A fourth victim's body was recovered from the site of the Francis Scott Key
By Lisa Baertlein LOS ANGELES, April 26 (Reuters) – Four cargo ships, stuck for about a month at the Port of Baltimore by the ruins of the collapsed Francis Scott Key bridge, have exited
Global shipping giant Maersk has released a detailed update on its operations following the collapse of Baltimore’s Key Bridge. The company, which chartered the MV Dali, has now confirmed that
A fourth body has been recovered Sunday from inside a vehicle at the site of the Key Bridge collapse, although the name of the victim is not being released. One of the missing construction vehicles was located, and inside was a person who had been trapped after cargo ship, Dali, crashed into the Key Bridge
Federal agents are executing a search warrant in connection with an investigation into the vessel that flattened a Baltimore bridge last month.
The City of Baltimore has taken legal action against the owners and managers of the cargo ship Dali, which crashed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge on March 26, leading
Baltimore's mayor and city council are calling for the owner and manager of the cargo ship that took down the Francis Scott Key Bridge to be held fully liable for the deadly collapse.
Baltimore's mayor and city council are calling for the owner and manager of the cargo ship that took down the Francis Scott Key Bridge to be held fully liable for the deadly collapse.
The ironworkers, painters and others who constructed the Francis Scott Key Bridge in the '70s thought it would outlive them.
The owner and manager of the massive container ship that took down the Francis Scott Key Bridge last month should be held fully liable for the deadly collapse, according to court papers filed Monday on behalf of Baltimore’s mayor and city council. The two companies filed a petition soon after
Baltimore's mayor and city council are calling for the owner and manager of the cargo ship that took down the Francis Scott Key Bridge to be held fully liable for the deadly collapse
Mayor Brandon Scott says city will ‘aggressively address the catastrophic impact’ of the incident