By Rich McKay and Joseph Ax
(Reuters) โ The U.S. Army on Saturday released the name of the third soldier who died on a Black Hawk helicopter that collided with an American Airlines passenger jet near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport this week, killing 67 people in all.
The soldier was identified as Captain Rebecca Lobach, of Durham, North Carolina. She was an aviation officer in the regular Army since 2019 and assigned to the 12th Aviation Battalion, Fort Belvoir, Virginia.
The Army had initially declined to identify Lobach, an unusual decision that the agency said was made at the request of the family.
But on Saturday the Army said in a statement that Lobachโs family had agreed to release her name to the public.
โShe was a bright star in all our lives,โ her family said in a statement, noting that she worked as an advocate for victims of sexual assault and planned to become a doctor after her military service. โNo one dreamed bigger or worked harder to achieve her goals.โ
Meanwhile, investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board have determined the CRJ700 airplane was at 325 feet (91 meters), plus or minus 25 feet, at the time of impact, officials said at a Saturday evening news briefing.
The information was based on data recovered from the jetโs flight data recorder โ the โblack boxโ that tracks the aircraftโs movements, speed and other parameters.
The new detail suggests the Army helicopter was flying above 200 feet (61 meters), the maximum altitude for the route it was using.
Preliminary data indicates the control towerโs radar showed the helicopter at 200 feet at the time of the accident, though officials said the information has not been confirmed.
โThatโs what our job is, to figure that out,โ NTSB board member Todd Inman told reporters when asked what could explain the discrepancy.
Inman also said at Saturdayโs briefing that the helicopterโs training flight would typically include the use of night-vision goggles.
โWe do not know at this time if the night-vision goggles were actually being worn, nor what the setting may be,โ he said. โFurther investigation should be able to let us know if that occurred and what factor it may play in the overall accident.โ
Data confirms that the air traffic controller alerted the helicopter to the presence of the CRJ700 about two minutes before the crash.
One second before impact, the crew aboard the American flight had a โverbal reaction,โ according to the planeโs cockpit voice recorder, and flight data shows the planeโs nose began to rise, officials said.
The official said an automated radio transmission alerted โtraffic, traffic, traffic,โ was heard on the voice recorder and then sounds of the collision were heard before the recording ends.
The Army previously identified the other two soldiers killed in Wednesdayโs crash as Staff Sergeant Ryan Austin OโHara, 28, and Chief Warrant Officer 2 Andrew Loyd Eaves, 39. The names of the 60 passengers and four crew members who died on the jet have not been officially released, although many have been identified through family and social media.
Crews are preparing to remove the wreckage of the aircraft from the Potomac River starting on Sunday. Forty-two bodies have been recovered thus far, the Washington, D.C., fire department said on Saturday.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta and Joseph Ax in Princeton, New Jersey; Editing by Daniel Wallis)