Here are some of the victims of the tragedy identified so far. A mother and her young son Julia Kay and her son, 11-year-old Sean Kay, leave behind a broken-hearted husband and father – and three other children – after they were killed in the horrific collision.
Everly and Alydia Livingston are among the figure skaters killed when an American Airlines flight collided with a Black Hawk helicopter
U.S. Figure Skating announced that 'several members of our skating community' were on the American Airlines flight that crashed into the Potomac River
US Figure Skating confirmed several members of the skating community were onboard the American Airlines flight that collided with a Blackhawk military helicopter.
The Kansas City Figure Skating Club reacted to the loss of a community in a plane crash near DC.
Coach Alexandr Kirsanov and skaters Angela Yang and Sean Kay were on the plane, Kirsanov's wife, Natalia Gudin confirmed.
Officials believe there are no survivors after a plane with 64 people aboard crashed into a helicopter near Reagan Washington National Airport.
The midair collision and plane crash into the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., is hitting close to home on ice skating rinks across the country, including the Orlando Ice Den in Maitland. “I think the whole world is sad. It’s a terrible, unimaginable situation,” said BJ Shue-Chapman, the rink’s skating director.
Everly, Alydia, Donna and Peter Livingston, who were four passengers who died on American Airlines flight 5342, are being remembered by friends. Ted Boyke, a friend of Peter's, tells PEOPLE how the devoted father always "put his family first.
Two victims of the plane crash, Boston figure skating coaches Vadim Naumov and Evgenia Shishkova were friends with Kansas City coach Marina Eltsova.
The midair collision Wednesday night between the plane and an Army helicopter in Washington, D.C., has left Wichita grieving. The worst U.S. air disaster in a generation killed 67 people, including young figure skaters who had attended a national development camp in Wichita following the championships. No one survived.