News

Crewmembers from the doomed Mexican navy boat that smashed into the Brooklyn Bridge are gearing up to set sail again — this ...
The NTSB is still waiting for the Mexican government's permission to access the ship that crashed into the Brooklyn Bridge.
When a Mexican navy tall ship crashed into the Brooklyn Bridge, it was maneuvering in turbulent waters. The tide had just turned, and a fast current was heading up the East River ...
Two sailors died and more than a dozen others were injured after a Mexican Navy tall ship crashed into the Brooklyn Bridge.
There was a somber gathering just below the Brooklyn Bridge on Wednesday night, as members of the New York Mexican community ...
Officials said Monday that an inspection of the Brooklyn Bridge in New York City determined the load-bearing elements of the ...
Seven officers and 172 cadets who were aboard the Cuauhtemoc training vessel arrived early Monday at the port of Veracruz, ...
The 297-foot ship was bound for Iceland when it lost power around 8:30 p.m. Saturday and was pulled backwards by a current.
Federal officials were in Manhattan on Monday to investigate the Brooklyn Bridge ship crash involving a Mexican Navy ship on ...
The National Transportation Safety Board has put extra focus on bridge safety over the last year following the collapse of ...
A Mexican Navy ship never intended to sail under the Brooklyn Bridge. U.S. and Mexican officials are investigating what led to the accident that killed two crew members. The Cuauhtémoc ...
A maritime expert told The Times that the Cuauhtémoc’s propellers may have been running in reverse, pushing it faster toward the Brooklyn Bridge, as a tugboat tried escorting the ship out of a pier.