Who was the co-pilot?
On board 8-minute descent to death
Germanwings
Flight 9525 co-pilot deliberately crashed plane, officials say
Updated
1655 GMT (0055 HKT) March 26, 2015
Story highlights
- Lufthansa CEO says his company's "speechless that this aircraft has been deliberately crashed by the co-pilot"
- Investigators say they're baffled as to why
- A village near the crash site opens its homes to victims' loved ones
What questions do you have about the crash? Post on Twitter with the
hashtag #GermanwingsQs. We'll take them to aviation experts and try to get them
answered.
(CNN)The
co-pilot of Germanwings Flight 9525 purposely crashed the plane into the French
Alps on Tuesday, killing all 150 people on board, officials said Thursday.
"We at Lufthansa are speechless that this aircraft has been
deliberately crashed by the co-pilot," said Carsten Spohr, CEO of
Lufthansa, which owns Germanwings.
Marseille prosecutor Brice Robin said the co-pilot, 28-year-old German
national Andreas Lubitz, apparently "wanted to destroy the aircraft."
It's unknown whether Lubitz planned his actions in advance, Robin said.
But he "took advantage" of a moment in which the pilot left the cockpit
and "activated the descent," which can only be done deliberately.
Andreas Lubitz
It's also unclear whether the pilot entered a code to try to get back
into the cockpit, or whether Lubitz "put the lever on lock," which
would have prevented the code from working, Spohr said.
What is known is that screaming could be heard on an audio recording for
just the final few minutes of the flight.
Death was instantaneous for those on board when the plane plunged into
the mountains, Robin said.
German authorities also say "that we have to assume" that
Flight 9525 "was deliberately activated for a crash," German
Chancellor Angela Merkel said Thursday. "This is hard to comprehend for
most people. Nobody can imagine this."
The French government has asked the FBI to help investigate the crash, a
law enforcement official said Thursday.
A search is underway for the plane's second "black box," the
flight data recorder, which could shed more light on the plane's final minutes.
No clues about why co-pilot
would crash plane
Investigators are baffled as to why Lubitz would have done this
Lufthansa does "not have any clues," Spohr said.
The picture of the plane's final minutes comes largely from what was
discovered in the mangled cockpit voice recorder.
Lufthansa CEO: Speechless that co-pilot crashed plane 01:08
PLAY VIDEO
The pilot and co-pilot had normal exchanges during the flight, Robin
said. When the pilot stepped out to go to the bathroom, he asked Lubitz to take
over.
The most plausible explanation of what happened next is that Lubitz,
"through deliberate abstention, refused to open the cabin door ... to the
chief pilot, and used the button" to cause the plane to lose altitude,
Robin said.
The disaster is not being described as a "terrorist attack,"
and the killing of 150 people would generally not be described as a "suicide"
either, Robin said. Spohr agreed: "If a person kills himself and also 149
other people, another word should be used -- not suicide," he said.
Lubitz was not known to be on any terrorism list, and his religion was
not immediately known, Robin said.
Lufthansa has no standard
psychological testing after hiring
He had been with Germanwings since September 2013 and had completed 630
hours of flight time, the company said. Lubitz had trained at the Lufthansa
flight center in Bremen, Germany.
He only had about 100 hours of experience on the type of aircraft he was
flying, but he had all the necessary certifications and qualifications to pilot
the aircraft alone, the prosecutor said.
He had passed medical tests, Spohr said. The audio recording showed his
breathing to be steady, with no sign that he had a heart attack or other
medical issue.
Lufthansa does not have standard psychological testing for pilots once
they are hired, Spohr said. The company considers an applicant's psychological
state when hiring, he said.
The co-pilot was "fully qualified to pilot the aircraft on his
own," Robin added.
A man in Montabaur, Germany, who belonged to the same flight club as
Lubitz, said he couldn't believe it. "The way I know Andreas, this is
inconceivable," Peter Ruecker said Thursday.
The mountainous terrain where the Germanwings jet went down is difficult
to access.
Village opens homes to
victims' loved ones
The bodies of the Germanwings crash victims will not be released until
all DNA identification work has been done -- a process likely to last several
weeks, Robin said.
While some human remains have been recovered, many have not. The task is
treacherous for search crews working on steep slopes in icy weather. Workers
were dropped by helicopters and tied together for safety.
Robin said he had told the families of the crash victims all the same
information he was telling reporters at a news conference.
The families of the two pilots are also in France but are not in the
same place as the relatives, he said.
Lufthansa is providing "financial support" to relatives of the
victims, Spohr said. He declined to go into details.
Relatives and friends of the victims have traveled on special Lufthansa
flights to an area near the site where their loved ones perished.
Seyne-les-Alpes, a nearby town, is serving as a staging post. Mayor
Francis Hermitte predicted that 200 to 300 people would come to the area
Thursday.
Most are not expected to stay overnight, he said. But in case they do,
he said, local residents have offered accommodations for them.
Victims from 18 countries
The doomed flight was traveling from Barcelona, Spain, to Dusseldorf, Germany, when it
crashed Tuesday.
Germanwings said the plane reached its cruising altitude of 38,000 feet,
and then dropped for about eight minutes. The plane lost contact with French
radar at a height of about 6,000 feet. Then it crashed.
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