Three victims of the deadly Washington, D.C., plane crash have Ohio ties, and the airline involved has a connection to Ohio. Here's the latest.
Authorities say there are no survivors after a passenger plane landing near Washington, D.C., and an Army helicopter hit each other.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Three people with connections to Ohio were among the 67 victims of Wednesday night’s deadly midair collision between an Army helicopter and an American Airlines flight from Kansas, reports say.
WASHINGTON, D. C. - A freeze on federal grant and loan funding that President Donald Trump announced this week left Ohio agencies, universities, and companies that receive federal money in a state of uncertainty as they weighed how to cope with a new policy that jeopardizes billions of dollars they expected to receive.
William Dunn, a former Marine Corps pilot, questions what the communication was between air traffic control, the plane and the helicopter.
The new emergency communication system can help save lives in Ohio. Here are the 10 counties using it now before the statewide launch this spring.
Lawmakers across the country shared their reactions and condolences following the fatal collision, including Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, who shared a statement on his social media page.
Honda Motor said on Wednesday it will boost its investments in three Ohio auto plants by $300 million to have flexibility to build EVs, hybrids and gas-powered vehicles on the same assembly line.
A woman from Wichita who attended college at a small university in Ohio was among the 64 people on board the American Airlines flight out of Wichita that crashed with a military helicopter Wednesday night near the Reagan National Airport near Washington,
Officials say a PSA Airline passenger airliner and an Army helicopter collided Wednesday night in Washington, D.C. Here's what we know about the airliner's Ohio ties.
Fresh off of his unexpected departure from President Donald Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency, Vivek Ramaswamy has set his sights on becoming governor of Ohio, his home state
Grace Maxwell, a student at Cedarville University in Greene County, and Elizabeth Anne Keys, a Cincinnati native, were among 67 killed in plane crash.