Windsor Star

Co-pilot was treated for suicidal tendencies, prosecutor­s say

- TINO ANDRESEN AND NICHOLAS BRAUTLECHT

DUSSELDORF, GERMANY — Andreas Lubitz, the Germanwing­s co-pilot believed to have deliberate­ly crashed Flight 9525 into the French Alps, was treated in the past for suicidal behaviour.

“Several years ago, before receiving his pilot’s licence, the co- pilot was in psychologi­cal treatment for a longer period for observable suicidal tendencies,” Dusseldorf prosecutor­s, who are leading the German investigat­ion, said Monday.

“Thereafter and until the end, medical consultati­ons and periods of sick leave occurred, without suicidal tendencies or aggression toward others being certified.”

Authoritie­s said for the first time Monday that they’ve created a homicide commission to probe whether Lubitz intentiona­lly crashed the jet en route from Barcelona to Dusseldorf.

Police in Dusseldorf have assigned 50 homicide detectives to the case as part of a group working on the investigat­ion that has numbered as many as 200, one of the city’s largest police operations in decades.

The 27-year-old Lubitz com- pleted his training in 2012, then worked for 11 months as a flight attendant before becoming a Germanwing­s pilot in 2013. Carsten Spohr, chief executive officer of the low- cost airline’s parent Deutsche Lufthansa, said last week that Lubitz took leave “for several months” during his studies, which he started in 2008.

Prosecutor­s said Monday they’re still trying to determine a possible motive after voice recordings indicated that he locked his captain out of the cockpit before directing the plane into a French mountain slope, killing himself and 149 passengers and crew. His medical files reveal no signs of physical ailments, prosecutor­s said.

One explanatio­n is that he possibly harboured a mental llness that threatened to end his career. He was suffering from a psychosoma­tic sickness, according to someone close to the investigat­ion. Prosecutor­s retrieved unfilled prescripti­ons for tranquilli­zers to fight depression in his apartment, Bild Zeitung reported.

Any revelation­s about his medical history may help shed light on Lubitz’s state of mind and whether he may have cracked under the realizatio­n that his failing health was jeopardizi­ng his ambitions. Lubitz tore up doctors’ notes that declared him unfit to work, including on the day of the crash, suggesting he sought to hide his diagnosis from his employer and colleagues.

“He seemed completely normal,” Frank Woiton, a Germanwing­s captain who flew with Lubitz to Vienna in recent weeks, said in an interview with WDR television. Woiton said Lubitz told him he was happy to finally fly for the group, and that he wanted to pilot long-haul routes and become a captain on the Boeing 747 or the Airbus A380, the two biggest commercial aircraft.

Lubitz also suffered from a detached retina, blurring his vision — potentiall­y a careerendi­ng diagnosis for a pilot, Bild Zeitung said. Prosecutor­s declined to comment on the Bild reports.

The police are gathering DNA samples from the victims’ families to aid in the identifica­tion of the bodies. Searchers in France are still scouring the debris for the flight data recorder — important because it could help confirm findings from the voice recorder.

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Andreas Lubitz

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