Germanwings co-pilot intended to destroy plane, says French prosecutor – live updates
LIVE Updated 3s ago
A French team prepares to board a helicopter at an air base in Seyne-les-Alpes. Photograph: Boris Horvat/AFP/Getty Images
Mark Tran
@marktran
Thursday 26 March 2015 12.01 GMTLast modified on Thursday 26 March 201512.24 GMT
Key events
12.24pm - 12:24
The press conference has ended. I will post key points shortly.
1m ago - 12:23
The
Aviation Business Gazette has this information on Lubitz.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is recognizing Andreas Guenter Lubitz with inclusion in the prestigious FAA Airmen Certification Database.
The database, which appears on the agency’s website at
www.faa.gov, names Lubitz and other certified pilots who have met or exceeded the high educational, licensing and medical standards established by the FAA.
Pilot certification standards have evolved over time in an attempt to reduce pilot errors that lead to fatal crashes. FAA standards, which are set in consultation with the aviation industry and the public, are among the highest in the world.
5m ago - 12:19
The recovery of the bodies will go on probably until the end of next week. The family of the co-pilot have left Marseille and gone back.
11m ago - 12:13
Co-pilot was 28
There was no contact between Marseille control tower and the plane, despite numerous efforts to contact the plane in the last few minutes. The age of the co-pilot is 28, Robin discloses.
13m ago - 12:11
“I can’t call this a suicide, but it is a legitimate question to ask.”
14m ago - 12:10
No indication of terrorist action
“There is no element that indicates this is a terrorist action”
15m ago - 12:09
“Death was sudden and immediate,” says Robin.
17m ago - 12:07
Andreas Lubitz is named as co-pilot
Co-pilot is named as Andreas Lubitz by prosecutor.