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Brian in VA 03-08-2014 08:30 AM

Quote:

Read on a pilots board that an Italian national living in Thailand had his passport stolen last August in Thailand. Someone using that passport reportedly boarded the missing aircraft. Italian guy is reported to have called his family in Italy to tell them he was not on the missing aircraft. Media not reporting this. Terrorism?
Here you go:

Stolen passports were used to buy two tickets for Malaysia Airlines missing flight | South China Morning Post

creaturecat 03-08-2014 08:35 AM

Karma for the thieves. If nothing else.
A terrible tragedy for everyone else.

Iciclehead 03-08-2014 09:38 AM

My first reaction on hearing that is that this is an act of terrorism....with the terrorists using stolen passports to get on and then doing the deed as they are wont to do.

777's have this stellar record, have a very large doubt that any aircraft issue would result in it disappearing without some sort of call out from the crew that they were having issues with the airplane.

In any event, godspeed...this will not end well methinks....

Dennis

speeder 03-08-2014 09:55 AM

Ahh...it already did not end well. The plane is on the bottom of the ocean and everyone is dead.

speeder 03-08-2014 09:58 AM

So when they scan a stolen passport at their airports being used by someone else, it justs says, "All good! Let them board." ????

intakexhaust 03-08-2014 10:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by speeder (Post 7950971)
So when they scan a stolen passport at their airports being used by someone else, it justs says, "All good! Let them board." ????

That was my first thought too. And just now its noted? Bizarre. Who has jurisdiction of criminal investigation?

911_Dude 03-08-2014 10:30 AM

Not all countries have US airport security or US airline regulation (maintainence) requirements. That's the answer to a lot of the "how come" questions.

I've been in countries where if you pull the engine cover on a plane your likely to see soda can, zip tie and tape repairs. It wouldn't surprise me if the airline involved in this crash had a few "deficiencies".

Iciclehead 03-08-2014 10:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by speeder (Post 7950966)
Ahh...it already did not end well. The plane is on the bottom of the ocean and everyone is dead.

I was thinking of the repercussions of terrorism....and yes, it is already a bad end for the people on board.

As for the passport thing, the communication between countries is not all that it is cracked up to be. Even if the passport is reported stolen, no guarantee that the departing airline has an up to date list or that the boarding agent actually scanned the thing.

I have had odd occurrences in North America where you flash the passport and boarding pass and off you go, they don't always scan.

Dennis

Porsche-O-Phile 03-08-2014 10:52 AM

777 down
 
Pure speculation but I'd wager money on the "religion of peace" having something to do with this.

I hope I'm wrong.

speeder 03-08-2014 11:05 AM

Based on the country involved, that's not a real master detective deduction.

nostatic 03-08-2014 11:27 AM

Malaysia isn't a hotbed of terrorism. Indonesia however is completely messed up. The other group to ponder are the Uihgurs in China (the flight was headed for Beijing).

Seems like a mechanical failure would allow the crew to contact the ground unless it was a catastrophic decompression at altitude. Either way, same results for the pax.

Tishabet 03-08-2014 12:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 911_Dude (Post 7951014)
Not all countries have US airport security or US airline regulation (maintainence) requirements. That's the answer to a lot of the "how come" questions.

I've been in countries where if you pull the engine cover on a plane your likely to see soda can, zip tie and tape repairs. It wouldn't surprise me if the airline involved in this crash had a few "deficiencies".

I've flown MAS a lot (at least 20 legs, 41k actual miles flown according to my frequent flier account with them) and have flown out of KUL many, many times. Malaysia is not a first world country but their airline and KUL airport are both top notch imho. You may be assuming that they are some sort of fly by night operation bit this is not the case. I have flown plenty of other semi-sketchy airlines in and around that region (Jet, Tiger, Air Asia, Vietnam, China Air) but would compare Malaysia to Singapore Air, Emirates, Qatar, etc.

Now of course I am not in the airline industry, not a pilot etc... just speaki g from my experience as a passenger.

As far as the Muslim angle, Malaysia is of course one of the largest Muslim nations on earth (second only to Indonesia I believe). I'm not sure I could understandthe angle of Muslim terrorists attacking a flight originating from Malaysia and heading to China where there are also plenty of Muslims... seems kind of counterintuitive.

intakexhaust 03-08-2014 01:11 PM

For the moment, disregard this tragedy but I'm perplexed by the stolen passports. Not one but two reported.

What's the chance of that? Is this a regular thing having passengers with stolen passports? One would think INTERPOL would have some cross ref. and flag airport db.

How does it come to light after the fact?

With all the micro spying between and within governments, vast networking, the powers to be are still that stooopid?

afterburn 549 03-08-2014 01:17 PM

Which bowing jet has the known hydraulic problem of rudder going full tilt the opposite of peddle input?

varmint 03-08-2014 01:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by intakexhaust (Post 7951167)
For the moment, disregard this tragedy but I'm perplexed by the stolen passports. Not one but two reported.

What's the chance of that? Is this a regular thing having passengers with stolen passports? One would think INTERPOL would have some cross ref. and flag airport db.

How does it come to light after the fact?

With all the micro spying between and within governments, vast networking, the powers to be are still that stooopid?




****loads of drugs going back and forth

north korean spies

could be anything

gamin 03-08-2014 02:31 PM

Rudder problems - 737.

porwolf 03-08-2014 03:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nostatic (Post 7951088)
Malaysia isn't a hotbed of terrorism. Indonesia however is completely messed up. The other group to ponder are the Uihgurs in China (the flight was headed for Beijing).

Seems like a mechanical failure would allow the crew to contact the ground unless it was a catastrophic decompression at altitude. Either way, same results for the pax.

Yeah, what do the pilot expert say to this? Even the Air France crew that crasghed into the Atlantic a few years ago was able to send a brief message, I remember. What catastrophic sudden event in the cruising phase could possible caused both the crash and the instant loss of communication?

dewolf 03-08-2014 03:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by porwolf (Post 7951308)
Yeah, what do the pilot expert say to this? Even the Air France crew that crasghed into the Atlantic a few years ago was able to send a brief message, I remember. What catastrophic sudden event in the cruising phase could possible caused both the crash and the instant loss of communication?

North Korean missile.

porwolf 03-08-2014 03:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dewolf (Post 7951312)
North Korean missile.

North Korean missile? That far away? That accurate?

porwolf 03-08-2014 03:49 PM

Here are some questions about the sudden crash of the Signapore Airline 777 answered:

Why Malaysia Airlines Jet Might Have Disappeared - ABC News

And on the stolen passports:

Missing MAS flight: Both imposters bought tickets from China Southern Airlines - Nation | The Star Online

And:

http://www.theadvocate.com.au/story/2137361/authorities-investigate-possible-foul-play-as-search-for-missing-malaysia-airlines-plane-continues/?cs=87


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