bbm above
AUSTRALIANWEBSLEUTH You have raised many interesting possibilities and I had just finished reading an article I found "disturbingly odd."
"I told him, ‘Your father is too old to be alone.' And he said, "Just one or two more flights...then I'm just going to be with Papa."'
Captain Sumeet Sabharwal: ‘Just one or two flights left, then I am going to be just with Papa': Air India pilot's last words haunt neighbours as Powai says goodbye to Captain Sumeet Sabharwal | Mumbai News - Times of India
Read more at:
Captain Sumeet Sabharwal: ‘Just one or two flights left, then I am going to be just with Papa': Air India pilot's last words haunt neighbours as Powai says goodbye to Captain Sumeet Sabharwal | Mumbai News - Times of India
Had the captain recently contacted his HR and tell them he wanted to retire? Was he depressed
over his aging Father's health? Why not just consider hiring a caregiver?
Something just seems so "off" for lack of a better word. Family issues (Y) marital issues (N).
Well, to start with, a "good Indian boy" who's unmarried at 55 would be questionable. Of two options that come to mind (one obvious, but maybe less of a problem in a big urban city and a high-paid job), and the other, purely psychological, was he the only child, "the golden boy" whom the parents didn't want to share with anyone, or were the parents too controlling?
I would start with this; why unmarried? Or was he divorced (Indian wives leave, too, but usually for a very good reason)?
Anyhow, being the oldest/only son and living with the dad would be probably protective from suicide. He had the dad to take care of.
Likewise, he took care of passengers for many years. This, and his crew, would IMHO add one more layer of responsibility there.
We have people like Zakaria Ahmed Shah, but IMHO it was more an aberrant form of political terrorism because it is well-understood what he protested against.
Looking towards own lonely old age is different. I'd start here.
And, of the two pilots, he'd know the plane better.
On the other hand, the young pilot, not too experienced but with the family in aviation, could have had own problems too.
Or maybe it could be momentous lapse of consciousness, like an automatism during a micro-seizure? Nothing planned?
I am thinking of how easy or difficult, practically, it would be to switch off both switches? I assume it takes some force? And would the black box be able to tell from what side it was done?
Could someone be standing above the pilots and do it by the foot, btw?