Former Senior Investigator with the Transportation Safety Board of Canada, Larry Vance, told 60 Minutes he was confident he knows what happened to the aircraft.
"I think the general public can take comfort in the fact that there is a growing consensus on the plane's final moments," he said.
Mr Vance said the pilot "was killing himself" and took the aircraft to the most remote place possible so it would "disappear".
"Unfortunately, he was [also] killing everybody else on board, and he did it deliberately," he said.
"He was taking it to a predestination, some place that he had planned to take it, and he flew that six hours to get it there."
Mr Vance said he envisioned the plane on the bottom of the ocean, with the fuselage in one piece and the left wing still on.
"The right wing may be off, the engines are separate, but you basically have four pieces of aeroplane down there," he said.
"It's not scattered all over the bottom of the ocean."
Apr 2024:
Flight pre departure documents
Hardy, who worked with the Australian Transport Safety Bureau during the search in 2015, told The Sun: “It’s a strange coincidence that the last engineering task that was done before it headed off to oblivion was topping up crew oxygen which is only for the cockpit, not for the cabin crew.” Independent
NDTV
NDTV
留言
張貼留言