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DC air traffic controller reveals ‘warning signs were all there’ before midair crash that killed 67

March 30, 2026
in News
DC air traffic controller reveals ‘warning signs were all there’ before midair crash that killed 67

A former Washington DC air traffic controller on duty the night of the fatal January 2025 mid-air collision involving an American Airlines plane and a US Army helicopter warned how there were “obvious holes” already in the system at the time of the disaster.

“The warning signs were all there,” Emily Hanoka told CBS 60 Minutes Sunday, revealing how controllers had identified safety concerns and staffers were forced to keep Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport moving, even though its capacity was being stretched.

“You had frontline controllers ringing that bell for years, and years, saying this is not safe,” she said.

A blonde woman in a red blazer speaks to the camera, gesturing with her right hand.
Emily Hanoka, a former air traffic controller at Ronald Reagan National Airport, revealed the ‘warning signs were already there’ before the deadly January 2025 crash 60 Minutes

“This cannot continue. Please change this and that didn’t happen.”

Hanoka, who clocked off just hours before the smash over the Potomac River that killed 67, said safety recommendations were made – but they never went too far. 

“Controllers formed local safety councils and every time that a controller made these safety reports, another controller was compiling data to back up the recommendation. And many recommendations were made, and they never went too far,” she said.

Air traffic controllers were tasked with keeping the airport moving – even though 800 flights a day would take off from its main runway.

“Some hours are overloaded, to the point where it’s over the capacity that the airport can handle,” she said. “There was definitely a pressure. If you do not move planes, you will gridlock the airport.”

DC Plane crash 2025
Jack Forbes / NY Post Design

Controllers were forced to rely on a squeeze play – a highly-precise operation where planes take off and land within seconds of each other on just one runway.

“This is what has to happen, in order to make this airspace work. And it did work. It worked until it didn’t,” Hanoka said.

“There were obvious cracks in the system, there were obvious holes.”

The American Airlines plane was approaching the airport’s runway 33 when it collided with the Black Hawk helicopter, which was traveling south, over the icy river.

Commercial and military aircraft often criss-crossed at low altitudes over the river, with former pilots describing it as “helicopter alley.”

Just one day before the air disaster, two near misses were reported, CBS reported. One of those involved an American Airlines plane that left Norfolk. Between 2021 and 2024, 85 near mid-air collisions were reported.

A red crane lifts the mangled fuselage of a helicopter from a body of water, with several workers watching from a barge.
Wreckage from the crash is pulled from the Potomac. 60 Minutes
A fiery explosion illuminates the night sky over a body of water with a pier in the foreground.
The moment the collision happens. Obtained by CNN

Since the crash, the Federal Aviation Administration has rolled out a major safety overhaul, eliminating the practice known as visual separation.

This was where pilots were expected to see and avoid each other in the skies.

Air traffic controllers are now required to use radar to ensure aircraft remains separated. 

“The tragedy over the Potomac one year ago revealed a startling truth: years of warning signs were missed, and the FAA needed dire reform,” Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said.

The FAA’s move came after the National Transportation Safety Board concluded in its report that there was an “overreliance of visual separation.”

Officials also imposed restrictions on non-essential helicopter flights operating around Reagan airport. 

The post DC air traffic controller reveals ‘warning signs were all there’ before midair crash that killed 67 appeared first on New York Post.

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