Germanwings
pilot rehearsed crash on outbound flight-investigators
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[May 06, 2015]
PARIS (Reuters) - The Germanwings
co-pilot suspected of deliberately crashing a jet in the Alps in March
practiced entering the fatal descent settings on the previous, outbound
flight, investigators said.
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The changes in autopilot settings, mimicking those which crashed
the jet on its way back to Duesseldorf from Barcelona some two hours
later, would barely have been noticeable because the jet was already
descending, investigators said.
"I can't speculate on what was happening inside his head; all I can
say is that he changed this button to the minimum setting of 100
feet and he did it several times," said Remi Jouty, director of the
French BEA accident investigation agency.
Shortly after the aircraft had reached cruise height on the return
flight on which all 150 aboard died, the captain told Lubitz he was
leaving the cockpit and asked him to take over the radio.
Just over 30 seconds after the door closed, leaving Lubitz alone in
the cockpit, the 27-year-old entered the instruction he had
previously rehearsed, ordering the plane to descend to 100 feet on
autopilot: easily low enough to crash into the mountains ahead. He
then altered another dial to speed the jet up.
The findings come from examination of cockpit voice recordings and
flight data taken from the aircraft's two 'black boxes'.
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The BEA, whose investigation runs in parallel to judicial probes,
will issue a final report in about a year that may include
recommendations on cockpit doors and the handling of pilots' medical
records by the airline industry.
(Reporting by Tim Hepher; Editing by James Regan and Andrew Callus)
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