The Unified Command announced a plan to refloat and transit the cargo ship Dali that hit and destroyed the Francis Scott Key Bridge from its current location to a local marine terminal.
Dali, the cargo ship that crashed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore before its collapse, is set to be refloated Monday after nine weeks of salvage efforts requiring the use of giant floating cranes and explosives.
After Monday's controlled demolition of the piece of steel lying across the Dali, officials expected to refloat the ship about two days later. That time has come and gone. The complicated work is taking longer than anticipated. Newly…
Director of Apostleship of the Sea Andrew Middleton spent several hours with the 21 crew members who have been on board the Dali cargo vessel ever since it crashed into Baltimore's Key Bridge in late March.
The National Transportation Safety Board's preliminary report on the Key Bridge collapse offers a minute-by-minute account of what happened aboard the ship that struck it. Here's how investigators say it went down.
The first power outage occurred after a crew member mistakenly closed an exhaust damper while conducting maintenance, investigators with the National Transportation Safety Board said in their preliminary report.
The Dali containership lost power several times in the hours before it crashed into and caused the collapse of Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge, an NTSB report said.
Crews in Baltimore conducted a controlled demolition of Francis Scott Key Bridge debris which had been resting on top of the Dali cargo ship. CBS News homeland security and justice reporter Nicole Sganga has the latest, including…
Crews continued to evaluate on Tuesday a controlled explosion aiming to dislodge the cargo ship Dali from the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore.
A series of controlled detonations Monday brought the remaining steel making up the fallen Francis Scott Key Bridge crashing down onto the Dali cargo ship and into the Patapsco river below.