airlines jet was on approach to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. Concurrently, the Black Hawk helicopter was conducting a routine training mission in the vicinity.

According to the NTSB, less than 30 seconds before the collision, ATC instructed the helicopter crew to “pass behind” the jet. However, this critical instruction may not have been received by the Black Hawk pilots due to simultaneous radio transmissions, a phenomenon known as a “stepped-on” transmission.

Communication Breakdown: The Stepped-On Transmission

A “stepped-on” transmission occurs when two parties transmit over the same frequency simultaneously, causing one or both messages to be garbled or unheard. In this incident, the cockpit voice recorder indicates that the Black Hawk crew began their own transmission at the exact moment ATC issued the directive to pass behind the jet. As a result, the instruction was likely not heard by the helicopter pilots. NTSB Chairwoman Jennifer Homendy stated, “That transmission was interrupted—it was stepped on.”

Altitude Discrepancies: Conflicting Data

The ongoing investigation into the tragic midair collision between a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter and an American Airlines CRJ700 on January 29, 2025, near Washington, D.C., has uncovered conflicting altitude readings that have raised concerns about equipment malfunctions and potential human error.

About four minutes before the crash, the Black Hawk pilot reported their altitude as 300 feet, while the instructor on board claimed they were at 400 feet. However, data from the helicopter’s flight recorder showed that its radio altimeter registered an altitude of 278 feet at the time of the collision. Meanwhile, air traffic control (ATC) data suggested that the helicopter was flying at 200 feet when the crash occurred. This contradicts radar data from ground-based tracking systems, which indicated the helicopter was actually at about 300 feet—above its permitted maximum of 200 feet in that specific flight corridor.