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Thursday, March 26, 2015

German Plane Crash Will Be Revealed To Be A Terrorist Event, However, We Will Never Know It. Why Did It Take Two Days To Reveal The Co-Pilot's Name When We Knew The Captain Immediately? Germanwings Knew Something And Did Not Want It Revealed. What Else Are They Hiding?

Germanwings Co-Pilot Named as Andreas Lubitz

Flying club that he joined as a youth issues notice of death

French prosecutor Brice Robin said noises like a door being kicked down can be heard on the black box 
recording recovered from Tuesday’s plane crash in the French Alps. Mark Kelly reports.
FRANKFURT—Andreas Lubitz, the 28-year-old co-pilot who authorities 
say appeared to fly Germanwings Flight 9525 intentionally into the French 
Alps, had passed all flight training and psychological screening and had no 
record of problems, the chief executive of the airline’s parent company said 
Thursday.
Deutsche Lufthansa AG Chief Executive Carsten Spohr said at a news 
conference that he had no indications why Mr. Lubitz, a German national, 
would have intentionally crashed the plane.
Earlier in the day, the French prosecutor in charge of the crash probe named 
Mr. Lubitz as the co-pilot, and said he appeared to have locked himself 
inside the cockpit, preventing his more-experienced pilot to re-enter, after 
the pilot had left the cockpit. Then he appeared to intentionally crash the jet, 
the prosecutor said.
Mr. Lubitz joined budget carrier Germanwings in 2013 and had 630 flight
 hours, according to Lufthansa. He completed flight training in Bremen, 
Germany. Mr. Spohr said Mr. Lubitz had been qualified fit to fly and cleared 
all screening checks. But he also said he had interrupted his training for some 
months, without providing details. He said he couldn’t comment on Mr.
 Lubitz’s break in training, but said he was tested again for flight fitness
 after returning.
ENLARGE
German Interior 
Minister Thomas de 
Maizière said separately
 Thursday that German 
security forces have no
 indication that Mr. 
Lubitz had a terrorism
 background.
“According to our present 
information...we have no
 indication of any kind 
of terroristic background
 for him,” Mr. de Maizière said in a televised statement.
Some early biographical about Mr. Lubitz started to come into view. He was 
a member of a German flying club that said he joined the group as a youth to 
“fulfill his dream of flying.”
The LSC flying club, which is in the German state of Rhineland Palatinate,
 named Mr. Lubitz as a member and the co-pilot of the plane in a death notice
 on its website posted before the prosecutor’s statement.
An undated handout picture issued by Airbus shows an A320 cockpit. One of the two pilots of Germanwings Flight 9525 was locked out of the cockpit when it crashed. ENLARGE
An undated handout picture issued by Airbus shows an A320 cockpit. One of the two pilots of Germanwings Flight 9525 was locked out of the cockpit when it crashed. PHOTO: EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
He comes from the town of Montabaur, about 60 miles northwest of 
Frankfurt. The town issued a statement on Thursday expressing sympathy 
with the family, but didn’t name Mr. Lubitz.
It wasn’t immediately possible to reach family members or representatives of 
Mr. Lubitz.
Flight 9525 crashed Tuesday en route from Barcelona to Düsseldorf with 
150 people on board.
—Archibald Preuschat contributed to this article.

Photos: Germanwings Recovery Efforts Continue

Rescue workers return to scene as Germany and Spain mourn the crash of Flight 9525

Barcelona’s El Prat airport was a scene of grief Tuesday as family members of the flight’s passengers arrived there.
A student who knew some of the German students involved in a crashed plane, reacts during a minute of silence in front of the council building in Llinars del Valles, near Barcelona, Spain on Wednesday.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, left, French President Francois Hollande, center, and Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy on Wednesday pay respect to victims in front of the mountain where a Germanwings jetliner crashed Tuesday, in Le Vernet, France.
Students place candles at the Joseph-Koenig-Gymnasium high school in Haltern am See on Wednesday.
A photo released by the French Interior Ministry shows search operations at the Germanwings crash site.
Germanwings employees cry as they place flowers and light candles outside the company’s headquarters in Cologne, Germany.
The voice data recorder of the Germanwings jetliner that crashed Tuesday in the French Alps, after French investigators cracked open the plane’s badly damaged black box on Wednesday.
A helicopter of the French Gendarmerie takes off Wednesday from Seyne, France, for another search-and-rescue operation.
Members of the emergency services meet at dawn to start trying to recover the bodies and the remains of the Airbus A320 that crashed the previous day at the rescue center in Seyne. Officials said the flight was carrying 144 passengers and six crew members, and that all are feared dead.
A poster reading "Yesterday we were many, today we are alone" can be seen in front of a memorial of flowers and candles near the Joseph-König-Gymnasium secondary school in Haltern am See on Wednesday. Sixteen teenagers and two teachers from the school were assumed to be among the 150 dead in the crash.
Candles burn amid pins from airlines Condor, Germanwings and Lufthansa, from left, outside the Germanwings headquarters at Cologne-Bonn airport.
Wreckage and debris lie on the mountain slopes after the crash of the Germanwings Airbus A320 over the French Alps. The plane took off from Barcelona at about 10 a.m. local time on Tuesday.
A French civil security services helicopter flies near the hard-to-reach site in the French Alps.
French police and mountain-rescue teams arrive near the site of Tuesday’s plane crash.
Family members of the passengers of the crashed plane reacting at Barcelona's El Prat airport in Spain on Tuesday.
Barcelona’s El Prat airport was a scene of grief Tuesday as family members of the flight’s passengers arrived there.
A student who knew some of the German students involved in a crashed plane, reacts during a minute of silence in front of the council building in Llinars del Valles, near Barcelona, Spain on Wednesday.
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