Is this "M" the plane that crashed? A researcher in aviation says that images from satellites show "almost a perfect match" in the South China Sea near Vietnam.
Is this “M” the plane that crashed? A researcher in aviation says that images from satellites show “almost a perfect match” in the South China Sea near Vietnam.© Images AGN

RadarOnline.com has learned that an aviation satellite researcher thinks a “M” she found in the South China Sea may be part of the wreckage from the long-lost flight MH370.

In a shocking turn of events that happened nine years after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappeared on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014, volunteer satellite researcher Cyndi Hendry thinks she has proof that the Boeing 777 ended up in the South China Sea near Vietnam.

Hendry says that the “M” she found in the South China Sea using satellite imagery is “almost a perfect match” to the “M” on the plane that went missing.

She also said that investigators “repeatedly ignored” her at the time, even though she might have found something very important.

Hendry recently said, “When I saw the pain on the faces of these family members, I knew I had to do something.” “It really tugged at my heart. I like to take pictures for fun, so I have a good eye for details.”

“I thought I’d be a good person to help find this plane using the satellite pictures,” she said.

But Hendry didn’t find “something white” in the South China Sea until a few days after MH370 went missing on March 8, 2014. He was looking at satellite images taken thousands of miles away from where the plane was thought to have gone missing.

“There was nothing on the images from space. She said, “It was just the blackness of the sea.” “Then you hit the next button, and more black scans. A lot of black. And then there’s finally something white.”

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“I got the plans for a Boeing 777 off of the internet. I was able to tell that one of the pieces was the nose cone,” Hendry said. “That’s when I started saying, ‘Holy crap! A piece of trash is there. There’s the plane.'”

“Then I started to see more puzzle pieces. Something that looked like the plane’s main body. Something that might have been the tail. I got goosebumps.”

Hendry told investigators and Malaysia Airlines right away about what she had found, but she says she was “repeatedly ignored.”

Shortly after Hendry’s find, the search in the South China Sea was stopped because new information showed that MH370 had crashed in the Indian Ocean.

“I understood what I had. Hendry went on to say, “I knew I had proof in the South China Sea.” “The more I looked for trash, the more I found. I’m sure this is where MH370 ended up, off the coast of Vietnam.

“I had already talked to Malaysia Airlines at that point. I tried to tell so many people about this debris,” she said as a conclusion. “No one paid attention to me.”

RadarOnline.com said before that Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 suddenly disappeared on March 8, 2014, less than an hour into its trip from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

The 229 people on the flight also went missing, and more than nine years later, the Boeing 777 plane has still not been found or recovered.

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