This Article is From Apr 02, 2015

Germanwings Co-Pilot Researched Cockpit Doors, Suicide Online: Prosecutors

Germanwings Co-Pilot Researched Cockpit Doors, Suicide Online: Prosecutors

A handout photo shows a part of the crash site of the Germanwings Airbus A320 near Le Vernet, French Alps. (AFP photo)

Berlin:

German prosecutors said on Thursday the co-pilot suspected of deliberately crashing a Germanwings plane in the French Alps had searched online for information about suicide and cockpit doors in the week before the disaster.

A tablet computer which prosecutors said was used by Andreas Lubitz was found in a search of a flat he used in Duesseldorf, the prosecutor's office in the western city said in a statement.

"The browser history wasn't erased, in particular the search terms called up on this device in the period from March 16 to March 23 were able to be retraced," it said.

"The user focused on the one hand on medical treatment methods, in addition to informing himself about ways to commit suicide," it added.

On at least one day, Lubitz had also spent several minutes on search terms about "cockpit doors and their security provisions", the prosecutor's office said, adding it would not release the individual search terms.

Investigators believe Lubitz, 27, locked his captain out of the cockpit during the Barcelona to Duesseldorf flight on March 24 and deliberately flew the plane into a mountain, killing himself and the other 149 people onboard.

German prosecutors had said Monday that the co-pilot was treated for suicidal tendencies "several years ago", before he received his pilot's licence.

Lufthansa, which owns the low-cost Germanwings airline, said the following day that Lubitz had informed the carrier in 2009 that he had previously suffered from severe depression.

Meanwhile, authorities are hoping to unearth more clues as the second black box from the Germanwings plane has been found after a nine-day search.

Duesseldorf prosecutors are conducting the German-based part of the investigation into the crash. Seventy-two of the victims came from Germany, with many from the western region.

German daily Bild reported on Thursday that Lubitz told doctors he saw in the weeks before the crash that he was written off sick and not flying at the time.

Citing files obtained by investigators, it said that Lubitz had been involved in a car accident in late 2014 in which the airbag opened and injured him. He said he was suffering from trauma and poor vision.

The records also showed that Lubitz told his doctors he was on anti-depressants and Lorazepam, a mild tranquiliser used to treat anxiety.

However, it was not immediately clear whether he was actually taking the medication or how regularly.

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