Co-pilot deliberately crashed Germanwings plane, wasn’t known as terrorist — prosecutor

Undated file picture of co-pilot Andreas Lubitz is seen via Facebook March 26, 2015. The co-pilot suspected of deliberately crashing a Germanwings jet into the French Alps on Tuesday has been identified as 28-year-old Andreas Lubitz. Announcing his details at a news conference on Thursday, Marseille prosecutor Brice Robin said he had no known links with terrorism."There is no reason to suspect a terrorist attack," he said. Asked whether he believed the crash that killed 150 people was the result of suicide, he said: "People who commit suicide usually do so alone....I don't call it a suicide."The German citizen, left in sole control of the Airbus A320 after the captain left the cockpit, refused to re-open the door and pressed a button that sent the jet into its fatal descent, the prosecutor told a news conference carried on live television.    TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY  NO SALES. NO ARCHIVES. FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NOT FOR SALE FOR MARKETING OR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS.
Undated file picture of co-pilot Andreas Lubitz is seen via Facebook March 26, 2015. 

The co-pilot of the Germanwings airliner that crashed in the French Alps killing all 150 people aboard appears to have brought the A320 Airbus down deliberately, the Marseille prosecutor said on Thursday (March 26).

German Andreas Lubitz, 28, left in sole control of the Airbus A320 after the captain left the cockpit, refused to re-open the door and operated a control that sent the plane into its final, fatal descent, the prosecutor Brice Robin told a news conference.

“Alone at the controls of this Airbus A320, the co-pilot manipulates the buttons of the flight monitoring system, to effect the descent of the aircraft. The act of selecting the altitude can only be deliberate,” he said.

“The most plausible, realistic interpretation as far as we are concerned is that the co-pilot — through voluntary abstention, through voluntary abstention — refused to open the door of the cabin to the captain,” he added.

Robin said Lubitz was not known as a terrorist and there were no grounds to consider the crash as a terrorist incident.

He also said passengers’ screams could be heard on the recordings just before the final impact.

“I think that the victims only realised at the last minute, at the very last minute, because in the audio file the shouts are only heard in the last moments before impact,” the prosecutor said.

Robin said the identification process for the bodies of the 150 victims of the crash had begun.

Reuters/BFMTV