Breakthrough: Has Lost Flight MH370 Finally Been Found?
As we approach the eighth “anniversary” of missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, now comes word that the “disappeared” jetliner may have been found. Since about 2016, a highly respected British aerospace engineer has devoted almost all of his waking hours to solving this strangest of all recent modern aviation mysteries. He has lately (since November of 2021) applied a revolutionary new tracking technology which, he says, has resulted in locating, almost precisely, where and when this plane carrying 239 souls crashed into the Southern Indian Ocean back on March 8, 2014.
Richard Godfrey is no crackpot conspiracy theorist living in his mother’s basement, surgically connected to his keyboard and glued to his computer monitor, wearing nothing but his socks and underwear. On the contrary, he is a real “scientist,” a certified, bona fide aerospace engineer and physicist, who claims the long-missing plane crashed into the Indian Ocean 1,993 kilometers (1,240 miles) west of Perth, Australia, and rests 4,000 meters (2.5 miles) below the ocean surface.
Once again, the Boeing jumbo 777–200 jetliner vanished without a trace during a flight from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia to Beijing, China on March 8, 2014 — and, again, with 239 doomed people on board.