Flight and voice recorders in the cockpit were recovered from a passenger aircraft crashed on the Potomak River in Washington after a collision in the air by a military helicopter that claimed the lives of 67 people, US media reported.

Sources knowing the survey confirmed on Thursday at CBS News and ABC News that recording devices, commonly known as black boxesrecovered from the crashed aircraft and will be analyzed by the National Transport Security Council, which leads the investigation.

The service hopes to have a preliminary report ready within 30 days. Experts say that both American Airlines Flight 5342 pilots and Military Pilots in Black Hawk had experience in navigating complex airspace, while the country’s leader of the country’s traffic controllers said it was too early for speculation about speculation about speculation the cause.

Meanwhile, 14 people are still missing, according to the latest information. More than 40 corpses have so far been recovered from the Potomak River, where the aircraft crashed after the collision.

The Minister of Transport promises to “correct” FAA

Transport Minister Sean Duffy said late Thursday that he would soon announce a plan to reform the Federal Aviation Service (FAA) after the destructive collision of the American Airlines regional aircraft with the Army helicopter, which cost 67.