The latest MH370 news from The Sun said that an Australian scientist claimed to have found the exact resting place of MH370.
Vincent Lyne, a researcher at Tasmania University, said MH370 deliberately crashed deep into Broken Ridge - a 6km deep hole in the Indian Ocean.
Mr. Lyne believes that Broken Ridge has narrow, steep sides, large mountain ranges and other deep holes surrounding it as well as is filled with fine sediment "considered a perfect hiding place" for MH370.
Richard Godfrey - a retired British aerospace engineer who spent the past decade tracking the journey of MH370 and conducting a separate investigation into the missing plane, has also made similar statements.
Mr. Richard Godfrey affirmed that the location of MH370 can be determined at a depth of 4km from the ocean surface in the Broken Ridge area.
He combined a new technology with satellite communication system data from the plane. "The two merged systems could be used to detect, identify and locate MH370 during its flight into the South Indian Ocean," he said.
The retired British aerospace engineer is "very confident" in the ability to find the missing plane. According to him, MH370 crashed at around 8:19 a.m. on March 9, 2014.
"We have a lot of satellite data, oceanographic data, drift analysis, performance data from Boeing and this is the new technology. All four data match a specific point in the Indian Ocean," he said.
Broken Ridge was not included in the initial search area for MH370 in 2014 and was about 28km from Ocean Infinity's 2018 search location. However, the area was part of a 2016 search, 7 news reported.
Mr. Vincent Lyne is urging officials to search for MH370 in an area that he considers a "high priority". "Whether or not to search depends on the authorities and the search company, but scientifically, we know why previous searches have failed and the science also clearly shows the location of MH370," he said.
Many experts, including Godfrey and Lyne, are concerned that MH370 pilots - captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah - may have deliberately crashed the plane into the sea.
British Boeing 777 pilot Simon Hardy believes that the clues for the MH370 captaincy hypothesis are the mastermind hidden in flight documents. He told The Sun that MH370's additional fuel and oxygen could be evidence that the plane went missing on purpose.
Mr. Godfrey commented that the MH370 tragedy occurred after a "vehicle robbery" - a "terrorist act" carried out by captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah. The pilot "decided to change course and let the plane disappear in one of the world's most remote places."
An unnamed pilot who accompanied captain Shah on previous Malaysia Airlines flights told The Atlantic that the MH370 captain had taken the Vice President out of the cockpit and then sent the plane into the sea.