News

The National Transportation Safety Board, which is investigating Saturday's deadly crash of a Mexican Navy tall ship into New York's Brooklyn Bridge, is focused on the ship's guide tugboats and sudden ...
The NTSB arrived on the scene Sunday to open an investigation ... The New York Times and the Associated Press reported. Brooklyn Bridge ship crash: Mexican ship headed the wrong way before fatal ...
The NTSB is still waiting for the Mexican government's permission to access the ship that crashed into the Brooklyn Bridge.
The U.S. Coast Guard set up a “safety zone” in the East River Friday morning so the ARM Cuauhtémoc could be slowly towed to ...
Authorities have identified the second victim who died in the Brooklyn Bridge ship crash last weekend that also claimed the life of a fellow Mexican Navy cadet.
Everyone who was injured was on the boat. Officials said they did not believe the bridge sustained any structural damage.
A Mexican naval ship called for assistance from tugboats in New York just moments before it crashed into the Brooklyn Bridge, signaling the crew may have known the ship was veering off course after ...
Officials are investigating what caused the Mexican Navy tall ship Cuauhtémoc to veer off course and strike the Brooklyn Bridge, killing two people.
Federal officials were in Manhattan on Monday to investigate the Brooklyn Bridge ship crash involving a Mexican Navy ship on Saturday, a collision that left ...
No structural damage was done to the Brooklyn Bridge when a Mexican navy tall ... starting about 8:24 p.m., Brian Young, an NTSB marine accident investigator, said at a news conference Monday ...
The NTSB is investigating the May 18th crash of the Mexican Navy ship Cuauhtémoc into the Brooklyn Bridge. Investigators are collecting evidence and seeking public video footage of the incident.
At a news briefing, NTSB board member Michael Graham ... of Transportation to conduct a survey at the crash site. The Brooklyn Bridge didn’t sustain any “significant structural damage ...