MONTABAUR, Germany — One year before he made the cut for Lufthansa’s elite flying school, Andreas Lubitz worked at a Burger King behind a car wash, flipping Whoppers and frying fries and talking to co-workers about his dream.

One day, he told them, he would be a pilot.

That dream finally started to come together in 2008, when Lubitz would leave for Bremen, Germany, then travel to Phoenix, Arizona, to attend one of the industry’s most rigorous commercial pilot-training programs. But by 2009, Lubitz had walked out of the program he had fought so hard to attend, taking several months off and coming back to his home town. During that hiatus, Detlef Adolf – general manager at the Burger King here and Lubitz’s former boss – remembers his former employee stopping by the restaurant, buying a meal and sharing his distressing news.

“He had come back because he said the pressure was too great,” Adolf said Saturday.

Investigators now believe that Lubitz, 27, deliberately flew an Airbus A320 with 150 people on board into a remote corner of the French Alps on Tuesday, provoking a search for answers that is increasingly centering on his health, and his mental health in particular.

The picture emerging of Lubitz is one of a man haunted, whose ambition to fly brought him both pleasure and torment. Authorities have found doctors’ sick notes stating he was unfit for work, including on the day of the crash. On Saturday, Germany’s Bild newspaper quoted an interview with a former girlfriend of Lubitz’s who described a man who suffered from both vivid nightmares and delusions of grandeur.

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‘WE’RE GOING DOWN!’ NIGHTMARES

“At night, he woke up and screamed: ‘We’re going down!’ because he had nightmares,” the former girlfriend told Bild. “He knew how to hide from other people what was really going on with him.”

She added that last year he had warned, “One day I will do something that will change the whole system, and then everybody will know my name and remember it.”

Bild and the New York Times reported on Saturday that Lubitz was seeking treatment for vision problems, though it remained unclear whether the issue was real or perhaps psychosomatic. Such concerns could have led Lubitz to worry that he would permanently lose his medical certification to fly.

Here in his home town in southwestern Germany, a city of 13,000 dotted with traditional houses and well-tended lawns, the mood shifted between denial and sorrow over its local boy made good. Yet Lubitz was hardly a forceful presence here, and those who knew him described him as friendly, even bland – a non-memorable man who yelled out “Guten Tag” to neighbors on his morning runs but was otherwise quiet and reserved.

“He was inconspicuous, normal, nice,” said Michael Dietrich, the pastor at the Luther Church in Montabaur Lubitz’s confirmation class.

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But on the day Lubitz appeared to fly that Airbus into a chilly French mountainside, he was hiding a potentially deadly secret: a chronic medical condition that a doctor had determined was serious enough to keep him out of the sky.

Authorities would not reveal the exact nature of Lubitz’s illness. But an official from the German prosecutor’s office in Düsseldorf, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to reveal details beyond an official statement, said earlier that the doctors’ notes were related to a “long-lasting condition.” Asked whether they were also related to psychiatric problems, he said, “Read between the lines.”

DEPRESSION SIDELINED PILOT SCHOOL

The comments came after Germany’s Bild newspaper reported that Lubitz had been treated for at least one “serious depressive episode” so bad that he had to suspend flight training for several months in 2009. On Friday, the Rheinische Post also reported that the medical notes discovered in Lubitz’s apartment came from at least two doctors – suggesting he may have been searching for a favorable diagnosis and possibly feared losing his medical certification to fly.

German aviation authorities said that Lubitz’s medical file, tied to his pilot’s license, contained a notation that he was required to have “special regular medical examinations,” but such citations can relate to a wide range of conditions.

Yet the prospect that mental health problems may have figured in the crash of the Germanwings plane additionally shined a spotlight on what critics call flaws in the regular medical checks required of airline pilots, who must pass as many as two exams per year. Such tests, however, are largely geared toward catching physical ailments, such as vision or heart problems, that could impair performance in a cockpit. But mental health tests in fitness evaluations are often cursory, sometimes amounting to little more than a written questionnaire.

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“Typically, there are no tests applied to identify psychological diseases,” said Andreas Adrian, an aviation doctor who evaluates Lufthansa’s and other airlines’ pilots in Bremen, Germany. “Maybe you are giving someone a questionnaire to answer, but, of course, you can get a good actor and he can easily hide any issues.”

The debate intensified on Friday over whether mental health should be more deeply probed – an effort strongly opposed by some pilot groups and others who say such a policy could add to the pressures of an already high-stress job.

MENTAL HEALTH TESTING FALLOUT

More rigorous mental health testing could “uncover thousands of people who are going through difficult times in their lives and prevent them flying when they are perfectly capable of carrying out their normal day jobs,” said Philip Baum, editor of the magazine Aviation Security International. “You will have to employ far more pilots, and it would be an additional stress and could make things worse.”

The possibility that Lubitz may have hidden his condition – a task that could have been made easier by strict medical privacy laws in Germany – might help explain how he passed his flight training program. Lufthansa chief executive Carsten Spohr said this week that his company, which owns Germanwings, was never informed of the reason for Lubitz’s medical leave in 2009, a period in which the newspaper Bild said Lubitz was suffering from clinical depression.


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