Malaysia Airlines Flight 370: What most likely happened (Documentary)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
  • Malaysia Airlines Flight 370: What most likely happened
    Merch: my-store-d4ffb...
    Support Bad Things on Patreon: / badthings
    Bad Things: True Crime is a channel with all things true crime and mystery! Subscribe to stay updated on the most interesting true crime cases out there.
    ⚠️ Copyright Disclaimers
    • Section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Act states: “Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 106 and 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright.”
    • We use images and content in accordance with the RUclips Fair Use copyright guidelines

Комментарии • 343

  • @stephenwodz7593
    @stephenwodz7593 Год назад +93

    The idea of a mechanical failure makes ZERO sense. The zig-zag flight route, the turning off of the transponder, the lack of a mayday call, with no attempt to land anywhere, all point to human intervention from beginning to end.

    • @lorenzo2534
      @lorenzo2534 Год назад +11

      Bingo 💯

    • @mickeysmiths
      @mickeysmiths 11 месяцев назад +7

      Yes, agree 100%. It was controlled to the end..

    • @DeadNastyRust
      @DeadNastyRust 9 месяцев назад +6

      Pilot

    • @isabellind1292
      @isabellind1292 10 дней назад

      @@DeadNastyRust I agree w/you all. I also believe pre-eminent (retired NTSB) air crash investigator Greg Feith who believes the pilot deliberately crashed the plane.
      It's too bad that there are those Malaysians who won't even entertain that humans are capable of committing mass murder.

    • @user-ct2wx6ir7d
      @user-ct2wx6ir7d 10 дней назад

      @@DeadNastyRust I agree w/you all. I also believe pre-eminent (retired NTSB) air crash investigator Greg Feith who believes the pilot deliberately crashed the plane.
      Too bad there are those in Malaysia who won't even entertain that humans are capable of committing mass murder.
      Then, there's CNN's Don Lemon who threw in his 2-cents worth that it might've been swallowed up by a black hole.✈⚫🙄

  • @calzabbath
    @calzabbath Год назад +65

    Transponders and beacons shouldn't be capable of being turned off manually, just like flight recorders. The guy was crazy and took his failures too personally and dramatically thus ending almost 300 innocent lives.

    • @markakkerman-uc5li
      @markakkerman-uc5li Год назад

      😮

    • @manchesterisblue1023
      @manchesterisblue1023 Год назад

      yeah his wife was fugly too so idk why he was so upset

    • @behrwillsonn3181
      @behrwillsonn3181 Год назад +1

      They have to because if an electrical fire starts in the cabin, like with in a panel, the only way to stop the fire is to turn off the electrical system.

    • @jonathonsears6269
      @jonathonsears6269 Год назад

      Allegedly

    • @dawnwilson1529
      @dawnwilson1529 10 месяцев назад

      Good point...plus they need to find a way to make the batteries in the black boxes last longer.

  • @Sundaydish1
    @Sundaydish1 Год назад +113

    Turning the transponder off is a red flag. The only reason to do that during normal flight is to hide the planes location. You would have to have access to the cockpit and know where the transponder breaker was in order to do that. I think it's clear the plane was crashed on purpose. But the captain was not alone.

    • @paulklaes816
      @paulklaes816 Год назад +20

      If the co-pilot had stepped out of the cockpit, the pilot could keep him out by not unlocking the door for him to return. Likewise, all the air-to ground/satellite phones on a plane can be disabled in the cockpit. For security purposes there isn't much in the way of tools or objects on a plane that can be used to force open or break down the cockpit door once it is locked.

    • @Sundaydish1
      @Sundaydish1 Год назад +11

      @@paulklaes816 What I meant was we can't just assume it was the captain as there were 2 people in that cockpit. People are convicting the captain just because he had a shitty week. I think that is wrong.

    • @ivynyx1834
      @ivynyx1834 Год назад +12

      I thought leaving 1 person alone in the cockpit wasn't allowed after the German co pilot locked out the capt & crashed the plan into a mountain

    • @Sundaydish1
      @Sundaydish1 Год назад +7

      @@ivynyx1834 The Germanwings CFIT was a year after MH370 but, as flight deck doors lock automatically now, an FA has to be in the cockpit to unlock the door to let a pilot back in after a physiological break.

    • @GrizrazRex
      @GrizrazRex Год назад +6

      Some airlines may have not yet adopted such a policy in 2014.

  • @harrydemkee3580
    @harrydemkee3580 11 месяцев назад +7

    Interesting the pilots own family were the ones to give investigation the information about the pilots private life issues and unusual behavior in the weeks leading up to the crash and then claim he would never of taken his own life. None of us would want to think our family member could be capable of something like this but when looking at all the facts rationally there really is no other explanation. Just sad that in the taking of his own life he caused the death of so many innocent people 😢

  • @baroncalamityplus
    @baroncalamityplus Год назад +42

    While it isn't beyond a shadow of a doubt, pilot suicide seems the most likely cause.

    • @petejames1326
      @petejames1326 Год назад +1

      i agree and thats why malaysia is overing it up because suicide in ISLAM is HARAM, and its a huge scandal if they admitted it.

  • @johnskinner3108
    @johnskinner3108 Год назад +21

    After what happened on the Germanwings flight 9525, where there was no doubt of pilot involvement, convinces me that the same occurred on MH370

  • @thecitizen3870
    @thecitizen3870 10 месяцев назад +5

    He purposely flew into a zone where debris may never be found.

  • @stewartmillen7708
    @stewartmillen7708 Год назад +44

    An article I recall reading speculated that the pilot decompressed the airplane at 35,000 feet. When this is done, passengers and crew have only 5 minutes of oxygen available before they pass out and die, as the assumption is that the pilot will immediately take the plane down to 10,000 feet or less. But if not, then everyone else on board will quietly die without a struggle while the pilot still has several hours of oxygen and is the only living person on board. That sounds like the most likely occurrence.

    • @marksamuelsen2750
      @marksamuelsen2750 Год назад +4

      If that’s accurate then the Co-Pilot had to be involved!

    • @stewartmillen7708
      @stewartmillen7708 Год назад +25

      @@marksamuelsen2750 not necessarily. He could have locked the door behind the copilot when he went to the restroom, forcing to copilot as well to rely on the short-term oxygen supply.

    • @jrock28
      @jrock28 Год назад +2

      Asinine

    • @jeffisontheair
      @jeffisontheair Год назад +13

      Completely agree. Copilot locked out, decompression, and everyone passes out after running out of oxygen. Especially likely given the fact that this plane was airborne many hours later. The aircraft crashed after the engines flamed out from fuel exhaustion.

    • @joesands8860
      @joesands8860 Год назад +6

      If the pilot did it he would not have to lock the co-pilot out of the cockpit, he could easily have made an excuse to get out of his seat, get behind the co-pilot and quickly put him in a choke hold incapacitating and killing him quickly without anyone in the cabin knowing. Then depressurizing the cabin killing other flight crew and passengers.
      Afterwards make all those crazy maneuvers, setting the plane on auto pilot to stay over open waters, then let himself die of hypoxia.
      The plane would continue untracked until it ran out of fuel and hit the water and sunk into the depths.

  • @ahkauyong6960
    @ahkauyong6960 11 месяцев назад +4

    The whole episode is very fishy.
    The Maldives fisherman claimed they saw the place flying low in the air. They didn't searched that location but they searched the far south of the Indian Ocean. It doesn't make sense to me.

  • @petejames1326
    @petejames1326 Год назад +13

    its obvious this was no accident or terrible mechanical incident, the pilot obviously locked out the co pilot and than flew the plane himself into the souther indian ocean ON PURPOSE, motive? terrorism, or depression or boredom we dont know, but 100% it was done on purpose by the captain.

    • @carljcmjk8609
      @carljcmjk8609 Год назад +3

      Yep

    • @petejames1326
      @petejames1326 Год назад +6

      @@carljcmjk8609 if it was a hijacking, they would have made radio contact to declare an emergency OR to tell them what the hijackers demands are, like fly to Iran or fly to syria etc..nothing like that was made, it was pilot suicide 100% and malaysia wont admit it because suicide in islam is a grave HARAM violation and a very very bad look, im surprised anti semitic malaysia does not blame MOSSAD for this, im serious

    • @AriaXLee555
      @AriaXLee555 4 месяца назад

      There’s no proof he was in a terriost group

  • @AtomicExtremophile
    @AtomicExtremophile Год назад +14

    Turning off the transponder and having the same plot on his computer equates to I being the skipper.

  • @mentoncouve
    @mentoncouve Год назад +49

    I think you're correct on this one. I also believe the pilot to be responsible for the disappearance of the aircraft. He had a sinister enjoyment out of fabricating a perfect disappearance while he was committing suicide.

    • @johnstudd4245
      @johnstudd4245 Год назад +13

      I agree, and think that is by far the most likely explanation. Its a shame that he did not consider the lives of all the passengers. Making him a mass murderer of extreme numbers.

    • @gixxermeru
      @gixxermeru Год назад +2

      aggreed❤

    • @josiesiudut-bf2rj
      @josiesiudut-bf2rj Год назад +5

      Plane is under a passage deep in the Indian ocean 7th arc 900 miles off. International

    • @danbev9313
      @danbev9313 Год назад +1

      ​@@josiesiudut-bf2rj
      The plane will never be found and the bodies have long been consumed by sea creatues of the deep

    • @Sohltaker
      @Sohltaker Год назад +1

      Agreed… I had always thought it was mechanical until hearing more about his personal life. He clearly was not in the frame of mind to be flying. It also makes me wonder how many other pilots have at least considered it when things went sideways in their lives.

  • @debbieanne7962
    @debbieanne7962 Год назад +38

    I actually flew this route less than 12 months later. Malaysia Airlines retired MH370 to MH380. I didn't realise it was the same flight route until years later. The plane was completed full. One thing you didn't mention is if there was a mechanical fault? I guess all these years later we'll never know. And the aircraft was broken into thousands of pieces of debris. I remember our Australian prime minister stating "we won't stop looking until the plane is found " well that didn't happen!!

    • @markprange4386
      @markprange4386 Год назад +3

      The aircraft wasn't broken into thousands of pieces.

    • @marcelosoto-quiroga1965
      @marcelosoto-quiroga1965 Год назад +8

      No mechanical fault would have been so catastrophic not to allow the crew to make a mayday call. And if so, how the plane happened to continue flying for over 6 or 7 hours?
      According Canadian former pilot and air crash investigator Larry Vance's hypothesis, the B777 was just "landed" over the ocean, much like Capt. Sullenberger did on the Hudson river. The plane eventually sank almost intact, and only having lost a few pieces. That's the only way to explain why no seat cushions nor other floating pieces have been found, except those few that (not incidentally) are all from the outside of the aircraft.

    • @carljcmjk8609
      @carljcmjk8609 Год назад

      People are still looking for that plane ? Still till today many stuff is right on the ocean floor that hasn’t been found yet and some will
      Never be ?

    • @TimKyoutube
      @TimKyoutube Год назад

      I flew it as well. i paid only $400 for business class :)

    • @Sohltaker
      @Sohltaker Год назад +1

      In your Prime Minister’s defense, they did look exhaustively. They were one of the last countries to give up hope. There was probably nothing left to find at the point when they called off the search. The boxes no longer were pinging. And the amount of money being spent looking was no longer justified. So I do not feel as though they broke any type of faith with the crew and passengers of MH370 by no longer searching.

  • @stephenwodz7593
    @stephenwodz7593 Год назад +15

    It is THE most mysterious disappearance in aviation history, not just "one of" the most ...

    • @stuartlee6622
      @stuartlee6622 Год назад +1

      Try Pan American Flight 7, dear.

    • @joewas2225
      @joewas2225 Год назад +2

      @@stuartlee6622
      Wrong

    • @utcpresident1927
      @utcpresident1927 Год назад +5

      The disappearance of Amelia Earhart would certainly be in the conversation, and some might even include the infamous Flight 19 in the "Bermuda Triangle," though some modern theories on that one make a lot of sense without involving anything supernatural. Granted, MH37O would certainly top the list of "modern" aviation disappearances.

    • @scottwooledge6387
      @scottwooledge6387 9 дней назад

      Amelia Earhart is arguably as mysterious. Wreckage was never even found.

  • @elnino114
    @elnino114 Год назад +8

    According to the Netflix documentary "MH370: The Plane That Disappeared", Jiang Hui, the son of an MH370 passenger, mentioned that while waiting for answers, a girl came running up to him, showing that she was receiving a phone call from her father, who was on the plane. Unfortunately, it stopped ringing when she tried to pick up her phone. What about this???

    • @isabellind1292
      @isabellind1292 9 дней назад

      Google "BIG THINK" (Mar. 18/2023) "What Happened to Flight MH370? Don't believe what Netflix's documentary tells you."

  • @josephconnor2310
    @josephconnor2310 Год назад +6

    I too believe the pilot was responsible.

  • @saulphiri7127
    @saulphiri7127 Год назад +7

    Captain Sha murdered the other pilot and took control of the plane. The manual turning off of the transponder was him. His marriage was breaking apart. He went on a Suicide mission, Period!

  • @unajaneeskew2168
    @unajaneeskew2168 Год назад +5

    Since his life was troubled and family falling apart…he should have been grounded. At least until he was evaluated. His employer should have been notified by his wife and family. This could have been prevented!

    • @theblessedone9700
      @theblessedone9700 11 месяцев назад

      No one knew until when they had to find out what went wrong.

  • @pleiadesneptunes
    @pleiadesneptunes Год назад +8

    it is a bit like the Germanwings flight, where the suicidal mass-murdering 1st Officer did not point the nose down,he just sat there, until the plane crashed against a mountain. The doors fortified since 9-11 have so far cost hundreds of lives

  • @perhentzepetersen9310
    @perhentzepetersen9310 Год назад +9

    How is it even possible for a hijacker/hijackers to get access to the cockpit? So it HAS to be the pilot!

    • @debra6513
      @debra6513 Год назад +1

      They were known to let people into the cockpit, a real no no

  • @willo7734
    @willo7734 Год назад +27

    Great job laying out the facts. So much for all the conspiracy theories about aliens or the illuminati. I mean.. if the captain was in a deep depression for weeks, his marriage was breaking up, and he did nothing but play with a flight simulator and refused to talk to family beforehand it doesn’t take Sherlock Holmes to crack this case. It’ll still continue to be talked about as a huge mystery though because that’s way more fun than something banal like the pilot was a murderous piece of garbage.

  • @linda10989
    @linda10989 Год назад +12

    That was a huge area that had to be searched so I'm surprised that after the disappearance, the black box ping signal wasn't increased from 30 days to a longer time. I know it would take a while to see this put in place industry-wide, but no one even suggested this might be a good idea so the loss of a plane might be located sooner.

    • @AtomicExtremophile
      @AtomicExtremophile Год назад +6

      Or transmit signals in real time to ground and satellite...

    • @linda10989
      @linda10989 Год назад +1

      @@AtomicExtremophile Yes!!

    • @nexus9deluxe
      @nexus9deluxe Год назад +4

      The captain had sent over 90 messages on social media to a pair of pretty young girls.. That wasn't mentioned....

  • @TheXmeimei
    @TheXmeimei Год назад +3

    He wasn't the first rogue polite, and wont be the last one, who crashed a plane, taking passengers with him to hell.

    • @smithyboii1022
      @smithyboii1022 Год назад

      You really believe it was the pilot 🙄 4 top scientist’s aboard that plane,

    • @AriaXLee555
      @AriaXLee555 4 месяца назад

      Yes German wings flight 9525..

  • @PseKicks247
    @PseKicks247 Год назад +5

    Look into who was on the plane. 4 scientists.. and look into the pat pendings registered days after the plane vanished. And how much they were worth. 🤔

  • @gwenna1161
    @gwenna1161 Год назад +5

    i believe it was a stolen flight that was shot down for getting way too close to a certain military island.

    • @HufflepuffDaddy
      @HufflepuffDaddy Год назад +1

      So the plane flew for 8 hours but was also shot down?

    • @carljcmjk8609
      @carljcmjk8609 Год назад +2

      If the plane was shot down that would have been found out. Hard to hide something like that and would leave a huge area of scattered debri someone would have said something . Pilot lost his mind and plunged that plane far away off the route even where the search team were looking for the plane I bet it’s not even close also .

  • @michaelbonade4667
    @michaelbonade4667 Год назад +5

    When looking at the Pilot theory…much weight needs to be applied to the cultural significance of divorce and loosing one’s family…loosing “face” in one’s community….

    • @michaelbonade4667
      @michaelbonade4667 Год назад +1

      It’s a despicable act regardless of the state of his personal life….

  • @Quantum-1157
    @Quantum-1157 Год назад +4

    Terrorist incident ?! 😂😂😂😂 ur writers must be high! Terrorists flew the plane for 7 hours over the ocean and switched off the transponder, told pilots not to communicate , and quietly sat down with 200 unsuspecting passengers who didn’t question why a 3 hour flight was taking 7 hours? 😂😂

  • @jpmtlhead39
    @jpmtlhead39 Год назад +2

    This is one of the Mysteries that's gonna be debated for many,many years to come.

  • @crystalrusmisel1832
    @crystalrusmisel1832 Год назад +16

    I’ve been obsessed with this mystery from day one! I want so bad for them to find it! I’m not sure on how I feel about what happened. I’ve heard so many scenarios that make sense but again this whole thing doesn’t so we will hopefully one day find out.

    • @Katclem77
      @Katclem77 Год назад +7

      Me too! I check every so often for updates. Anything. This is definitely one of the biggest mysteries, ever.

    • @beewalk34
      @beewalk34 Год назад +2

      I been obsessed with Oceangate since it's disappearance

    • @carljcmjk8609
      @carljcmjk8609 Год назад +2

      Only one that makes sense is that it’s 100 percent the pilots fault and did it on purpose. Explain to me not a single mayday call? They would have more than enough time even if it’s seconds . All previous pilots have done it in fatal disasters within seconds . So why not even a single one . Pilot killed everyone . The ocean is also very vast and till this day we are still trying to look for stuff . For your information it took 75 years to find the titanic at the bottom of the ocean floor and some places are so deep no human machine till this day can reach . So

    • @jonathonsears6269
      @jonathonsears6269 Год назад +1

      ​@@carljcmjk8609Why is that the only option in your opinion? People are murdered daily. Conspiratorial crimes are committed regularly. History, even very recent history shows us how much of a motivator money can be.
      It's likely that the pilot was responsible but it's also very possible this was a targetted effort to get rid of a group of people.

    • @carljcmjk8609
      @carljcmjk8609 Год назад

      @@jonathonsears6269 fair one get rid of everyone in the plane then ? Is it that what you are implying ? Plus I don’t believe in alot of conspiracies pure nonsense some of them .

  • @richardmcleod1930
    @richardmcleod1930 Год назад +7

    Malaysia still states they have the safest airlines in the World. Can this be true with such a mystery regarding this missing plane yet to be found?

  • @victorcontreras9138
    @victorcontreras9138 Год назад +4

    Yes, I too agree that after many videos and theories, it seems that the captain was responsible.

  • @wojciechslaw
    @wojciechslaw Год назад +2

    Looks like it was the crew.
    Terrorists are usually first to brag about their "success."
    None of the passengers noticed anything (apparently). Look at the events of the September 11th. When people realised that the planes had been hijacked they started calling and sending messages to their relatives and friends. None of it was mentioned here and terrorists would have been spotted. Seems like everything was done quietly in the cabin.
    Regards and all the best to all

  • @BloodyApril
    @BloodyApril Год назад +5

    Stupid for Malaysian Air Force not to send up interceptors to intercept it and fly up to it to see what was going on. Or force it down.

  • @ableton-i3d
    @ableton-i3d Год назад +4

    Pilot made it dissapear on purpose

  • @markopolo3445
    @markopolo3445 Год назад +6

    The freaking pilot did it...Malaysia knows more than it says...This video did nothing to help!

  • @rkh7904
    @rkh7904 11 месяцев назад +1

    Its a pretty diabolical act to decide that one will kill oneself and take everyone else on the flight out too.If that is the case.

  • @ehanneken
    @ehanneken Год назад +4

    Bad Things is likely right, because of the circumstantial evidence.

  • @marioortiz8682
    @marioortiz8682 Год назад +6

    You should make a video on what most likely happened with the million ads I had to sit through to watch this video.

    • @Iron-Bridge
      @Iron-Bridge Год назад

      Watched it with the Brave browser. No ads 😁

  • @katemaloney4296
    @katemaloney4296 Год назад +2

    Who is to say there wasn't a cabin malfunction and everyone succumbed to depressirization?

    • @chazzlidell1492
      @chazzlidell1492 Год назад +1

      The only problem with that is the on board transponder wad deliberately turned off!!. Why? doesn't make sense 😕

  • @gh4121-b5n
    @gh4121-b5n 10 месяцев назад +1

    The plane was electronically taken over(each 777 had that capability built in) and eventually landed at the US. Base in Diego Garcia. It was “who” was on that flight that’s never been released.

  • @WysteriaGuitar
    @WysteriaGuitar 11 месяцев назад +1

    Most likely it was the Captain, he supposedly had lots of marital and financial problems...

  • @danae2882
    @danae2882 Год назад +1

    The pilot had some kind of psychotic breakdown which his family noticed, he was responsible for purposely taking down the plane

  • @Sohltaker
    @Sohltaker Год назад +2

    I had always maintained throughout most of this that it was almost certainly a mechanical failure that brought down 370. I discounted everything else, including that the pilot or co-pilot purposely crashed the flight. However… hearing the information shared here regarding to pilots marriage (which I had never heard before) I have to now conclude that it almost certainly (99.99%) was he who committed this act. Which I consider the ultimate act of cowardice. Not because he committed suicide. Many people do for a multitude of reasons. But because he killed all of those people as well. They were all innocent. Which in my mind excludes him as being any sort of person I can feel sorry for.

  • @ZA56AA
    @ZA56AA Год назад +3

    The pilot.
    Just like the German pilot who crashed the plane deliberately.

  • @kaptainkurt7261
    @kaptainkurt7261 Год назад +2

    It’s beyond obvious. Occam’s Razor.

  • @yvonnesanders4308
    @yvonnesanders4308 Год назад +3

    Shocking it took them a week to get the satellite data

    • @marcelosoto-quiroga1965
      @marcelosoto-quiroga1965 Год назад

      The Inmarsat company does NOT offer that kind of terrestrial tracking services, only satellite communications. It was one of the employee's initiative that led to a ping-based time and position search job after the mystery began to grow.

  • @jenniferbreaux7385
    @jenniferbreaux7385 Год назад +1

    I love ur channel and how u draw the most logical conclusions.

  • @pjohnwilliams6941
    @pjohnwilliams6941 Год назад +3

    It was the pilot

  • @terencenxumalo1159
    @terencenxumalo1159 Год назад +1

    good work

  • @theblessedone9700
    @theblessedone9700 11 месяцев назад +1

    There is no doubt in my mind that the Pilot was experiencing mental illness issue. He wanted to end his life. Fact proved that he was looking out to say goodbye to his City. All activities pointed out that the Pilot was alone did the murdering act. Killing the all on board & himself later. He killed all the passengers deprived if airs. Then the behavior of him flying to rids of fuel then crushed the plane. He was so emotional before he crashed. Flying around for hours as if to ditches all the fuel. His own immediate family described symptoms of mental illness. Severe depression. Finding the Plane will revealed what really happened. A year after we witnessed a crazy German Pilot crashed the Plane & kills his passengers. There had to be reasons as to why he made sure the Plane would be hard to find. Life Insurance?

  • @williamkirk1156
    @williamkirk1156 Год назад +1

    I agree. There is also a possibility, based on recovered debris, that the landing gear was down.

  • @hunteremison524
    @hunteremison524 17 дней назад

    I’ve always hated the idea that he would punish so many people for his own problems but it’s really the only thing that makes sense

  • @mattm597
    @mattm597 Год назад +1

    Why do they keep showing the completely irrelevant photo of a trash dump during these "what most likely happened" videos? Makes no sense. Get some relevant photos!!! 🙄

  • @dylanforrester3720
    @dylanforrester3720 Год назад +1

    Me personally I think if this was some coordinated, outside of the crew attack, I feel like this would’ve happened more than once following the disappearance seeing they could get away from it, someone would’ve claimed responsibility(maybe), I don’t see any way that a third party could benefitted from the financial struggles aspect following the disappearance. The pilot would’ve most likely made a distress call. If it were a fire, the plane wouldn’t have flown for as long as it did, and if it was a pressurization problem the transponder wouldn’t have been switched off. Additionally, I think it’s quite odd the captain had similar routes at his personal flight simulator. This doesn’t rule out the first officer, but I see don’t see this being far from a pilot hijacking

  • @joejohnson2478
    @joejohnson2478 Год назад +1

    The pilot committed suicide taking all of his passengers and fellow employees with him.

  • @perhentzepetersen9310
    @perhentzepetersen9310 Год назад +3

    As I see it there are some problems for the pilot to overcome: His co-pilot, the cabin crew and the passengers. But it is not impossible. I think it is the captain.

    • @H0urg1ass
      @H0urg1ass Год назад

      Wait for, or order the FO to leave the cockpit for some reason, lock the cockpit door, put on your oxygen mask and depressurize the airplane. Everyone on board but you is dead in a few minutes, re-pressurize the airplane and do whatever you want with the remaining flight time.
      I'm 99.99% sure it was the captain with a 1% chance of some kind of electrical failure / fire that they were able to handle, but then weren't able to make calls or regain control of the airplane due to the destruction caused. Then the plane simply flew until it ran out of fuel and crashed. But I don't like this one because it would have had to be the most gentle crash ever due to the fact that nothing from the interior of the airplane has ever washed up on any shores.

    • @perhentzepetersen9310
      @perhentzepetersen9310 Год назад

      @@H0urg1ass Yeah, I agree about the pilot. He "somehow" took control of the plane, and you explain it very well. But I think it is amazing he could find the right switches, (those who send signals from the plane) and switch them off about in a short period of time. They are in complete different places and very hard to find if you dont know what you are doing.
      But of course, if he was well prepared, he would find them.

    • @pirate3599
      @pirate3599 10 месяцев назад

      It's quite easy."invite" the copilot to take his toilet break, then lock the door, depressive the cabin

  • @rsoleintheuk
    @rsoleintheuk Год назад +3

    This video had me confused and I can’t believe anything this youtuber puts out.
    You can even you can get simple facts right. At first you mention there were 227 passengers and 12 crew. This totals 239 souls on board. But toward the end you mention dis captain shah end his life and that of 292 passengers.
    So if you can’t get the souls on board right how can I believe anything you mention in this video.

  • @AmudeshP
    @AmudeshP Год назад +1

    Titan with 5 people was missing and found it within 5 days and recovered within 10 days but 239 people missing with MH370 over 9 years no news???

    • @rango8539
      @rango8539 Год назад

      Search for the titan was rather simple, because it was near the wreck of the titanic, so the area they needed to scout was relatively very small, and not to mention because its a sub, it has very limited power and speed which means it cannot get very far, but the fact that it still took 5 days should tell you how difficult conducting an undersea search is, even with the technology available. The search for mh370 on the other hand was infinitely more difficult, the possible locations of its crash was very wide, having to search 100s of sqkilometres of seabed is a gargantuan task, dont forget that the possible area of crash is very remote, very farway from land, it took several days for the search team to even get there. So no, its not surprising at all that they were not able to find the plane even after years of search, what is surprising and infuriating is the gross incompetence of the malayasian government and military in handling of the situation.

  • @firozesameer5677
    @firozesameer5677 Год назад +1

    What was the status of the co-pilot? Not a word about him discussed here 🙄

    • @marcellepesek3038
      @marcellepesek3038 Год назад +1

      @firozesameer5677 The First Officer was engaged to be married soon and had every
      reason for living.

  • @jameshaxby5434
    @jameshaxby5434 Год назад +1

    The black box pingers were supposed to last about 30 days, but I remember thinking at the time, that they didn't start the sea search for about that long, which I found very suspicious.

  • @matthewdavis6118
    @matthewdavis6118 Год назад +1

    Great video on a tragic subject.

  • @disciple2742
    @disciple2742 Год назад +3

    The captain took a cowards way out... kys not other innocent people too

  • @shangchi828
    @shangchi828 Год назад +1

    Jocelyn Chia brought me here

  • @11174John
    @11174John 2 месяца назад

    Imagine how much of a jerk you have to be to not just un-alive yourself, but un-alive hundreds of people with you.

  • @zoroalakazam
    @zoroalakazam Год назад +4

    I dont think the plane had even crashed, a crucial "one evidence " was that some relatives did call one of the passengers handphone..and it still ringing after 4 days plane went missing but without answering...CAN we back track on the call and locate the Phone?

  • @GenXMarks
    @GenXMarks Год назад +2

    There are mysteries which are not solved, but there are also lots of possibilities that define the true reason of that incident. The same happened with MH370, there are lots of mysteries that are now the part of ocean. Hope someday we will find the right answer about all of these mysteries.

    • @carljcmjk8609
      @carljcmjk8609 Год назад +2

      There is only one pilot did it . Not even a single mayday call? All pilots do it even within seconds of disaster . Pilot did it

  • @PoorBoyPennyShow
    @PoorBoyPennyShow Год назад +1

    THE PILOT

  • @byronbailey9229
    @byronbailey9229 Год назад +1

    The Australian Defence Scientific Technology Group used the Inmarsat satellite hourly ' handshakes ' with the B777 plus Bayesian mathematical modelling to place MH370 at 8am crossing latitude 38S in the southern Indian Ocean heading south and commencing descent due fuel exhaustion. Considering that a former Australian prime minister revealed in October 2019 that he was told by the Malaysian prime minister on 12 March 2014 that it was murder-suicide by MH370's captain indicates not a real mystery as to what happened but these armchair experts love to ramble on and ignore the evidence. I have many thousands of hours as a captain on B777.

  • @pcbondart
    @pcbondart Год назад +1

    Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 2501, a DC-4, lost in little ole' Lake Michigan, STILL NEVER FOUND!

  • @akashbhullar
    @akashbhullar Год назад +1

    Aren't you the same guy who does: Bengal Tiger vs Siberian Tiger, who's the apex Predator, what will happen If these 2 big cats fought in the wild?

  • @Paul-jb1yw
    @Paul-jb1yw Год назад +2

    It definitely sounds like the events of March 7th could have been the final straw of a very troubled man, I'm from Niagara falls, it's pretty easy to kill myself, but why do you have to take a bunch of innocent people with you???

  • @t.anthony3940
    @t.anthony3940 Год назад +2

    All this technology & they loose the plane?? Something smells fishy, no pun intended...

  • @M3ME72
    @M3ME72 7 месяцев назад

    Realization of just how vast and deep all oceans are.😢😢

  • @lizc6393
    @lizc6393 Год назад +4

    It was the pilot, had to have been, yeah?

  • @linggenglajang7266
    @linggenglajang7266 Год назад +2

    new search of MH370 is silent. Titan sub on 4km dept can be found in 4 days with the help of ROV. Why malaysia set a new search with the same approach deploy ROV team for the task?

  • @gunston999
    @gunston999 2 месяца назад +1

    Turn off the annoying background music 😝

  • @McPh1741
    @McPh1741 Год назад +8

    After watching the NetFlix 3 episode documentary, I’m leaning toward it accidentally being shot down. There was a multinational military exercise being conducted south of Vietnam when the flight was passing through that area. It’s not the first time something like that would have happened and people are in that area report hearing and explosion and a possible fire. That’s why no debris was found. There were looking in the wrong area.

    • @michealallison8756
      @michealallison8756 Год назад

      I concur!

    • @carljcmjk8609
      @carljcmjk8609 Год назад +1

      Shot down? Where exactly that would have been known and you can’t hide that sorta act . Most likely the captain plunged that plane in the abyss of the ocean far off route . I would even say where everyone was searching for the plane isn’t even in the area or even close to where the pilot sunk that plane .

    • @usveteran9893
      @usveteran9893 10 месяцев назад

      A plane shot down would crash into the ocean and burst into pieces...where's the debris?

  • @kenyanboy7627
    @kenyanboy7627 Год назад +1

    all this said,fine the plane was crashed,2where is the debri?

  • @adriwing3587
    @adriwing3587 Год назад +1

    My condolences to all families involved.
    One possibility why there is no trace of the plane was probably ....
    Capt. Shah flew the plane to Diego Garcia and was downed by US Air Force 😢

    • @theblessedone9700
      @theblessedone9700 11 месяцев назад +1

      They found some debris floating on the Ocean then on to the Shore with no burn mark. So that theory is a 100% no.

  • @mrliberty8468
    @mrliberty8468 Месяц назад

    The debris found would eliminate it being stolen or traveled to the north.

  • @davidagiel8130
    @davidagiel8130 Год назад +1

    It’s murder suicide by the pilot

  • @spencerstock1936
    @spencerstock1936 28 дней назад

    Why not add the fact the black box and tacking was turned off and the fact they found one off the pilot but he says his memory gone

  • @robertthomson1587
    @robertthomson1587 Год назад +1

    Of course it was the pilot.

  • @paganphil100
    @paganphil100 Год назад +1

    In short......we don't know 😞

  • @andrewkim8243
    @andrewkim8243 Год назад +1

    Notwithstanding hs personal problms, it seems strange dat d pilot who is planning to commit suicide by crashing d plane, wud choose to do so aftr so many hours from takeoff or switching off d communication channels. He cud jus hv crashed d plane in d South China sea, bcos it makes no difference in hs state of mind, whr he crashes d plane.

    • @HufflepuffDaddy
      @HufflepuffDaddy Год назад

      The pilot wanted the plane to disappear with very little or zero evidence in the huge Indian Ocean, not perform a reckless Hollywood movie stunt in closer waters. Location made all the difference in the world to the pilot.

  • @NightShooter87
    @NightShooter87 3 месяца назад

    There is no evidence, that it was the pilot. The way to look at most mysteries, is, can it go to court. These aren't theories, merely hypothesis, with nothing credible. We will never know this and many other cases, that's why they're interesting. If we knew what happened, the there wouldn't be videos like this.

  • @dissy5563
    @dissy5563 Год назад +1

    It crashed off sentinel Island and the natives killed the survivors.

  • @SciHeartJourney
    @SciHeartJourney Год назад +6

    While I don't possess a specific theory, let's explore the facts and analyze their potential implications:
    1) The plane initially flew north of Malaysia before changing its course to the south.
    2) The plane was near enough to land to have it within sight when it veered off its intended path.
    3) Despite the darkness, it is likely that there were visible ground lights.
    4) The plane was within cellphone range of land.
    The absence of communication from anyone on board raises questions, and we can consider several possible explanations:
    a) It was late, and both passengers and crew were probably asleep, thus not attempting to make calls or send messages.
    b) They might have been incapacitated due to hypoxia or other unknown factors.
    c) The darkness could have disoriented them, leading to a lack of awareness about their off-course status and an inability to recognize that the land they saw was not China.
    Regarding control over cabin air pressure, intentionally causing a loss of cabin pressure would also affect the pilot, which casts doubt on such an action.
    The pilot's decision to practice landing in the area where the plane vanished is indeed unusual and raises concerns. It is possible that this choice was made to evade any software that could flag potential hijackers. Notably, the 9/11 hijackers did not engage in landing practice. This circumstance is now regarded as a "red flag," suggesting that the pilot's landing could have been an attempt to conceal their true nefarious intentions. The intention could have been to avoid drawing suspicion from software systems designed to detect individuals engaged in suspicious activities.
    It is essential to remember that these are speculative ideas based on the available facts, and reaching definitive conclusions would necessitate further investigation and analysis.

    • @KevinRaab
      @KevinRaab Год назад +2

      What bothers me about the theory that it is supposed to be an extended suicide of the pilot is the question about the co-pilot. In the case of the Germanwings suicide, for example, the co-pilot was locked out, which led to great unrest and panic among the passengers. So was the co-pilot still in the cockpit?

    • @lizc6393
      @lizc6393 Год назад +1

      Could he have depressurized the plane and then set the auto pilot? I'm not very smart, just a thought.

    • @HufflepuffDaddy
      @HufflepuffDaddy Год назад +1

      Depressurizing the main cabin wouldn't affect the pilot. The cockpit has its own emergency air supply.

  • @johnholmesinchesahead342
    @johnholmesinchesahead342 4 месяца назад +1

    Worst assessment on the net.

  • @gregdrmax
    @gregdrmax Год назад +1

    No doubt…the pilot. DUH!

  • @behrwillsonn3181
    @behrwillsonn3181 Год назад +1

    The captain did not crash the plane. Sure the captain's personal was rocky, but since he built a flight simulator in his room means that work was a form of solace for him. He loved flying and no matter how your divorce is going you're not going to kill the only thing bringing you happiness.

    • @OriginalGateKeeper
      @OriginalGateKeeper Год назад +1

      He practiced flying this unusual route on his simulator.

    • @behrwillsonn3181
      @behrwillsonn3181 Год назад +1

      @@OriginalGateKeeper No, he did not. You misheard a reporter trying sensationalize the story. The front tire caught fire due to deflation while in the wheel well. After about 40 minutes smoke filled the cockpit, they turned off electrical systems to stop what they thought was an electrical fire as the captain turned to land at the nearest airport. But both pilots passed out due to smoke inhalation and the plane flew on autopilot until it ran out of fuel. The cabin crew could not get into the cockpit because the door was locked and due to 9/11 protocols there was no way to get into the cockpit.

    • @seanbehrens3203
      @seanbehrens3203 10 месяцев назад

      @@SeargentBarnes Ah...--wrong. A deflated tire bounces, that bounce creates heat, with heat, oxygen, and fuel (rubber) what do we have? Fire. Also, using your logic, if tires can catch fire on takeoff, why not landing? It's the same thing if you're a tire.

  • @theblessedone9700
    @theblessedone9700 11 месяцев назад +1

    The pilot did not want the Plane found. Why? What was his motive for not wanting to be found? I believed all searchers are so closed & yet seems so far. The Ocean is so deep. The pilot knew where to sink the Plane down.
    If you have troubles, seeks helps. For you to takes hundreds of human lives with you made you very inhuman like. Where your soul will go end with God. You will be so severely punishes. Airplane must since we know that some Pilot are not to be trusted, we must find ways for them not able to repeat it. I am thinking Charles'Angel detective team in each Plane proved by the Government the country where Planes are in flights. Or make it so that the crew can also take procession in such situation.

  • @chrisduhaime5689
    @chrisduhaime5689 Год назад +1

    Tuned off the electronics and nose dive into the ocean / sad that pilot did it and took all with him / the oil sheen didn't stay long for search planes to find the impact area .

  • @grapeshot
    @grapeshot Год назад +1

    And we call this the Lost effect.

  • @robertdeffenbaugh9004
    @robertdeffenbaugh9004 Год назад

    The most likely scenario is the Transponder malfunctioned while the Co-Pilot tried to get a signal on his Cellphone.
    It was reported his Cellphone was on.

  • @LWRC
    @LWRC Год назад +1

    It was the pilot! End of story!!!

  • @giuseppersa2391
    @giuseppersa2391 Год назад +1

    Well this was a waste of time

  • @drats1279
    @drats1279 Год назад

    Your guess is as good as anyone else's.

  • @grapeshot
    @grapeshot Год назад +2

    So there was a good chance he Kamikaze the plane into the Indian Ocean.

  • @William-Marshall
    @William-Marshall Год назад +1

    He was a very EVIL man.