Germanwings Pilot’s Last Email Reveals He Was Afraid Of Going Blind

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Germanwings co-pilot Andreas Lubitz sent a distressing email to his doctor before he crashed the A320 jet into the French Alps last year killing 150 people.

The paranoid suicide pilot was suffering depression and sent an email to his doctor just weeks before the atrocity revealing his fear of going blind. “I am afraid to go blind… I can’t get this possibility out of my head,” Lubitz wrote.

Mail Online reports:

Lubitz, then 27, slammed the A320 jet into the French Alps on March 24, killing all 149 passengers and crew on board.

The contents of the email he sent to his doctor two weeks before the atrocity have now finally been revealed.

In the email, published by German newspaper Bild, he said: ‘I am afraid to go blind and I can’t get this possibility out of my head.’

It emerged after the crash that Lubitz was suffering from both depression and loss of vision – and feared his conditions would cost him his job as a pilot.

The email revealed he was taking the highest dose of Mirtazapine, an anti-depressant which is also used as a drug to induce sleep.Germanwings

Lubitz, who put the plane into a steep dive after locking his co-pilot out of the cockpit, said the increased medication was making him more restless and made him panic about his vision.

He also told his therapist that he was bothered about the permanent tension he felt in his eyes and wrote: ‘If it wasn’t for the eyes, everything would be fine.’

The doomed flight had taken off from Barcelona and was heading for Dusseldorf.

It was later revealed that Lubitz had, in the five years before the crash, consulted 41 different doctors.

He was suffering from severe depression which almost led to him taking his own life a few years before.

The final report on the accident will be released on March 13, according to the Office of Research and Analysis of France .

Bild has released further details about Lubitz and his health and the role various doctors played in giving him sick notes.

The newspaper says that two days after the air crash, a psychiatrist told the police: ‘Do not tell me he has flown a plane.’ Germanwings

 

3 Comments

  1. This was a cover story for a flightware glitch that dove the plane down, or a actual evidence of demon possession.

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