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Aerial tours often involve multitasking pilots, tricky aircraft and fewer regulations compared to planes. But helicopter tour experts say many safeguards help protect pilots and passengers.
Tour company in Hudson River helicopter crash shuts down operations, FAA confirms - Six people were killed when the helicopter plunged into the Hudson River last week ...
The Federal Aviation Administration has issued an emergency order grounding the company behind the helicopter flight that ...
The rotor of the helicopter from last week's deadly crash has been retrieved from the Hudson River, four days after the ...
Six people died Thursday in the New York City crash. The company was grounded after its director of operations was fired.
The aircraft was on a sightseeing flight when it suddenly broke apart in midair, its rotor blades falling separately toward ...
Meanwhile, divers from the New York Police Department continued recovery operations on April 13, searching for several parts ...
The FAA announced that New York Helicopter Tours is shutting down following the crash that killed 6 people last week.
A couple visiting New York City from the Netherlands said they were next in line to board the doomed helicopter that crashed into the Hudson River, killing all six people on board.
Divers were spotted pulling the rotor from the murky river Monday afternoon — days after the chopper went down off Manhattan, ...
All six people on board the craft, operated by New York Helicopter Tours, died when it crashed into the Hudson River on ...