Germanwings 'black box' shows co-pilot Andreas Lubitz sped up
descent
Story highlights
French investigators: Flight data
recorder reveals Andreas Lubitz acted deliberately to crash plane
He used
autopilot to set altitude at 100 feet and then used the controls to speed up the
descent
Marseille, France (CNN)Initial tests on the flight data recorder
recovered from downed Germanwings Flight 9525 show that co-pilot Andreas Lubitz
purposely used the controls to speed up the plane's descent, according to the
French air accident investigation agency, the BEA.
The flight data
recorder, or "black box," was found Thursday by recovery teams that have spent
days since the March 24 crash scouring the mountainside in the French Alps where
the plane went down.
A statement from the BEA on Friday said its teams
had immediately begun to investigate its contents.
"The initial readout
shows that the pilot present in the cockpit used the autopilot to put the
(airplane) into a descent towards an altitude of 100 (feet) then, on several
occasions during the descent, the pilot modified the autopilot setting to
increase the speed of the (airplane) in descent," it said.
"Work is
continuing to establish the precise history of the flight."
Evidence from
the plane's cockpit voice recorder, recovered swiftly after the crash, had
already led investigators to believe that Lubitz acted deliberately to bring
down the plane, killing all 150 people on board.
And prosecutors in
Germany said Thursday that an analysis of a tablet device retrieved from the
27-year-old's apartment in Dusseldorf revealed that he had researched suicide
methods and cockpit door security on the Internet.
The correspondence and
search history on the device demonstrated that the co-pilot used it from March
16 to March 23, Dusseldorf prosecutor Christoph Kumpa said.
The search
history was not deleted and also revealed searches concerning medical treatment,
the prosecutor said.
DNA profiles
Investigators have focused on
Lubitz's health as they try to establish his motivation.
But the missing
"black box" was expected to yield important evidence about the plane's final
minutes.
A female police officer digging by hand for clothes in a ravine
that been searched previously found the flight data recorder Thursday afternoon
about 8 inches (20 centimeters) below the surface, Marseille prosecutor Brice
Robin told reporters.
Usually white with florescent orange, this
discovered recorder lived up to its name as a black box because fire had
darkened it with ashes.
In addition, out of more than 2,000 DNA samples
collected from the crash site, lab workers have isolated 150 DNA profiles, Robin
told reporters.
"That does not mean we've identified" the crash's 150
victims, Robin said -- noting the recovered DNA still must be compared with DNA
submitted by the families of those who died in the crash.
Authorities
have also found 470 personal effects at the site, according to Robin. That
number includes 40 cell phones, though all those were badly damaged. Robin cast
doubt that any useful information could be retrieved from those phones, given
their condition.
That view is consistent with French officials' claims
Wednesday insisting that two publications, German daily Bild and French Paris
Match, were wrong to report that cell phone video showed the harrowing final
seconds from on board the flight.
'Premeditated murder' claim
Noting
he's made a criminal request to German authorities but is for now conducting his
own investigation, the French prosecutor said he is tasked with an involuntary
homicide investigation.
But Robin noted that Lubitz made voluntary
actions -- such as guiding the plane toward the mountain and reducing its speed
to prevent alarms from going off -- and was "alive and conscious" to the very
end.
A European official government official with detailed knowledge of
the investigation said that Lubitz's actions amount to "premeditated
murder."
While cautioning that there are still many holes in
understanding Lubitz's motivation, the disclosures about his Internet searches
show that he planned to do what he was going to do, according to this
official.
Germanwings Jet Was Accelerated on Descent, Second Black Box
Data Show Flight recorder found Thursday backs up prosecutor's
suspicions about plane crash
The second black box recorder from the crash site
of the Germanwings jetliner revealed that the person flying the plane at the
time of the crash changed the altitude settings for the automatic pilot to 100
feet and then sped up the plane multiple times, investigators said
Friday.
PARIS-Data freshly drawn from the second black box aboard
Germanwings Flight 9525 show the plane was repeatedly accelerated as it
descended into a mountainside, French aviation investigators said Friday,
bolstering prosecutors' suspicions that co-pilot Andreas Lubitz intentionally
crashed the jetliner.
French investigation agency BEA said in a statement
that the flight data recorder, which was found and recovered on Thursday,
revealed that the person flying the plane at the time of the crash changed the
altitude settings for the automatic pilot to 100 feet and then sped up the plane
multiple times as it headed toward the ground, eventually hitting a slope in the
French Alps at 400 miles an hour.
The BEA didn't declare that the person
responsible for the crash was Mr. Lubitz, though French and German prosecutors
have already assigned blame on the 27-year-old who suffered from
depression.
The flight data recorder can store 25 hours of technical data
from a flight and is regarded as the most reliable indicator of any system
malfunction. The first black box recovered from the crash site included a voice
recording from the cockpit and French prosecutors who heard it said that it
suggested Mr. Lubitz locked out his captain and deliberately flew the plane into
the mountain.
Investigators will likely be searching the flight data
recorder for confirmation that Mr. Lubitz actively denied the captain access to
the cockpit by flicking a switch to lock him out. The special doors, which were
integrated onto planes after the 9/11 attacks to prevent terrorist from gaining
control of a commercial airliner, are equipped with technology so that those in
the cockpit can shut out anybody trying to enter the flight deck.
German
prosecutors said on Thursday that Mr. Lubitz researched cockpit security,
medical treatments and suicide methods on his tablet computer in days leading to
the crash.
The BEA revealed on Friday three photos of the flight data
recorder, which showed a mangled metal case, though the main recorder appeared
to be intact. The investigation is ongoing, the BEA added.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/germanwings-plane-was-accelerated-on-descent-say-french-investigators-1428055460
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German
pilot did computer searches on suicide in days before crash
German police officers carry a computer out of a
house believed to belong to the parents of crashed Germanwings flight 4U 9524
co-pilot Andreas Lubitz in Montabaur, on March 26, 2015.
(Reuters)
- German prosecutors said on Thursday they believed the co-pilot who crashed a
Germanwings plane in the French Alps last week had searched on a computer for
ways to commit suicide shortly before the crash, which killed 150
people.
In
a statement, prosecutors in his home town of Dusseldorf, Germany, said the
computer, found in his home, also showed searches on cockpit doors and safety
precautions related to them.
They
said Andreas Lubitz had also "looked for information on ways to commit suicide"
in computer searches that took place between March 16 and March 23, one day
before the crash.
"On
at least one day, the person had for several minutes undertaken searches related
to cockpit doors and their safety precautions," it added.
The
disclosure feeds into an acceleration of the multiple investigations into the
crash of the German airliner as police in the French Alps said they had found
the plane's second "black box" cockpit recorder.
"The
second black box has been recovered. The prosecutor is going to make an
announcement", a Gendarmerie officer said.
The
Marseille, France, prosecutor in charge of the case, Brice Robin, confirmed he
was planning a news conference for later on Thursday.
Mr.
Robin said last Friday that preliminary evidence from the cockpit voice
recorder, which was quickly recovered from the scene, suggested 27-year-old Mr.
Lubitz crashed the jet on purpose after barricading himself at the
controls.
The
second "black box", or flight data recorder, contains hundreds of parameters
taken from the Airbus A320.
The
first box, which records pilot conversations, cockpit sounds and radio messages,
was found hours after the crash.
There
was no immediate word on the condition of the device, designed to withstand the
force of a significant impact.
If
intact, the data is expected to provide further detailed evidence including any
commands from the co-pilot seat.
France's
BEA air crash investigation authority, which is expected to decode the
information as part of a parallel safety investigation, was not immediately
available for comment.
Investigators
are still trying to work out the motive for which Mr. Lubitz would take the
controls of the A320, lock the door that was specially reinforced after 9/11 and
apparently deliberately steer the aircraft into a mountainside.
German
daily Bild reported on Thursday that Mr. Lubitz had allegedly lied to doctors,
telling them he was on sick leave rather than flying commercial
planes.
Germanwings
parent Lufthansa has come under pressure to explain what it knew about his
condition.
It
said this week that when Mr. Lubitz resumed pilot training in 2009 he provided
the flight school with medical documents showing he had gone through a "previous
episode of severe depression."
|
How to Screen Pilots
and Protect Passengers By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
The crash of a
Germanwings plane last week and the news that its co-pilot had been treated for
depression and suicidal tendencies raise questions about how to keep pilots with
mental health problems from possibly putting passengers at risk. One step is
broadly adopting recommendations an aerospace medical group made in 2012, after
a JetBlue pilot suffered an apparent mental breakdown during a
flight.
The Aerospace Medical Association released a report recommending
that depression and substance abuse screening be added to health examinations
for pilots. The report also said that employee assistance programs in which
pilots could discuss mental health issues without fear of reprisal made them
more likely to come forward.
Pilot health screenings in the United States
and in Europe still typically focus on physical ailments, according to a report
in The Times. Pilots are expected to tell their employers if they think they
have a health problem that could hamper their ability to fly. But those
suffering from mental illness are often reluctant to talk about their conditions
because they worry about being fired.
For a different model, airlines
might look to the medical profession. Physician health programs, which exist in
47 states, perform assessments and offer screening for doctors dealing with
conditions like mental illness and addiction. Doctors can contact these programs
themselves, but colleagues may also refer a doctor if they are concerned about
his or her performance. The programs assess whether a doctor's condition poses
an on-the-job threat and what treatment, if any, is needed.
Some doctors
are monitored for months or even years after their initial referral. Some are
judged unfit to continue practicing. But making clear that treatment options are
available, and that entering treatment need not necessarily end a career,
encourages doctors to get help before their illnesses become so severe they can
no longer work.
The Allied Pilots Association, the pilots' union for
American Airlines, instituted a program in 2011 that allows pilots to seek help.
At a 2014 conference, the president of the Aerospace Medical Association noted
that this program had led to a significant increase in the number of pilots
reporting their mental health issues and receiving assistance. A systematic
process within the whole airline industry to provide mental health assessments
and help pilots get treatment is not too much to ask. |
Calls for crash avoidance technology
Source: Lubitz saw
multiple doctors
It is becoming increasingly clear to investigators that
Lubitz was "very afraid" he would lose his license to fly because of his medical
issues, a law enforcement source with detailed knowledge of the investigation
told CNN on Thursday.
It's already emerged that Lubitz had battled
depression years before he took the controls of Flight 9525 and that he had
concealed from his employer recent medical leave notes saying he was unfit for
work.
But the law enforcement source said that after a severe depressive
episode in 2009, Lubitz relapsed with severe depression and stress in late
2014.
In the weeks leading up to the crash, Lubitz was shopping doctors,
seeing at least five, perhaps as many as six, the source said, as he kept going
from one doctor to the next seeking help, including from a sleep specialist. He
was prescribed powerful medication, though it's not clear he was taking it. |
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