I know what you have to do, the pilot leaves the student on the flight alone, kills himself by jumping out of the plane.

A flight instructor from Argentina jumped out of the plane to death in the middle of a flight lesson, telling the shocked student: “E know what you should do”, and letting it lower the air vehicle itself.
Leandro Andres Bertazzo was identified as the instructor who jumped from Cessna 150G plane. on the city of Toledo, central Argentina, on July 4th, leaving his student on flight, Prosecutor General Carlos Gonella announced.
“E know what you need to do, continue”, Bertazzo told 22-year-old Rosario, Argentinian media reported Todos Noticias (TN).
Bertazzo then removed his seat belt from his seat, removed the headphones, opened the plane door, and jumped out, reports New York PostPeriscope broadcast.
Rosario, who owns private pilot licenses, announced flight school officials Flying Parrot in Cordoba for the tragedy in the air and received instructions for emergency procedures, safely landing the training plane.
Álvarez, who had worked closely with Bertazzo, said he did not understand why his instructor jumped off the plane.
He made this tragic decision aboard a plane, with another person next to him. There is no way to think or understand it, but the human mind is very complex and unpredictable. That's why what happened”, Álvarez said, according to the media.
Prosecutors have launched an investigation into Bertazzo's death, as they have seized the plane to determine the circumstances that led to the fatal decline, the prosecutor general announced on Tuesday.
According to the media, Bertazzo allegedly had mental health problems and was enrolled in a psychiatric clinic without anyone's knowledge, except his immediate family.
He was in a neuropsytric institute, but no one knew. Only his family,”, discovered Álvarez.
Bertazzo had kept his difficulties hidden, since no one at flight school had noticed anything unusual about him.
There is a very close relationship between the student and the professional instructor, but none of those who flew with him or those who saw him could understand that he would make the decision to jump off the plane. Of course, something was wrong”, Álvarez told TN.
The training aircraft suffered no injuries, including the door.
Officials expressed surprise at Bertazzo's move, saying opening the flight doors is very difficult. They compared this to trying to open the door of a car during a drive of about 200 miles [200 km] an hour.
Bertazzo was a highly experienced pilot and had several licenses, including that of air transport pilot (ATP), commercial first-class pilot and flight instructor.
According to the media, during his career he had worked for a short period even in the neighbouring state, Chile./ Periscope.











