Duesseldorf prosecutors said investigators found a tablet computer at co-pilot Andreas Lubitz's apartment in Duesseldorf and were able to reconstruct his computer searches from March 16 to March 23.
Based on information from the cockpit voice recorder, investigators believe the 27-year-old Lubitz locked his captain out of the A320's cockpit on March 24 and deliberately crashed the plane, killing everyone on board.
Prosecutors' spokesman Ralf Herrenbrueck said in a statement that Lubitz's search terms included medical treatment and suicide methods. On at least one day, the co-pilot looked at search terms involving cockpit doors and their security methods.
German prosecutors said personal correspondence and search terms on the tablet, whose browser memory had not been erased, "support the conclusion that the machine was used by the co-pilot in the relevant period.
French prosecutors, meanwhile, said the second black box from the Germanwings jet crash had been found - the data recorder that contains readings for nearly every instrument on the plane.
No video or audio from the cellphones of the 150 people aboard the plane who were killed in the March 24 crash has been released publicly. Today, Lt. Col. Jean-Marc Menichini told The AP that search teams have found cellphones, but they haven't been thoroughly examined yet. He would not elaborate.
Questions persist about journalist Frederic Helbert's reports in the French magazine Paris-Match and in the German tabloid Bild this week about the video that he says he saw. Helbert vigorously defended his reports in an interview today with The Associated Press.
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