Germanwings Crash Video Shows Passengers Screaming ‘Oh My God’ Seconds Before Fatal End, Prosecutors Deny Authenticity Amidst Publications Claim

The Germanwings Crash video showing the ill-fated moment of the passengers, seconds before it crashed into the French Alps is a hoax.

Marseilles-based prosecutor Brice Robin claimed there is no Germanwings crash video taken inside the cabin and he is not aware of any existence of a video contrary to the report made by German Daily Bild and French magazine Paris Match, Daily Mail reports.

A CNN report shows that Julian Reichelt, editor-in-chief of Bild online was being interviewed claiming that he had seen the final moment of Flight 9525 Germanwings crash video where passengers can be heard screaming "Oh My God" in various languages before they finally hit their fatal end.

Germanwings Flight 9525 crashed into the French Alps on March 24 killing all 150 passengers. Several reports claimed that Lubitz deliberately crashed the plane. He locked out the pilot from the cockpit as he intentionally plans to hit the French Alps.

The Germanwings crash video report came after Lufthansa, the parent company of the Germanwings claimed that the Andreas Lubitz, co-pilot accused for mass murdering the 149 passengers was reported halting his pilot training for several months due to episodes of severe depression.

The internal investigations appeared that Lufthansa, the parent company of the Germanwings was aware of Lubitz's condition but he was still allowed to continue his pilot training and even entered the cockpit despite his mental condition.

Reichelt claimed that the Germanwings crash video is "indisputably authentic." He added he is confident that he saw a hazy video of the plane's interior where everyone seemed to be screaming as if they knew what's going to happen.

He also described the metallic banging sound that suggests that the pilot was trying to open the cockpit door. The Germanwings crash video was clearly described in a collaborative report of the German daily Bild and French magazine Paris Match. It was not shown online, according to the Independent.

Reichelt stated that the Germanwings crash video with 'totally blurred and chaotic scene' came from a reliable source close to the investigation. The said video apparently came from a memory chip of a mobile phone collected from the crash site.

Despite the stance of the publications German daily Bild and French magazine Paris Match, the French prosecutor strongly denied presence of such video. He claimed that anyone who has any video should surrender it to the investigators.

Robin referred the Germanwings crash video report as "completely wrong" and "unwarranted." To shed some light on the reported video, the French prosecutor added that all mobile phones found must be brought to the the Criminal Research Institute in Rosny-sous-Bois, near Paris for complete analysis.

Until to this day, no single mobile phone was analyzed in the research center.

The Germanwings crash video comes same time after the French magazine Paris Match reported the conversation between the pilot and Lubitz where he was asking the pilot to leave him in the cockpit alone as revealed in the aircraft's black boxes.

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