Witnesses Recall What They Heard and Saw During American Airlines Crash: 'Like a Giant Roman Candle'
Some witnesses recalled seeing sparks in the air, while others heard a loud noise before learning a plane crash had occurred in D.C.
Multiple witnesses are coming forward after an American Airlines plane collided with a U.S. Army helicopter on Wednesday, Jan. 29
Some witnesses recall seeing a "white flare" and “a huge steak of sparks" in the air near Reagan National Airport
Others said they heard a loud "bang" before realizing a plane crash had occurred
Several witnesses are speaking out after seeing smoke and sparks in the air as an American Airlines plane collided with a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter on its approach to the airport.
American Airlines said 64 people were onboard American Eagle Flight 5342 from Wichita, Kansas to Washington, D.C., when it collided with the PSA Airlines flight over the Potomac River on Wednesday, Jan. 29.
Multiple people witnessed the crash from various angles. Abadi Ismail, 38, said he was “getting ready to go to bed” when he heard an unusual “bang bang” sound, according to Reuters and NBC News.
“[It was] something you don’t hear on a daily basis. It’s more like a war zone … So that caught my attention,” he recalled.
Ismail then “looked at the sky” and saw smoke coming from the south side of Reagan National Airport. “Horrendous. Unbelievable. Shocking,” he said.
Another witness, Courtney Cain, 28, said she saw a flash after hearing a bang as well near her home at Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling, according to The Washington Post.
After seeing news of the crash on television, Cain walked down to the waterfront by her home and watched emergency crews respond to the scene. She told the newspaper the first thing she said was, “I’m worried about the people.”
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Jimmy Mazeo was having dinner with his girlfriend at a park near the airport when he saw what appeared to be a “white flare” in the air, according to BBC News.
“We thought they were, like, shooting stars … but we didn’t really think much of it,” Mazeo explained. He then noticed planes had diverted from their normal landing patterns.
A short time later, they spotted first responders racing to the scene. “It was insane,” Mazeo said.
Ari Schulman, a journalist, was driving home to Alexandria, Va., on the George Washington Memorial Parkway when he saw the aftermath of the crash near the airport.
In a series of posts on X, Schulman recalled seeing “a huge steak of sparks” coming from underneath a jet that “was banked far, far to the right.”
“In that moment they looked to me like a giant Roman candle. But they were spreading out north to south, from the head to the tail of the plane,” Schulman described. He also noted that “the plane was about 100 feet above the ground” at the time.
Schulman said he looked away for two seconds, and did not see the plane when he looked back. As he headed home, he saw a police car racing toward the airport and realized the string of plane lights he had been watching were gone.
He later learned what he saw was the fatal collision of the American Airlines plane and the Black Hawk helicopter. “I wish I had not seen this,” Schulman wrote. “Let us all pray for many survivors.”
However, Washington, D.C. Fire and EMS Chief John A. Donnelly said in a press conference on Thursday, Jan. 30 that authorities “don’t believe there are any survivors from this accident."
Among the victims are 14 U.S. figure skaters, including six members of The Skating Club of Boston, CEO Doug Zeghibe announced at a press conference on Thursday, Jan. 30.
The victims from The Skating Club of Boston have been identified as two teens, Spencer Lane and Jinna Han, their mothers, Molly Lane and Jin Han, and two coaches, Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov, former Russian world champions.
"We have recovered 27 people from the plane and one from the helicopter," Donnelly explained, adding that they will "continue to work to find all the bodies and collect them and reunite them with their loved ones.”
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