HIJACK

MH370 disappearance could be a case of cyber-hijack: Blaine Gibson

mh370-gibson-rachna-tyagi Blaine Alan Gibson | Rachna Tyagi

As I have said before, MH370 has too many theories and not enough evidence. That is why I am looking for evidence. I find the debris and that tells us something about where and how the plane crashed. We really need to find the black box and the crash site. But what I am looking at is more like what didn’t happen, rather than what did happen. It is clear that it did not crash in the Gulf of Thailand nor did it crash in the Bay of Bengal. It crashed in the southern Indian Ocean, somewhere south of the equator and north of 35 degrees. It is also clear that it was not a controlled ditching, gliding or pilot suicide where the pilot deliberately takes the plane as far south and buries it intact. We know because of the debris that the plane is not intact in the water and we know because of the wing flap that it was retracted, it was not deployed, so those are things that didn’t happen. 

It is possible that there was some sort of onboard emergency that caused the plane to turn back to the nearest available airport. The captain would try to turn it back to try to land at Penang. That is the bearing that he took. As far as the other turns go, it is possible that the pilot was overcome by fumes, punched in some wrong coordinates, turned up north of the straits of Malacca and flew on, a ghost plane, and crashed.

There is a possibility, however, depending on the number of turns that the plane took, that the Satcom system was turned off and then turned back on. It is also possible that it was hijacked physically by someone on the plane. All the crew and passengers have been cleared in investigations, but you never know who is on the plane. There can be stowaways. It is certainly possible. It is possible that there was a physical hijacking on the plane. I know absolutely nothing about computers, nothing about hacking, and I am not an aviation expert—but it’s possible—and it should be looked into, that this was a cyber hijacking and in that case you need to have the best computer people looking at all possibilities and see if maybe somebody, who was very good with computers, could have hacked into the system and taken control of the plane. That needs to be looked at. There are certain things that could have happened and certain things that could not have happened and we need to be open to everything that is supported by evidence.

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