We are updating this breaking news post as more information becomes available.
The Germanwings Airbus A320 that crashed into the French Alps on March 24, killing 150 people, was deliberately crashed by the co-pilot,
a Marseille public prosecutor said at a press conference in France
today. “The intention was to destroy this plane,” said the prosecutor,
Brice Robin.
Carsten
Spohr, chairman and CEO of Lufthansa, which owns the budget airline
Germanwings, confirmed this narrative at a press conference today. “We
have to start from the assumption that the plane was intentionally crashed into the Alps,” he said.
According to information from the cockpit voice recorder, Andreas Lubitz, 28, locked the cockpit door when the other pilot stepped out to use the toilet. Lubitz, a German, then deliberately started the descent, according to the Associated Press.
German
Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere, responding to the French
prosecutor, said that there were “no indications of any kind of
terrorist background” to the crash. He said that intelligence and
police databases had been checked on the day of the crash, finding
nothing, and that the German co-pilot was not connected in any way to
terrorism. CNN is now reporting that French authorities have asked
America’s Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to join the
investigation.
After
beginning the descent, Lubitz did not say a word for the next ten
minutes, even as the flight recorder picked up the sound of knocking at
the door, gentle at first, then more urgent, and ultimately attempting
to break the door down.
Passengers
seemed unaware of what was going on at first, but screams could
be heard in the final few minutes. “I think the victims realized just at
the last moment, ” Robin said.
Lubitz remained silent but was breathing normally during the final minutes of the descent, Robin said.
Robin
did not respond to reporters’ questions about Lubitz’s religion or
ethnic background. “I don’t think it’s necessarily what we should be
looking for,” he said.
Details are gradually emerging about
Lubitz, a pilot with 630 hours of flying experience who trained with
Lufthansa, and had been flying for Germanwings since 2013. He lived with
his parents in Montabaur, a town in the west of Germany, said Agence
France-Presse. He also maintained a flat in Duesseldorf, a Germanwings
hub to which flight 4u9525 was headed before the crash.
The
captain of the plane has not yet been identified except as Patrick S., a
German national, in accordance with German privacy laws. Lufthansa said
he had more than than ten years’ flying experience with the airline,
and 6,000 hours of flight time. The German newspaper Bild also said he
had two children, AFP said.
watch video below:
Spohr
of Lufthansa said at a televised press conference today that he was
left “speechless” by the crash and its aftermath. Spohr said in
German: “like millions of other people this is a puzzle for us…and it
will take a while to understand what really happened.”
Pilots undergo yearly medical examinations, but those don’t include psychological tests, Spohr said. “If a person kills himself and also 149 other people, another word should be used—not suicide.”
Work on identifying the remains of the victims, which included 144 passengers and six crew members, has begun, the AP reports.
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