Posted on 03/24/2014 5:06:49 PM PDT by B212
By Jonathan Pearlman, in Kuala Lumpur 9:00PM GMT 24 Mar 2014 Flight MH370 crashed into the Indian Ocean in an apparent suicide mission, well-placed sources revealed have revealed, as Malaysias prime minister announced that everyone on the missing aircraft had died. The team investigating the Boeing 777s disappearance believe no malfunction or fire was capable of causing the aircrafts unusual flight or the disabling of its communications system before it veered wildly off course on a seven-hour silent flight into the sea. An analysis of the flights routing, signalling and communications shows that it was flown in a rational way. An official source told The Telegraph that investigators believe this has been a deliberate act by someone on board who had to have had the detailed knowledge to do what was done ... Nothing is emerging that points to motive.
(Excerpt) Read more at telegraph.co.uk ...
Do life insurance policies payoff for suicide? How do you prove suicide at depths of 20,000 feet? The Captain’s estranged wife still hasn’t been questioned because of “Malaysian” custom. Were there money problems? Did something in his life become so unbearable or shameful that he was forced to take his own life? Would he take a plane full of passengers with him? Unfortunately, because of the inept Malay investigation none of these questions have been asked, which a rookie cop would know is the first thing you do.
I’ve wondered for a while if one of the crew wanted to kill himself, yet have insurance go to his family, and to do that, make sure the plane was not found.
It was different circumstances altogether, but when we shot down that Iranian plane, IIRC, there were dozens of bodies floating. It was very low in altitude, IIRC.
If that were my 300 million bucks, I think I'd spend a grand on a GPS tracker that was located in a way it couldn't be shut off. I'd know down to the meter where that thing hit the water. It seems foolish to not have this ability on every aircraft. We keep having these problems and every time, we have trouble tracking the dang airplanes...
I’m with you. My money is on rag heads did it. I’m just thinking it didn’t go as planned somehow... like, maybe Oracle had another salesman on board or something and it ended up smacking into the water somewhere. The jihadis have a track record of screwing up most things they try. We’ll never know if they don’t find that voice recorder and the odds of that are pretty iffy.
” I noticed that only 3 flights passed even remotely close to the current search area.”
Noticed that too. May be the reason whoever was at the controls ostensibly put it there. Remote.
“How do you prove suicide at depths of 20,000 feet?”
Well, I think that’s one of the things that has some thinking suicide. Hard to prove in this case.
Brilliant. Been saying that all along. The NSA tracks my calls but not my potential flights?
What makes me doubt that it was the captain was the fact that the co-pilot relayed, "All right, good night". AFTER they had assumed the altered course. It's possible that the co-pilot was coerced into making that statement, but it seems more likely that the disappearance was engineered by the co-pilot, or at the least that the captain and co-pilot were working together ( not as likely because they did not know each other all that well).
well I’m talking more in a private sense... just like about any contractor in the US puts a lo-jack on an air compressor... but an airline doesn’t on a 300 million dollar aircraft. Those are expensive assets and to allow them to just be lost and be stuck shrugging your shoulders seems to me pretty dang foolish and irresponsible.
I agree with you - the story may be true and accurate - but there is also great reason to doubt, and all public information is manipulated.
One thing I noticed about this claim is that the location in the deep southern ocean is truly inaccessible. No ordinary person can go out there and look, unlike say in the Mollaca Straits.
I suppose. But that presumes at least the flight attendants were incapacitated or he bypassed the cockpit door security. Otherwise the plane never would have gotten that far.
Of course, presuming this latest theory, whether or not they’ve latched onto it, is correct.
Fair enough. It flew into path less taken and NO ONE noticed? Really?
That is very cool.
Check any and all insurance policies on the pilot and who benefits from his death.
Odds are he bailed out before the plane went down -- or tried to.
MH370: Families Called to Urgent Meeting; Malaysia Press Conference 10 a.m. EDT 3/24/14
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3136667/posts
MALAYSIAN AUTHORITIES: The Plane Crashed With No Survivors
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3136697/posts
Malaysia Grand Prix pushes grieving families of jet passengers from hotel
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3136731/posts
Officials Say Missing Malaysia Airlines Plane Ended in the Southern Indian Ocean
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3136711/posts
WORLD NEWS Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 Ended in Indian Ocean, Prime Minister Says
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3136787/posts
How British satellite company Inmarsat tracked down MH370
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3136789/posts
Aussie Flight Disaster Film ‘Deep Water’ Shelved Over Eerie Resemblance to Missing Malaysia Flight
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/3136793/posts
According to the article, Inmarsat knew this location within 24 hours!
“Relatives of the missing passengers are angry that Inmarsat worked out within 24 hours that MH370 was likely to have crashed where the search is now concentrated, but it took a further 10 days for rescue teams to act on the information.”
I’ve read many reports from pilots who say there are good reasons for being “able” to turn off the transponder. So I don’t think you’re going to find that device “locked on” in the future.
I agree. But its always been that way. I remember as a very young man my grand father telling me to “believe about 1/2 of what you see, and nothing that you read”. No telling what he would have thought about this government.
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