And you didn't need to "get into his head" either. The existing
evidence is highly suggestive on an intentional act, making a guess that suicide was the "most likely" perfectly logical.
All of these other references to medical credentials, psychiatry degrees, hours flown in a C150, level of experience, "diagnosing a pilot", etc. etc. is just fluff. If the speculation was based on
why the pilot might have committed suicide then I'd agree that's trying to get into his head. I don't see a single statement from anyone that suggests that approach.
There you go again, trying to get into my head. I don't know the cause, and the NTSB already has the same evidence that I do.
Maybe someone should call them and tell them NOT to consider suicide as a possibility.