consulted felt he was unfit to fly, a French prosecutor said Thursday.
The doctors
didn't report their concerns to Andreas Lubitz's employers, however,
because of German patient privacy laws, Marseille Prosecutor Brice Robin
told reporters in Paris.
Robin
met with families of victims Thursday and updated reporters on the
status of the investigation into the March 24 crash, which killed all
150 people aboard. Families are just starting to receive remains of
their loved ones and will start holding burials in the coming days and
weeks.
Robin said the
investigation so far "has enabled us to confirm without a shadow of a
doubt ... Mr. Andreas Lubitz deliberately destroyed the plane and
deliberately killed 150 people, including himself."
Investigators
say Lubitz locked the pilot out of the cockpit and flew the plane into a
French mountainside, after having researched suicide methods and
cockpit door rules and practiced an unusual descent.
Robin
said Lubitz had also investigated vision problems, and "feared going
blind" — a career-ending malady for a pilot. Lubitz had suffered
depression in the past and been on anti-depressants.
Lubitz had seven medical
appointments within the month before the March 24 crash, including three
appointments with a psychiatrist, Robin said. Some of the doctors felt
Lubitz was psychologically unstable, and some felt he was unfit to fly,
but "unfortunately that information was not reported because of medical
secrecy requirements," the prosecutor said.
In
Germany, doctors risk prison if they disclose information about their
patients to anyone unless there is evidence they intend to commit a
serious crime or harm themselves.
German
prosecutors have said he had no actual physical ailments. Robin said
Lubitz complained of seeing flashing lights but that there was no
apparent "organic" reason for Lubitz's apparent vision troubles.
Germanwings
and parent company Lufthansa have said that Lubitz had passed all
medical tests and was cleared by doctors as fit to fly.
The
question for investigators now is who could be held responsible. The
prosecutor upgraded the investigation from a preliminary probe to a
full-fledged manslaughter inquiry, which hands the case to investigating
magistrates who can file eventual charges against people or entities.
German lawyer Peter Kortas,
whose firm represents relatives of 34 victims, said negotiations with
Germanwings about compensation began several days ago. Families were
also seeking answers about delays in the return of victims' remains.
"In
this moment everything else is not as important as the fact that the
bodies, (the) remains be returned to their families," Kortas said. "It's
already more than two and a half months since the crash happened, so
it's finally necessary to get to closure."
"The loss of the relatives should be compensated with also a suitable
amount of money," he added. "There are two points in these negotiations:
First, the material loss for the material damages, and it is also about
damages for pain and suffering."
The
first burial is expected Friday. Nearly half of the victims were
German, 47 were Spanish and there were 17 nationalities among the
remainder.
___
Masha
Macpherson in Paris, Geir Moulson and Kirsten Grieshaber in Berlin and
Alan Clendenning in Madrid contributed to this report.
___
This
story corrects an earlier version to show that Lubitz had seven medical
appointments in the month before the crash, not that he had seen seven
doctors.
Source: AP

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