04-12-2014, 07:00 PM
I still believe the senior pilot sabotaged the aircraft.
Why? Not so sure, however, he is related to the political figure that was jailed the day before the flight vanished.
If he had asked the co-pilot to step out of the cockpit (to grab him something, or check on something), he could have conceivably locked him out of the cockpit.
Then when he flew low after crossing the Malay peninsula to either avoid other plane traffic or avoid radar detection, the co-pilot could have tried to make a cell call.
But, you'd think some of the passengers would have tried that too??
The pilot certainly would have known air corridors to fly through in order to avoid radar detection and probably was aware of ocean depths and HOW to crash a plane in order to minimize debris and minimize chances of plane ever being found.
Just a theory, but makes a lot of sense to me.
Why? Not so sure, however, he is related to the political figure that was jailed the day before the flight vanished.
If he had asked the co-pilot to step out of the cockpit (to grab him something, or check on something), he could have conceivably locked him out of the cockpit.
Then when he flew low after crossing the Malay peninsula to either avoid other plane traffic or avoid radar detection, the co-pilot could have tried to make a cell call.
But, you'd think some of the passengers would have tried that too??
The pilot certainly would have known air corridors to fly through in order to avoid radar detection and probably was aware of ocean depths and HOW to crash a plane in order to minimize debris and minimize chances of plane ever being found.
Just a theory, but makes a lot of sense to me.