Black box suggests Germanwings crash was deliberate: Investigators

Wreckage of the Airbus A320 is seen at the site of the crash, near Seyne-les-Alps, French Alps.
Wreckage of the Airbus A320 is seen at the site of the crash, near Seyne-les-Alps, French Alps.
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Reuters, Paris :
France BEA’s aviation investigators said on Friday a second black box recovered from the Germanwings crash site indicated that the copilot deliberately crashed the airplane.
“A first reading shows that the pilot in the cockpit used the automatic pilot to put the airplane on a descent toward an altitude of 100 feet,” the BEA investigation office said in a statement.
“Then several times the pilot modified the automatic pilot settings to increase the speed of the airplane as it descended,” it added.
Data from the second black box found in the wreckage of the Germanwings flight that crashed last week in the French Alps confirm the co-pilot acted deliberately, investigators said today.
“A first reading shows that the pilot in the cockpit used the automatic pilot to descend the plane towards an altitude of 100 feet (30 metres),” said the French BEA crash investigation office in a statement.
“Then, several times during the descent, the pilot changed the automatic pilot settings to increase the aircraft’s speed,” added the investigators.
The latest information appeared to confirm the theory that co-pilot Andreas Lubitz deliberately smashed his plane into the mountains, killing all 150 people on board.
Authorities found the second black box, which contains technical flight data, yesterday after a gruelling nine-day search in difficult mountain terrain.
Data from the first black box, which records conversations in the cockpit, suggested that Lubitz, 27, locked his captain out and then deliberately set the plane on a deadly collision course with the mountains. The plane smashed into the mountains at a speed of 700 kilometres (430 miles) an hour, instantly killing everyone on board – half of them German and more than 50 from Spain.
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