News

PARIS — After months of waiting, families of the 150 people killed when a Germanwings plane smashed into the French Alps in March will finally start burying their loved ones as the airline&#8… ...
Eight seconds later, the control yoke is pushed forward, tipping the tail up, ... Egyptair Flight 990 and Germanwings Flight 9525 are not exactly the same situation, ...
The co-pilot of the Germanwings plane that slammed into the Alps appears to have practiced for the deadly descent by setting controls to dangerously low altitudes during a flight earlier that day ...
Years before Andreas Lubitz crashed a commercial airliner into the French Alps, the FAA raised questions about his mental health.
Several Germanwings pilots refused to fly on Wednesday, a day after the airline's flight crashed in the French Alps, killing 150 people.
Families are grieving. Flight crews are in disbelief. Entire countries are in mourning. That much is clear. But much else about Germanwings Flight 9525, which crashed Tuesday in the southern ...
September 13, 2009 photo of Andreas Lubitz, who is believed to have deliberately crashed Germanwings Flight 9525 into a mountain in southern France on March 24, 2015, killing all 150 people on board.
The lead prosecutor in the crash of Germanwings Flight 9525 said Wednesday he didn’t know of any video footage captured from inside the doomed plane — and urged anyone who may have such video ...
U.S. aviation regulators in the summer of 2010 initially declined to issue a pilot medical certificate to then-student aviator Andreas Lubitz, who five years later intentionally brought down ...
The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration temporarily refused to issue a medical certificate to Andreas Lubitz, the co-pilot believed to have deliberately crashed a Germanwings jetliner last month ...
A 2013 article being widely circulated by news outlets, journalists and social media users, which claims that the Federal Aviation Authority (FAA) praised Germanwings co-pilot Andreas Lubitz as ...
PARIS (AP) — The first victims' remains from the Germanwings crash will be flown from France to Germany on Tuesday, about 11 weeks after the disaster that killed all 150 people onboard.