
Moments of terror, lifetime of questions; ‘No idea’ why co-pilot would crash airplane
MARCH 26, 2015, 8:11 AM LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015, 11:59 PM
BY ANGELA CHARLTON AND DAVID MCHUGH
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Passengers with moments to live screamed in terror and the pilot frantically pounded on the locked cockpit door as a 27-year-old German co-pilot deliberately and wordlessly smashed an Airbus carrying 150 people into an Alpine mountainside.
The account Thursday of the final moments of Germanwings Flight 9525 prompted some airlines to immediately impose stricter cockpit rules — and raised haunting questions about the motive of the co-pilot, whose breathing never wavered as he destroyed the plane and the lives of those aboard.
“We have no idea of the reason,” Marseille Prosecutor Brice Robin said, revealing the chilling conclusions investigators reached after reconstructing the final minutes of the flight from the plane’s black box voice recorder. Co-pilot Andreas Lubitz’s intention was “to destroy this plane.”
French, German and U.S. officials said there was no indication of terrorism. The prosecutor did not elaborate on why investigators do not suspect a political motive; instead they’re focusing on the co-pilot’s “personal, family and professional environment” to try to determine why he did it.
We’ve all encountered them, usually in the workplace and the occasional neighbor. Life’s misfits. Academically smart, good at what they do, but somehow afflicted with that certain something that just makes them socially inept. We typically don’t measure this trait in someone in the hiring process, no dount because it’s hard to measure and it’s politically incorrect. I’m guessing that this pilot was one of these types, just like Bergdahl, Assange, Manning, Snowden, etc.
He spent a year in a psych ward and hid all of the doctor’s notes saying he was unfit for work. I’d say someone should have figured that out.