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As D.C. plane crash victims are identified, stories emerge of a new dad, a law professor, champion skating coaches and rising stars
As D.C. plane crash victims are identified, stories emerge of a new dad, a law professor, champion skating coaches and rising stars

CBS News

time31-01-2025

  • General
  • CBS News

As D.C. plane crash victims are identified, stories emerge of a new dad, a law professor, champion skating coaches and rising stars

World champion skaters, a consultant who just moved to the D.C. area, a crew chief who was a new dad, champion figure skating coaches and rising skating stars were among those killed in the midair collision between an American Airlines plane and an Army helicopter over Washington, D.C. Sixty passengers and four Charlotte-based crew members were on American Eagle flight 5342, en route from Wichita, Kansas, and three crew members were aboard the Black Hawk helicopter when they collided a little before 9 p.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 29. Investigators are still working to learn what went wrong on a clear evening when the passenger plane was just a few hundred feet from landing at Reagan Washington National Airport. Officials said there were no survivors — and details about the 67 victims began to emerge. The passengers included several young figure skaters chasing their dream of becoming world-class competitors. The athletes were returning from the National Development Camp, which was held in connection with the recent U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Wichita. The Skating Club of Boston confirmed they lost six people in the deadly crash, including two rising stars in the figure skating world, their mothers, and two star coaches. We are also learning more about others aboard the flight, as well as the crew of the Black Hawk. Here are some of their stories. Ryan O'Hara Ryan O'Hara, 29, was the crew chief on the Black Hawk helicopter. He grew up in the Atlanta area and was a new father, leaving behind a wife and 1-year-old baby boy. His father, Gary O'Hara, told CBS News that Ryan joined his high school's ROTC as a cadet and enlisted when he was 18, specifically choosing the Army because it offered him the opportunity to work on Black Hawk helicopters. After a tour of duty in Afghanistan, he was assigned to Fort Belvoir in Virginia, just outside the nation's capital. "I was worried when he was in Afghanistan," his father said in an emotional interview. "You let your guard down … when he's on American soil." He described the crew of the Black Hawk as "probably the most respected pilots that Ryan had ever flown with." "He trusted them with his life," Gary O'Hara said. He said he began to worry immediately after seeing news of the crash Wednesday night. "My wife was like, 'No, it's not him,'" he said. "But my heart just broke." Andrew Eaves Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves said Chief Warrant Officer 2 Andrew Eaves, a native of Brooksville, was killed in the collision. His wife, Carrie Eaves, confirmed in a Facebook post that he was one of the pilots of the Black Hawk helicopter. "We ask that you pray for our family and friends and for all the other families that are suffering today. We ask for peace while we grieve," she wrote. Spencer Lane and Christine Lane Skating phenom Spencer Lane, 16, and his mom Christine Lane were on their way home to Rhode Island from the development camp. Douglas Lane spoke to Rhode Island station WPRI after the crash that claimed his wife and son, and called Spencer a "force of nature." "In his home club in Boston, he was just loved by everyone from the adults running to club to the smallest skaters to the people that are competing for a shot at the Olympics, they all just adored him," he said. He described his wife Christine as a creative person with a passion for graphic design and photography. "For Christine, just the amount of people from the community in Rhode Island I've already heard from today that she's touched," he said. "Whether it was screening them to adopt the dog that they loved or helping them with a summer project or whatever, she was just one of those people that could just kind of plug in anywhere, connect with people and build a real bond." Jinna Han and Jin Han Another skater from the Boston club,13-year-old Jinna Han, was killed in the crash along with her mother, Jin. They were from Mansfield, Massachusetts, CBS News Boston reported. Jinna had also been participating in the National Development Camp, an invitation-only event that brings together promising young athletes for training sessions led by some of the sport's biggest names. "Jinna, just a wonderful kid. Wonderful parents. Great competitor. Loved by all," said Skating Club of Boston CEO Doug Zeghibe. "I don't think we're ever going to forget them. That is for certain. How we commemorate them here we haven't gotten to that point to discuss, but we certainly will. Just definitely very important and well loved members of our community," he said. Vadim Naumov and Evgenia Shishkova Star coaches Vadim Naumov and Evgenia Shishkova were also returning from the development camp. The Russian-born pair — who won the 1994 World Figure Skating Championship — had been coaching at the Skating Club of Boston. They also competed in the Olympics twice — in 1992 in Albertville, France, where they placed fifth, and in 1994 in Lillehammer, Norway, where they finished fourth. The couple's 23-year-old son, Maxim Naumov, currently competes with Team USA. Zeghibe said Max had finished fourth in the senior men's event in Wichita and returned home on Monday with Zeghibe. "We are devastated by this unspeakable tragedy and hold the victims' families closely in our hearts," U.S. Figure Skating said in a statement Thursday. Alexandr Kirsanov A coach from the University of Delaware Figure Skating Club, Alexandr Kirsanov, 46, was confirmed as a victim of the crash, according to the University of Delaware and Kirsanov's employer, Black Bear Sports Group. He was also traveling back from the development camp. "In his many years with Ice World, Sasha coached, mentored, and made such an incredible impact not only on our young skaters but on so many who knew and loved him," Black Bear Sports Group founder and CEO Murry Gunty said in a statement. Olivia Ter Olivia Ter, 12, a youth figure skater from Prince George's County, Maryland, was aboard the flight at the time of the crash, according to the county's Parks and Recreation Department, CBS News Baltimore reported. She was returning with other skaters from the National Development Camp and aspired to qualify for a spot on Team USA in the world championships. "The impact of Olivia's life will continue to resonate in our youth sports community, and she will be sorely missed," said Bill Tyler, the director of the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission for the Prince George's Department of Parks and Recreation. Asra Hussain Raza Asra Hussain Raza was 26 years old and had recently moved to the Washington, D.C., area with her husband for a consulting job. She was flying home from a work trip to Kansas, her father-in-law, Hashim Raza, told CBS News. She was a graduate of the University of Indiana and Columbia University, her father-in-law said. Kiah Duggins Howard University law professor Kiah Duggins was killed in the crash, university president Ben Vison confirmed Friday, CBS News Baltimore reported. Duggins was also a civil rights attorney with the nonprofit Civil Rights Corps, according to a profile on the organization's website. She earned her bachelor's from Wichita State University and won the Miss Agusta and the Miss Bulter County beauty pageants in 2014 and 2015, making it to the top 10 finalists in the Miss Kansas pageants those years, according to the executive director of the Miss Kansas Organization. Elizabeth Anne Keys Elizabeth Anne Keys, a 33-year-old woman from Cincinnati, was a graduate of Tufts University and Georgetown University Law Center, CBS affiliate WKRC reported. Keys was valedictorian of her class at Madeira High School in Cincinnati in 2010. "She was just such an outstanding student, outstanding young lady, just the kind of person that we need many, many more of," former Madeira principal Ray Spicher told the station. "What a quality young lady she was, a leader around school, involved in all kinds of activities." Four local union members The plane crash victims included four members of the Steamfitters Local 602 union, which represents workers in heating, air conditioning, refrigeration and process piping industries in the D.C. metro area. The union did not release their names, but said in a statement, "Our focus now is on providing support and care to the families of our Brothers. ... We will share more details as they becomes available, including a nationwide UA relief effort for the families. These members will be forever in our hearts, and may God bless them and their loved ones."

Stories emerge of victims killed in D.C. plane crash
Stories emerge of victims killed in D.C. plane crash

Yahoo

time31-01-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Stories emerge of victims killed in D.C. plane crash

World champion skaters, a consultant who just moved to the D.C. area, a crew chief who was a new dad, champion figure skating coaches and rising skating stars were among those killed in the midair collision between an American Airlines plane and an Army helicopter over Washington, D.C. Sixty passengers and four Charlotte-based crew members were on American Eagle flight 5342, en route from Wichita, Kansas, and three crew members were aboard the Black Hawk helicopter when they collided a little before 9 p.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 29. Investigators are still working to learn what went wrong on a clear evening when the passenger plane was just a few hundred feet from landing at Reagan Washington National Airport. Officials said there were no survivors — and details about the 67 victims began to emerge. The passengers included several young figure skaters chasing their dream of becoming world-class competitors. The athletes were returning from the National Development Camp, which was held in connection with the recent U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Wichita. The Skating Club of Boston confirmed they lost six people in the deadly crash, including two rising stars in the figure skating world, their mothers, and two star coaches. We are also learning more about others aboard the flight, as well as the crew of the Black Hawk. Here are some of their stories. Ryan O'Hara Ryan O'Hara, 29, was the crew chief on the Black Hawk helicopter. He grew up in the Atlanta area and was a new father, leaving behind a wife and 1-year-old baby boy. His father, Gary O'Hara, told CBS News that Ryan joined his high school's ROTC as a cadet and enlisted when he was 18, specifically choosing the Army because it offered him the opportunity to work on Black Hawk helicopters. After a tour of duty in Afghanistan, he was assigned to Fort Belvoir in Virginia, just outside the nation's capital. "I was worried when he was in Afghanistan," his father said in an emotional interview. "You let your guard down … when he's on American soil." He described the crew of the Black Hawk as "probably the most respected pilots that Ryan had ever flown with." "He trusted them with his life," Gary O'Hara said. He said he began to worry immediately after seeing news of the crash Wednesday night. "My wife was like, 'No, it's not him,'" he said. "But my heart just broke." Andrew Eaves Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves said Chief Warrant Officer 2 Andrew Eaves, a native of Brooksville, was killed in the collision. His wife, Carrie Eaves, confirmed in a Facebook post that he was one of the pilots of the Black Hawk helicopter. "We ask that you pray for our family and friends and for all the other families that are suffering today. We ask for peace while we grieve," she wrote. Spencer Lane and Christine Lane Skating phenom Spencer Lane, 16, and his mom Christine Lane were on their way home to Rhode Island from the development camp. Douglas Lane spoke to Rhode Island station WPRI after the crash that claimed his wife and son, and called Spencer a "force of nature." "In his home club in Boston, he was just loved by everyone from the adults running to club to the smallest skaters to the people that are competing for a shot at the Olympics, they all just adored him," he said. He described his wife Christine as a creative person with a passion for graphic design and photography. "For Christine, just the amount of people from the community in Rhode Island I've already heard from today that she's touched," he said. "Whether it was screening them to adopt the dog that they loved or helping them with a summer project or whatever, she was just one of those people that could just kind of plug in anywhere, connect with people and build a real bond." Jinna Han and Jin Han Another skater from the Boston club,13-year-old Jinna Han, was killed in the crash along with her mother, Jin. They were from Mansfield, Massachusetts, CBS News Boston reported. Jinna had also been participating in the National Development Camp, an invitation-only event that brings together promising young athletes for training sessions led by some of the sport's biggest names. "Jinna, just a wonderful kid. Wonderful parents. Great competitor. Loved by all," said Skating Club of Boston CEO Doug Zeghibe. "I don't think we're ever going to forget them. That is for certain. How we commemorate them here we haven't gotten to that point to discuss, but we certainly will. Just definitely very important and well loved members of our community," he said. Vadim Naumov and Evgenia Shishkova Star coaches Vadim Naumov and Evgenia Shishkova were also returning from the development camp. The Russian-born pair — who won the 1994 World Figure Skating Championship — had been coaching at the Skating Club of Boston. They also competed in the Olympics twice — in 1992 in Albertville, France, where they placed fifth, and in 1994 in Lillehammer, Norway, where they finished fourth. The couple's 23-year-old son, Maxim Naumov, currently competes with Team USA. Zeghibe said Max had finished fourth in the senior men's event in Wichita and returned home on Monday with Zeghibe. "We are devastated by this unspeakable tragedy and hold the victims' families closely in our hearts," U.S. Figure Skating said in a statement Thursday. Alexandr Kirsanov A coach from the University of Delaware Figure Skating Club, Alexandr Kirsanov, 46, was confirmed as a victim of the crash, according to the University of Delaware and Kirsanov's employer, Black Bear Sports Group. He was also traveling back from the development camp. "In his many years with Ice World, Sasha coached, mentored, and made such an incredible impact not only on our young skaters but on so many who knew and loved him," Black Bear Sports Group founder and CEO Murry Gunty said in a statement. Olivia Ter Olivia Ter, 12, a youth figure skater from Prince George's County, Maryland, was aboard the flight at the time of the crash, according to the county's Parks and Recreation Department, CBS News Baltimore reported. She was returning with other skaters from the National Development Camp and aspired to qualify for a spot on Team USA in the world championships. "The impact of Olivia's life will continue to resonate in our youth sports community, and she will be sorely missed," said Bill Tyler, the director of the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission for the Prince George's Department of Parks and Recreation. Asra Hussain Raza Asra Hussain Raza was 26 years old and had recently moved to the Washington, D.C., area with her husband for a consulting job. She was flying home from a work trip to Kansas, her father-in-law, Hashim Raza, told CBS News. She was a graduate of the University of Indiana and Columbia University, her father-in-law said. Kiah Duggins Howard University law professor Kiah Duggins was killed in the crash, university president Ben Vison confirmed Friday, CBS News Baltimore reported. Duggins was also a civil rights attorney with the nonprofit Civil Rights Corps, according to a profile on the organization's website. She earned her bachelor's from Wichita State University and won the Miss Agusta and the Miss Bulter County beauty pageants in 2014 and 2015, making it to the top 10 finalists in the Miss Kansas pageants those years, according to the executive director of the Miss Kansas Organization. Elizabeth Anne Keys Elizabeth Anne Keys, a 33-year-old woman from Cincinnati, was a graduate of Tufts University and Georgetown University Law Center, CBS affiliate WKRC reported. Keys was valedictorian of her class at Madeira High School in Cincinnati in 2010. "She was just such an outstanding student, outstanding young lady, just the kind of person that we need many, many more of," former Madeira principal Ray Spicher told the station. "What a quality young lady she was, a leader around school, involved in all kinds of activities." Four local union members The plane crash victims included four members of the Steamfitters Local 602 union, which represents workers in heating, air conditioning, refrigeration and process piping industries in the D.C. metro area. The union did not release their names, but said in a statement, "Our focus now is on providing support and care to the families of our Brothers. ... We will share more details as they becomes available, including a nationwide UA relief effort for the families. These members will be forever in our hearts, and may God bless them and their loved ones." This story will be updated with additional information as it becomes available. New details emerge about military helicopter involved in midair collision Commercial plane crashes midair with military helicopter near Reagan National Airport Officials provide update on midair collision near Reagan National Airport outside D.C.

Father of crash victim says Black Hawk crew chief "trusted pilots with his life"
Father of crash victim says Black Hawk crew chief "trusted pilots with his life"

Yahoo

time31-01-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Father of crash victim says Black Hawk crew chief "trusted pilots with his life"

The father of U.S. Army Black Hawk pilot Ryan O'Hara said his son loved flying over Washington, D.C., never expressed concerns about the crowded skies and described the crew as "probably the most respected pilots that Ryan had ever flown with." "He trusted them with his life," Gary O'Hara told CBS News in an emotional interview from his home in Georgia Friday, less than two days after his son's military helicopter struck an American Airlines passenger jet. It was the worst air disaster in the nation in more than a decade. Ryan O'Hara's parents watched on television as their son's body was recovered from wreckage submerged in the frigid Potomac River and transferred to a hearse. "It's very touching to see the other soldiers saluting as they take him out with a draped flag over it," Gary O'Hara said. "But to sit there and think that that's my little boy — it's crushing." He described the burden of experiencing a wrenching personal tragedy that unfolded before a national audience – and then watching it become grist for a political debate about diverse hiring during a presidential news conference. He said any attempt to blame the crash on "DEI" only added to the family's grief and said no one in the Army lands a spot on a Black Hawk without being qualified. "You have to earn your spot to be moved into the ladder to be put into that helicopter. They don't just give it to you. You earn it," he said. "And you know, all of those soldiers that protect us, they earn their stripes every single day." Ryan O'Hara, 29, grew up in the Atlanta area and joined his high school's ROTC as a cadet, even though he wasn't from a military family. He enlisted when he was 18, specifically choosing the Army because it offered him the opportunity to work on Black Hawk helicopters. After a tour of duty in Afghanistan, O'Hara said his family was relieved when Ryan was assigned to Fort Belvoir in Virginia, just outside the nation's capital. He lived in the Washington region with his wife and 1-year-old son. "I was worried when he was in Afghanistan," he said. "You let your guard down …when he's on American soil." Gary O'Hara said his son loved flying over Washington, D.C., at night, and sometimes would send him photos of the monuments and text that "D.C. is the most beautiful city in the world." He said his son never raised concerns about the dangers of navigating the crowded skies. He said he began to worry immediately after seeing news of the crash Wednesday night. Even though numerous soldiers crew Black Hawks in the nation's capital, he said he felt instantly that the crash involved his son. "My wife was like, 'No, it's not him,'" he said. "But my heart just broke." He tried immediately to text his son after seeing the news, but it wouldn't go through. His daughter-in-law called late that night, fearing the worst. The next morning, those fears were confirmed with a knock on the door from two Army soldiers. "It's really like your worst nightmare," he said. As he grapples with the trauma of the past 48 hours, he views what occurred over the Potomac River as a freak event. "Sixty seconds earlier or later, there's no accident," O'Hara said. New details emerge about military helicopter involved in midair collision Commercial plane crashes midair with military helicopter near Reagan National Airport Officials provide update on midair collision near Reagan National Airport outside D.C.

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