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Germanwings crash probe to centre on psychological state of co-pilot

WATCH ABOVE: German prosecutors said on Monday that the co-pilot of the Germanwings passenger plane that crashed in the French Alps had received treatment for suicidal tendencies.

MARSEILLE, France – A French police official says European investigators are focusing on the psychological state of the 27-year-old German co-pilot who deliberately smashed an Airbus carrying 150 people into an Alpine mountainside.

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Returning Monday from a meeting with counterparts in Germany, judicial police investigator Jean-Pierre Michel told The Associated Press that authorities want to find out “what could have destabilized Andreas Lubitz, or driven him to such an act.”

READ MORE: Final moments of Germanwings flight show co-pilot urged captain to leave cockpit

Lubitz was the co-pilot of Germanwings Flight 9525, which slammed into a mountain near Le Vernet, France, last week en route from Barcelona, Spain, to Duesseldorf, Germany.

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Germanwings chief operating officer Oliver Wagner was meeting with relatives of the victims Monday in the southeastern French city of Marseille. He said a total of 325 family members have come to France.

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