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The co-pilot of the plane crashed in the Alps was sick leave and could not fly

He hid the company

USPA NEWS - The prosecution of Düsseldorf reported Friday that the co-pilot flight 4U9525 Germanwings, Andreas Lubitz, allegedly deliberately crashed the machine, with 150 people aboard, was sick and could not fly. One detail that Lubitz hid the airline.
According to the prosecution of Düsseldorf, among the papers found by police at the home of Lubitz there was the co-pilot had broken and hidden from Germanwings medical certificate of sick leave. Agents also seized documents that "prove" that the co-pilot was in treatment. However, records will no suicide note was found, the German prosecutor said.
Previously, Andreas Lubitz had been six months on sick leave for depression. Confirmation that remained in treatment and the fact that it hid the airline seems to support the thesis advanced Thursday by the prosecutor of Marseilles, Brice Robin, the co-pilot deliberately crashed the plane, taking advantage of the aircraft commander had out of the cabin.
Rescuers are still searching the second plane's black box containing the parameters of flight. Comparing these data with those sounds recorded in the other black box that Wednesday was found among the wreckage, it may establish a best guess about what happened during the flight. However, what seems beyond doubt is that it was not an accident but a mass murder perpetrated by the person who at that time controlled the plane. Meanwhile, continue to recover bodies in a succession, as said the prosecutor of Marseilles, could last two weeks.
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