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US admits responsibility in fatal helicopter crash involving American Airlines jet

The?U.S. The?Justice Department announced late on Wednesday that the federal government is liable for the deadly collision between an Army Black Hawk helicopter, and American Airlines Regional Jet which killed 67 near Reagan Washington National Airport. The government acknowledged that it had "a duty of care" to the plaintiffs which it breached -?thereby proximately leading to the tragic accident. It also admitted that the pilots on the Army helicopter as well as the regional jet failed to maintain "vigilance to avoid each other".

According to the Justice Department, a Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)?air traffic controller also failed to comply with an FAA directive and that as a result both agencies' conduct was liable.

The FAA refused to comment.

Robert Clifford said that the lawsuit was filed by the family of a victim of the crash. The filing shows "the United States admits its responsibility for the needless deaths in the crash... as well as FAA's failures to follow air-traffic control procedures."

Clifford said that the government "rightfully acknowledges it is not alone responsible for this deadly crash and that, in fact, its conduct was only one of many causes of the deaths that evening."

American Airlines filed a motion Wednesday to dismiss the case. The airline said it sympathized with the families "desire to seek redress for the tragedy", but that the "proper recourse was not against American." The United States government is the one to be blamed. The court should dismiss American from the lawsuit." In March, the FAA restricted helicopter flights after the National Transportation Safety Board stated that their presence near Reagan National posed "intolerable risks" to civilian aircraft. The FAA banned the Army in May from flying helicopters around the Pentagon following a close call which forced two civilian aircraft to abort their landings. The U.S. Senate passed a bill to tighten the rules for military helicopters on Wednesday.

(source: Reuters)