
BREAKING NEWS Bombshell new report reveals who made fatal mistake that caused Black Hawk to collide with jet and kill 67
On the night of January 29, Army Black Hawk pilot Capt. Rebecca Lobach was conducting an annual flight evaluation with her co-pilot Chief Warrant Officer 2 Andrew Loyd Eaves, who was serving as her flight instructor.
Four months on, new details published by The New York Time s revealed that the pilot made more than one mistake, leading to one of the worst catastrophes in aviation history.
Not only was Lobach flying her Black Hawk too high, but in the final moments before the impact, she failed to take advice and instruction from her co-pilot to switch course.
Lobach's piloting skills were being tested during the evaluation on the fateful night, before the crew were informed that an aircraft was nearby, according to the report.
Both Lobach and Eaves acknowledged the message from air traffic control and spotted the plane themselves before requesting to fly by 'visual separation' - a practice that allows aircrafts to avoid collisions based on their own observations instead of following the air traffic controller's instructions.
'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,' aviation experts told the outlet.
With just 15 seconds before colliding with the airplane, air traffic control told Lobach and Eaves to turn left, but instead, she flew directly into the jet.
Seconds before impact, co-pilot Eaves also turned to Lobach and told her that air traffic control wanted her to turn left. She still did not do so.
Investigators may never know why Lobach did not change course on January 29.
The report stated: 'The Black Hawk was 15 seconds away from crossing paths with the jet. Warrant Officer Eaves then turned his attention to Captain Lobach. He told her he believed that air traffic control wanted them to turn left, toward the east river bank.'
If she had turned left, it 'would have opened up more space between the helicopter and Flight 5342,' it added. Instead, 67 people - everyone aboard the plane and helicopter - perished.
A critical rule in the industry is that if two aircrafts are on a collision course pilots have to be advised if they are likely to merge, according to Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) regulations.
Experts found that did not happen that night and that 'immediate intervention was needed' to prevent the horrible tragedy that left 67 dead.
'Direct, immediate intervention was needed that night. Instead of seeing and avoiding Flight 5342, Captain Lobach continued flying straight at it,' the report read.
Though it remains unclear why Lobach defied orders, Aviation experts predict Lobach may have been 'blindsided' that the American Airlines flight was 'circling' Runway 33 that night.
Investigators now believe the Black Hawk crew did not hear the word 'circling' because they might have been pressing the microphone key to talk at the same time the crucial term came through, according to the report.
'If the key is depressed, the pilot can speak but not hear incoming communications,' it detailed.
There is also no indication that Lobach suffered a medical emergency at the time of the crash, and didn't have pre existing health issues, her loved ones and people close to the investigation told the outlet.
In February it was revealed that the helicopter crew may have had inaccurate altitude readings in the moments before the crash, investigators said.
NTSB chair Jennifer Homendy said the recording from the Black Hawk suggested an incomplete radio transmission may have left them without understanding how it should shift position to avoid the aircraft.
'That transmission was interrupted - it was stepped on,' she said, leaving them unable to hear the words 'pass behind the' because the helicopter's microphone key was pressed at the same moment.
'At 8:47:42 - or 17 seconds before impact - a radio transmission from the tower was audible on both CVRs directing the Black Hawk to pass behind the CRJ,' Homendy told reporters.
'CVR data from the Black Hawk indicated that the portion of the transmission that stated 'pass behind the' may not have been received by the Black Hawk crew.'
Homendy said the helicopter was on a 'check' flight that night where the pilot was undergoing an annual test and a test on using night vision goggles.
Investigators believe the crew was wearing night vision goggles throughout the flight and that there was nothing to suggest that the crew had removed them.
Just before that discovery, it was revealed that vital tracking technology inside the helicopter was turned off for 'no compelling reason' when it collided.
When the chopper went down, the Black Hawk's Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast was disabled - a system which shares an aircraft's position, altitude and speed, Sen. Ted Cruz previously told The New York Times.
The technology also includes a display that shows pilots the location of other aircraft both in the sky or on a runway, and allows air traffic controllers to not just rely on radar tracking - which could have a delay of a few seconds.
The American Airlines jet, which was flying from Wichita, Kansas, and preparing to land at the time of the crash, was piloted by 34-year-old Jonathan Campos, whose relatives said had dreamed of flying since he was three.
The passenger plane recorded its altitude at 313 feet two seconds before collision.
A few minutes before the twin-engine jet was to land, air traffic controllers asked if it could use a shorter runway. The pilots agreed, and flight-tracking sites show the plane adjusted its approach.
The jet's passengers ranged from a group of hunters to students and parents from northern Virginia schools to members of the Skating Club of Boston.
They were returning from a development camp for elite junior skaters that followed the 2025 U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Wichita.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Record
4 hours ago
- Daily Record
Chinook helicopter crashed on 'show flight', says former RAF test pilot
Retired Squadron Leader Robert Burke told the BBC that the Mark 2 version of the helicopter had been chosen for the flight to show it was safe because of internal politics between the Army and RAF. A former RAF test pilot has said that the 1994 Chinook disaster helicopter was chosen for a "show flight" despite safety worries, according to reports. RAF Chinook ZD576 hit a hillside in doggy conditions on the Mull of Kintyre, killing 29 people. The incident was initially attributed to pilot error, a decision that was subsequently reversed in 2011. Retired Squadron Leader Robert Burke told the BBC that the Mark 2 version of the helicopter had been chosen for the flight to show it was safe because of internal politics between the Army and RAF. Relatives of those who died in the crash have been campaigning for a new public inquiry. Burke said the Mark 2 Chinook was chosen even though RAF engineers and pilots had said it may not be fit to fly. He told the BBC: "The reason why that aircraft was flown in spite of all the reservations, and indeed the request from one of the dead pilots at the time, was to show the Army that the Chinook programme was running on time and the Mark 2 was perfectly safe to go into service. "It was a show flight. This journey - from airfield to airfield - was a perfect opportunity to fly such a high-profile group in an RAF Hercules for instance. "Not in a helicopter about which there were so many concerns. It was a gesture, that flight. A reckless act, but a show flight - it's as simple, and utterly tragic, as that." Many of the passengers who died were senior members of the security services. They were travelling from RAF Aldergrove in Northern Ireland to Fort George near Inverness, for a conference believed to about the Northern Irish Troubles. The pilots had asked to fly a Mark 1 version of the Chinook or two other helicopters instead. South Belfast woman Patricia Conroy lost her 55-year-old father Desmond Conroy - a Detective Chief Superintendent - in the crash. She told the BBC: "I feel sick to my stomach to discover that this flight was a show flight to effectively try to end an argument between the RAF and the Army about the safety of the Chinook fleet. "Instead, that decision ended my Daddy's life and started a lifetime of bereavement, trauma and a search for the truth." Last week Prime Minister Keir Starmer wrote to families telling them an inquiry would not be in the public interest. A UK Ministry of Defence spokesperson said: "We provided a detailed and considered response to the pre-action protocol letter stating the reasons why we cannot accept the demand for establishing a new public inquiry. "It's unlikely that a public inquiry would identify any new evidence or reach new conclusions on the basis of existing evidence. "The accident has already been the subject of six inquiries and investigations, including an independent judge-led review."


The Independent
7 days ago
- The Independent
3 Sept. 11 victims' remains are newly identified, nearly 24 years later
Three 9/11 victims' remains have newly been identified, officials said this week, as evolving DNA technology keeps making gradual gains in the nearly quarter-century-long effort to return the remains of the dead to their loved ones. New York City officials announced Thursday they had identified remains of Ryan D. Fitzgerald, a 26-year-old currency trader; Barbara A. Keating, a 72-year-old retired nonprofit executive; and another woman whose name authorities kept private at her family's request. They were identified through now-improved DNA testing of minute remains found more than 20 years ago amid the wreckage of the World Trade Center after the al-Qaida hijacked-plane attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the city medical examiner's office said. 'Each new identification testifies to the promise of science and sustained outreach to families despite the passage of time," chief medical examiner Dr. Jason Graham said in a statement. 'We continue this work as our way of honoring the lost.' Keating's son, Paul Keating, told media outlets he was amazed and impressed by the enduring endeavor. 'It's just an amazing feat, gesture," he told the New York Post. He said genetic material from part of his mother's hairbrush was matched to DNA samples from relatives. A bit of his mother's ATM card was the only other trace of her ever recovered from the debris, he said. Barbara Keating was a passenger on Boston-to-Los Angeles-bound American Airlines Flight 11 when hijackers slammed it into the World Trade Center. She was headed home to Palm Springs, California, after spending the summer on Massachusetts' Cape Cod. Keating had spent her career in social services, including a time as executive director of the Big Brothers Big Sisters of South Middlesex, near Boston. In retirement, she was involved in her Roman Catholic church in Palm Springs. The Associated Press sent messages Friday to her family and left messages at possible numbers for Fitzgerald's relatives. Fitzgerald, who lived in Manhattan, was working at a financial firm at the trade center, studying for a master's degree in business and talking about a long-term future with his girlfriend, according to obituaries published at the time. In all, nearly 3,000 people were killed when the hijackers crashed jetliners into the trade center's twin towers, the Pentagon and a field in southwest Pennsylvania on 9/11. The vast majority of the victims, more than 2,700, perished at the trade center. The New York medical examiner's office has steadily added to the roster of those with identified remains, most recently last year. The agency has tested and retested fragments as techniques advanced over the years and created new prospects for reading genetic code diminished by fire, sunlight, bacteria and more. 'We hope the families receiving answers from the Office of Chief Medical Examiner can take solace in the city's tireless dedication to this mission,' New York Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat, said in a statement Thursday.


BBC News
07-08-2025
- BBC News
Mother and daughter gain Army graduations within weeks of each other
Mum and daughter gain Army graduations in quick succession , After watching her mum graduate from her Army Reserve basic training, Chloe De Stadler graduated from Harrogate's Army Foundation College Author, Kit Taylor & Seb Cheer Role, BBC News, Yorkshire 1 hour ago It has been a special day of celebration for more than 700 junior soldiers who have graduated from Harrogate's Army Foundation College. Among the misty-eyed parents was Sherene De Stadler, who watched daughter Chloe in the parade weeks after completing her own basic training with the Army Reserve. "Any mother is going to be proud of their daughter or son when they graduate," the 39-year-old said. "But knowing personally what she has been through in the last six months, that pride tops anything I've ever known before." She decided to start training after Chloe joined the Army to create a "strong military presence in the household" and better understand her daughter's experiences. "It's a completely different language to normal civvy world," she said. The understanding went both ways, according to 17-year-old Chloe, originally from Surrey. Just weeks ago, it was her in the stands watching her mother's passing out parade. "Knowing that my mum was stood on that parade and had done it all, there's no words to explain it," she said. Image caption, Chloe and Sherene were emotional as they reunited following the parade Chloe said she now hoped to join the Army Air Corps and eventually gain a pilot's licence. "Her great-grandmother was a pilot," Sherene added. The pair enjoyed a celebration lunch alongside high-ranking guests at the college following the graduation. "To hear what they've all been through, it just shows everybody's in the same boat at one point in their journey and there is only room to grow," Sherene said. She hoped to pursue a career training new recruits, building on her previous work in physical training. , Wesley Jefferson-Hallett (centre) led the parade after being named the best junior soldier of the intake Another graduate invited to the VIP lunch was Wesley Jefferson-Hallett, 16, who led the parade after being named junior Regimental Sergeant Major (RSM). "It was nerve-racking but I got it done and I didn't ruin it, so I'm pretty happy," he said. Wesley decided not to tell his family about his key role until the ceremony. "I could hear my dad shouting at me from the side," he said. "The amount of people I marched off the square - it's amazing." Wesley, from York, had been working on a building site when he decided to follow his older brother into the Army. He said he was thrilled to meet former England football manager Sir Gareth Southgate, who lives locally and was an invited guest. , Wesley Jefferson-Hallett said he had "never been in front of that amount of people in my life" Wesley said he now hoped to complete his phase two training ahead of his aim to join the parachute regiment. Ben Townley, the college's RSM, said: "It's a day to celebrate what's been a tough journey for some of them, very challenging. "I know some of them had a few wobbles along the way, but seeing the smiles on their faces is brilliant." Get in touch Tell us which stories we should cover in Yorkshire Contact form Listen to highlights from North Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.