Malaysia Airlines Flight Goes Missing En Route to China

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It was planned. It was carried out. The hijackers got away with it. Why is that so hard to believe?


Planned? Can you prove that, or at least cite evidence?

Could have been relatively spontaneous.

The pilots wife moved out of the house days before the flight.

The pilot, prior to departure, spent the day in court. He watched his favorite politician lose a criminal case and get sentenced to 5 years.

What frame of mind do you think he was in as he boarded the plane?
Anonymous
The plane was hacked. The hacker did not know how to fly and crashed it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Today WTOP reported that the Pilot's flight simulator had data deleted in February. They are trying to recover the deleted data.


I'm sure this is just part of owning a flight simulator, which after all is a computer. Why would have have posted youtube videos about his flight simulator if he was busy learning how to hijack a plane with it.


Malaysian police guarded the pilots house for over a week without searching it. During that time, they let several family members and friends enter and leave the house; some left carrying things in bags.

Anyone of the many visitors could have erased the logs.

The Malaysians are clearly incompetent as far as this investigation goes. Plus they repeatedly refused Interpol's offers of assistance.

Add Malaysia to the list of countries I never need to visit.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It was pilot suicide. He went on one final joy ride before he crashed it into the Indian Ocean. After the co-pilot left the cockpit for a break the plane soared to 45,000 ft to knock everyone out. The pilot wanted to die over the Indian Ocean.


I agree - this best fits the evidence.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Today WTOP reported that the Pilot's flight simulator had data deleted in February. They are trying to recover the deleted data.


I'm sure this is just part of owning a flight simulator, which after all is a computer. Why would have have posted youtube videos about his flight simulator if he was busy learning how to hijack a plane with it.


Malaysian police guarded the pilots house for over a week without searching it. During that time, they let several family members and friends enter and leave the house; some left carrying things in bags.

Anyone of the many visitors could have erased the logs.

The Malaysians are clearly incompetent as far as this investigation goes. Plus they repeatedly refused Interpol's offers of assistance.

Add Malaysia to the list of countries I never need to visit.


They already said the logs were erased 5 weeks before the plane disappeared. They were deleted by people coming in and out of the pilot's house in the last 10 days.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It was pilot suicide. He went on one final joy ride before he crashed it into the Indian Ocean. After the co-pilot left the cockpit for a break the plane soared to 45,000 ft to knock everyone out. The pilot wanted to die over the Indian Ocean.


I agree - this best fits the evidence.


+1 He was a very clever guy by account of his YouTube videos; also, divorced and older, not much to lose.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It was pilot suicide. He went on one final joy ride before he crashed it into the Indian Ocean. After the co-pilot left the cockpit for a break the plane soared to 45,000 ft to knock everyone out. The pilot wanted to die over the Indian Ocean.


I agree - this best fits the evidence.


+1 He was a very clever guy by account of his YouTube videos; also, divorced and older, not much to lose.


Or everything to gain if he took money from a terrorist group in exchange for delivering them a plane.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It was pilot suicide. He went on one final joy ride before he crashed it into the Indian Ocean. After the co-pilot left the cockpit for a break the plane soared to 45,000 ft to knock everyone out. The pilot wanted to die over the Indian Ocean.


Why do you conclude suicide vs. steal the plane full of knocked out people?

If it was suicide why wait 7 hours to die?


He loved flying. I'm sure if you know you were going to die and could control what your last few moments would be like you would choose to die doing something you loved.


So true. I wouldn't mayday or anything. Bye bye women and children!


Even assuming the captain was suicidal ( which no one who knew him seems to believe to be the case but whatever), it's still a huge stretch to take down 260+ other people -- outright kill so many men, women and children -- on this suicide jaunt. It's so premeditated to lock the other pilot out of the cockpit, or kill him outright in the cockpit, then set about de pressurizing the cabin, disabling all communications, only to then present this laid back imbalanced that caused him to just want to fly peacefully across the Indian Ocean for 7 hours with his thoughts. I don't buy it without some indication that this guy was truly nuts. He looks like a kind father, grandfather, and family man in the pictures.


He definitely comes across as the bolded above. Seems to be a truly stand-up guy. But from what Ive seen personally, its difficult to guage such people and when they snap, its very bad.
Anonymous
I don't understand why the sightings of a plane flying low over the Madives is considered false now. Now do they know it was a different plane or not a plane at all?

Also, how the fuck could they let family members in and out the pilot's home before searching?

Supposedly the main pilot was a good Samaritan doing lots of volunteer work therefore I would assume he wouldn't want to kill all those people even if he was suicidal. Then again, you never know what is in someone's heart. A lot of people who committed terrible crimes were known as "pillars" in the community.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Aliens.


Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It was pilot suicide. He went on one final joy ride before he crashed it into the Indian Ocean. After the co-pilot left the cockpit for a break the plane soared to 45,000 ft to knock everyone out. The pilot wanted to die over the Indian Ocean.


I agree - this best fits the evidence.


+1 He was a very clever guy by account of his YouTube videos; also, divorced and older, not much to lose.


Or everything to gain if he took money from a terrorist group in exchange for delivering them a plane.


Hmmmm. Maybe the family took evidence away because they would profit from a payout. I hope the authorities are monitoring the family members who entered the home carefully.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote: I don't understand why the sightings of a plane flying low over the Madives is considered false now. Now do they know it was a different plane or not a plane at all?

Also, how the fuck could they let family members in and out the pilot's home before searching?

Supposedly the main pilot was a good Samaritan doing lots of volunteer work therefore I would assume he wouldn't want to kill all those people even if he was suicidal. Then again, you never know what is in someone's heart. A lot of people who committed terrible crimes were known as "pillars" in the community.


+1 Exactly.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It was pilot suicide. He went on one final joy ride before he crashed it into the Indian Ocean. After the co-pilot left the cockpit for a break the plane soared to 45,000 ft to knock everyone out. The pilot wanted to die over the Indian Ocean.


I agree - this best fits the evidence.


+1 He was a very clever guy by account of his YouTube videos; also, divorced and older, not much to lose.


But the co-pilot had said "alright, good night" 12 minutes after the new coordinates had been poked into the computer.
So co-pilot was in on it.
Unless the pilot had previously recorded co-pilots voice on his iPhone and replayed it to lead you off the scent.
Anonymous
Basic known Facts
0041 - Plane departs
0107 - ACARS communication sends report. (News conference today denied yesterday's news that reprogrammed route was in this report)
0119 - Co pilot says All right, good night as Malaysia ATC signs off and turns flight over to Vietnam ATC
0121 - transponder is turned off
0122 - Plane is off Malaysia radar screen - does not appear on Vietnam radar but Vietnam ATC assumes flight is delayed
0137 - expected ACARS report is not received
02?? - Vietnam ATC informs Malaysia ACT that flight 370 has not been in contact and not on radar
0215 - Malaysia military loses radar contact with with is believed to be the MH370 in the south part of the Andaman Sea. Malayisa confirms that prior to 0125 the plane made a series of deliberate sharp turns navigating by waypoints
0240 - Flight is declared missing
0811 - Last satellite ping
Anonymous
Why does everyone think it was the pilot and not the co-pilot? He was young and impulsive (evidenced by women in the cockpit). Also, he was the one who said "alright, goodnight." It seem odd that someone would say that under duress, especially when according to the experts there are about 6 ways to alert a terrorist without seeming to.

That phrase, according to pilots, is a nicety, obviously not a necessity. Is it coincidental that 2 minutes later the transponder went off? Or, did he say it as part of a plan to divert any suspicion. Hey things are alright here, even if you don't hear from our communications system in 30 minutes as scheduled.
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