According to a recent investigation, the Black Hawk helicopter’s pilot committed two fatal errors that caused it to crash into a passenger airliner before crashing into the Potomac River in January.
The catastrophe that occurred more than eight weeks ago and claimed the lives of 67 individuals is still causing shock in the aviation industry.
As Captain Rebecca M. Lobach allegedly disregarded orders to alter course, it has now been asserted that a series of communication blunders contributed significantly to the horrific accident on January 29.
In the skies over Washington, DC, the 28-year-old’s military plane collided with an American Airlines plane that had been authorized to land at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
In the past, investigators had hypothesized that the helicopter had been flying too high, crashing into the plane’s path and killing the pilot.

Furthermore, a shocking new story from The New York Times claims that Lobach disregarded instructions when performing her yearly flight evaluation in the air.
Lobach was aboard the helicopter with Staff Sgt. Ryan Austin O’Hara, 28, and co-pilot Chief Warrant Officer 2 Andrew Loyd Eaves, 39, who was serving as her flight instructor.
Transcripts of the chopper’s conversations with air traffic control have provided additional information about what went wrong before to the tragedy, the US publication said.
Air traffic controllers had alerted the helicopter’s crew that an airliner was approaching, and Lobach and Eaves were said to have confirmed this information.
Then, one of the military pilots requested that they fly by “visual separation,” which meant that they would be responsible for keeping a safe distance from other people using their own discretion while keeping an eye on any surrounding aerial activity.
Instead than depending on air traffic control’s direction, it is a frequent practice for personnel operating the aircraft to make their own observations.
Audio recordings from the helicopter then showed the air traffic controller telling the pilots that visual separation had been ‘authorized’.
The American Airlines airplane that had taken off from Wichita, Kansas, is thought to have been circling to land at this point.
Unknown factors caused Lobach to perform visual separation poorly, and 15 seconds later the helicopter struck the American Airlines aircraft, which was carrying 60 passengers and four crew members.
It is said that she disregarded her colleague Eaves’s advice to alter her direction prior to this fateful time.
The report by The New York Times claims: “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.”
“Turning left would have opened up more space between the helicopter and Flight 5342, which was heading for Runway 33 at an altitude of roughly 300 feet. She did not turn left.”
According to the article, Lobach might have done this because she failed to notice the jet that was so close or because she might not have been able to maneuver the helicopter to a safer location.
“There is no indication that [Capt. Rebecca Lobach] was suffering from health issues at the time or that a medical event affected her during those final moments aboard the Black Hawk, according to friends and people familiar with the crash investigation, which included autopsies and performance log reviews,” the report stated.
According to the US Army, Lobach had been an aviation officer since July 2019 and had around 500 hours of Black Hawk expertise.
During her time there, she received numerous honors, such as the Army Service Ribbon, the National Defense Service Medal, the Army Commendation Medal, and the Army Achievement Medal.
Why she reportedly disregarded Eaves’ instructions to turn left and why she allegedly failed to complete the visual separation are still unknown.
“Multiple layers of safety precautions failed that night,” Katie Thomson, the Federal Aviation Administration’s deputy administrator under former president Joe Biden, said.
Additionally, connections between the helicopter crew and air traffic controllers were said to have occasionally “cut out,” raising the possibility that important information was missed.
Brig. Gen. Matthew Braman, the Army’s director of aviation, said: “I think what we’ll find in the end is there were multiple things that, had any one of them changed, it could have well changed the outcome of that evening.”
By early next year, the National Transportation Safety Board should release its final report outlining the crash’s reasons.