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Patrick Sonderheimer Named as Captain in Germanwings Plane Crash

Patrick Sonderheimer was a 34-year-old father of two who tried unsuccessfully to break down the cockpit door as the plane rapidly descended.
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/ Source: NBC News

The captain of the Germanwings plane that crashed earlier this week, apparently at the hands of a co-pilot, was identified Saturday as Patrick Sonderheimer, sources told NBC News.

The captain joined Germanwings in May 2014, but had been with parent company Lufthansa and charter airline subsidiary Condor for more than 10 years. He had more than 6,000 hours of experience with the Airbus A320 model that crashed, a Lufthansa spokesman said Thursday.

Lufthansa told NBC News that both pilots were trained at a Lufthansa flight training center in Bremen, Germany, which included a stint in Phoenix.

Lubitz, 27, locked Sonderheimer out of Germanwings Flight 9525's cabin and steered the plane into the French Alps on Tuesday, killing all 150 on board, investigators said.

Lubitz left no suicide note, but German prosecutors said they found torn-up doctor's notes excusing him from work while searching his home. Germanwings has said it did not receive a sick note for the day of the crash.

Investigators did not elaborate on the illness, or say whether it was mental or physical. Sources told The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal on Saturday that Lubitz had been examined for vision problems that could have affected his ability to do his job, but that was not verified by NBC News.

The cockpit voice recorder taped Lubitz and the captain talking naturally and having a "very normal conversation," Marseille prosecutor Brice Robin told a news conference earlier this week. Just before 10:30 a.m., Robin said, the captain left the flight deck — likely to take a bathroom break — and handed controls to Lubitz.

A couple of minutes later, Lubitz put the plane into an unapproved descent, Robin said. The captain was heard trying to get back in through the double-locked door on the flight deck, calling out to his co-pilot and knocking, but Lubitz never responded, Robin said.

Lubitz said nothing in the final eight minutes leading up to the crash, but his breathing could be heard. An altitude warning sounded as the plane neared the mountaintops; the next sound was more forceful banging on the flight deck door, Robin said. The last sounds on the cockpit recorder before impact were passengers' screams.