What's new

What medical condition caused Andreas Lubitz to fly Germanwings 1525 into the ground?

St. Phatty

Active member
Mr. Lubitz was the 27 year old co-pilot of a German passenger airplane. In 2015 he barricaded himself into the cockpit and flew the airplane into the ground.

I didn't think about it much until I noticed the slight modifications in the Wikipedia description of the incident, indicating that some facts of his medical condition were being withheld from the general public.


"At first, though, it manifested with psychosomatic symptoms: Lubitz was certain he was going blind. He began visiting ophthalmologists and neurologists at the rate of three or four appointments a week, complaining that he was seeing stars, halos, flashes of light, streaks, and flying insects. He was also suffering from light sensitivity and double vision. “He was full of fear,” one ophthalmologist noted. Doctors examined his eyes and brain using a variety of state-of-the-art equipment, but found nothing wrong."

https://www.gq.com/story/germanwings-flight-9525-final-moments

"Three days after the crash, German detectives searched Lubitz's Montabaur properties and removed a computer and other items for testing. They did not find a suicide note nor any evidence his actions had been motivated by "a political or religious background".[108][109][110] During their search of Lubitz's apartment, detectives found a letter in a waste bin indicating he had been declared unfit to work by a doctor. Germanwings stated it had not received a sick note from Lubitz for the day of the flight. News accounts said Lubitz was "hiding an illness from his employers";[111][112][113][114][115] under German law, employers do not have access to employees' medical records, and sick notes excusing a person from work do not give information about medical conditions.[116]

The following day, authorities again searched Lubitz's home, where they found evidence he was taking prescription drugs and suffered from a psychosomatic illness.[117][118] Criminal investigators said Lubitz's web searches on his tablet computer in the days leading up to the crash included "ways to commit suicide" and "cockpit doors and their security provisions".[91][92][93] Prosecutor Brice Robin said doctors had told him Lubitz should not have been flying, but medical secrecy requirements prevented this information from being made available to Germanwings.[119][120]

In the weeks before the BEA's preliminary report, the investigation into Lubitz found he had been treated for suicidal tendencies prior to his training as a commercial pilot and had been temporarily denied a US pilot's license because of these treatments for depression.[121][122][123] The final report of the BEA confirmed the preliminary report's findings, saying the co-pilot began showing symptoms of psychotic depression.[2][f] For five years, Lubitz had frequently been unable to sleep because of what he believed were vision problems; he consulted over forty doctors and feared he was going blind.[119][120][124] Motivated by the fear that blindness would cause him to lose his pilot's licence, he began conducting online research about methods of committing suicide before deciding to crash Flight 9525.[2][67][120][124][125]"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanwings_Flight_9525
 

Dog Star

Active member
Veteran
If you wish to kill self its best to do solo... not with hundreds behind self..

then i look documentary on spies and one guy talked about machine that can
induce depression and its beam type of weapon.. they use it for years on people
and its a very effective.. need to found this documentary and will post it later here...
 

Latest posts

Latest posts

Top