I suspect the Germanwings Flight 9525 crash investigation assigns some blame to someone. There's a difference between accidents and deliberate action by motivated actors.
> suspect the Germanwings Flight 9525 crash investigation assigns some blame to someone
Read the synopsis [1].
Blaming the co-pilot would be fruitless. He's dead. There's no chance for retributive justice. And if he's the problem, the problem's solved: he's dead. Nothing more to do. Except, of course, there is. Blaming him is simply an unproductive emotional comfort.
Instead, the report examines the crash's root causes. The "co-pilot’s probable fear of losing his right to fly as a professional pilot if he had reported his decrease in medical fitness to an AME." The
"financial consequences generated by the lack of specific insurance covering the risks of loss of income in case of unfitness to fly." The "lack of clear guidelines" on when conditions need to be reported.
Addressing these factors helps prevent the next problem. Blaming the co-pilot actually does the opposite.
3.2 Causes blames the copilot in its first sentence. They absolutely tackle other failings of the systems and processes for it to get to this point, but there’s blame here, for a deliberate malicious act.
Of course the co-pilot is to blame. But that isn’t where the report starts nor ends. It’s incidental to fixing the problem. Those who choose to focus on blame are indeed propagating the root problems that led to the crash. Same in most other circumstances.
Read the synopsis [1].
Blaming the co-pilot would be fruitless. He's dead. There's no chance for retributive justice. And if he's the problem, the problem's solved: he's dead. Nothing more to do. Except, of course, there is. Blaming him is simply an unproductive emotional comfort.
Instead, the report examines the crash's root causes. The "co-pilot’s probable fear of losing his right to fly as a professional pilot if he had reported his decrease in medical fitness to an AME." The "financial consequences generated by the lack of specific insurance covering the risks of loss of income in case of unfitness to fly." The "lack of clear guidelines" on when conditions need to be reported.
Addressing these factors helps prevent the next problem. Blaming the co-pilot actually does the opposite.
[1] https://bea.aero/uploads/tx_elydbrapports/BEA2015-0125.en-LR...