MH370 'may have crashed down in a different ocean thousands of miles from key ... trends now

MH370 'may have crashed down in a different ocean thousands of miles from key ... trends now
MH370 'may have crashed down in a different ocean thousands of miles from key ... trends now

MH370 'may have crashed down in a different ocean thousands of miles from key ... trends now

MH370 'may have crashed down in a different ocean thousands of miles from key search area', says researcher who claims satellite images taken days after jet vanished show 'M' on debris Volunteer researcher Cyndi Hendry made the claim in new Netflix documentary She claims to have evidence of wreckage in the South China Sea near Vietnam 

View
comments

The downed MH370 flight might have crashed thousands of miles from the main search area, a volunteer satellite researcher has claimed.

Cyndi Hendry, a volunteer for now-defunct satellite imagery company Tomnod, found what looked like plane debris in the South China Sea only days after the plane vanished on March 8, 2014.

She said her discovery was ignored at the time when it was thought to have crashed into the Indian Ocean. 

But nine years later she claims to have found an 'M' on a piece of wreckage which is an 'almost perfect match' to the M on the side of the Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 flight that went missing on a flight between Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and Beijing, China.

Speaking on new Netflix documentary MH370: The Disappeared Plane, she said she knew she had 'evidence' of the jet in the South China Sea but was repeatedly ignored by investigators at the time.

Nine years later she claims to have found an 'M' on a piece of wreckage which is an 'almost perfect match' to the M on the side of the Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 flight

Nine years later she claims to have found an 'M' on a piece of wreckage which is an 'almost perfect match' to the M on the side of the Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 flight

Cyndi Hendry, a volunteer for now-defunct satellite imagery company Tomnod, found what looked like plane debris in the South China Sea only days after the plane vanished on March 8, 2014

Cyndi Hendry, a volunteer for now-defunct satellite imagery company Tomnod, found what looked like plane debris in the South China Sea only days after the plane vanished on March 8, 2014

Speaking on a new Netflix documentary, she said she knew she had 'evidence' in the South China Sea but was repeatedly ignored by investigators

Speaking on a new Netflix documentary, she said she knew she had 'evidence' in the South China Sea but was repeatedly ignored by investigators

She said: 'When I saw the

read more from dailymail.....

PREV Arts boss said his organisation did not realise it had agreed to fund a ... trends now
NEXT Female teacher, 35, is arrested after sending nude pics via text to students ... trends now