March 26, 2014 -- Updated 1802 GMT (0202 HKT)
New satellite images show 122 objects floating in the southern Indian Ocean, near other sightings that may be related to MH370. FULL STORY
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Best lead yet? Satellite spots possible debris field in search for Flight 370
March 26, 2014 -- Updated 2210 GMT (0610 HKT)
See satellite images of objects in ocean
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: Sources to CNN: No "smoking gun" on pilots' hard drives
- Objects, seen in satellite shots from French defense firm, could be related to Flight 370
- Latest satellite spotting "could be the break we've been waiting for," CNN aviation analyst says
- The objects range from about 3 feet to about 75 feet in length
When photographed by the
satellite on Sunday, the objects were scattered over 154 square miles
(400 square kilometers), acting Transportation Minister Hishammuddin Bin
Hussein said. That's about the size of Denver, Colorado.
The location recorded by
the satellite was within the search area scoured Wednesday by a dozen
aircraft from six nations, the Australian Maritime Safety Authority
said. Nothing was found, the agency said on Twitter.
Experts say it's possible the materials may have drifted or sunk.
Photos: The search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370
'Eventually something will come to light'
New ocean images show 122 objects
How Inmarsat found MH370's path
Search aircraft did spot
three objects, but teams weren't able to locate them again in several
passes through the area, the Australian Maritime Safety Authority said.
The latest objects seen on satellite images provided by Airbus Defence and Space range
from about 3 feet (1 meter) to about 75 feet (23 meters), Hishammuddin
said. Some appear bright, indicating they may be solid, he said.
The latest images appear
to be the most significant discovery yet in the hunt for the missing
plane, which vanished March 8 with 239 people aboard, said CNN aviation
analyst Miles O'Brien.
"There's a very good chance this could be the break we've been waiting for," he said.
Aviation safety analyst David Soucie agreed, saying he was particularly intrigued by the size of the 75-foot object.
"It has potential to be a wing that's floating," he said. "So I'm really encouraged by it, I really am."
But satellites have
captured images of objects before during the current search, crews have
yet to spot anything definitively linked to the airplane and ships
haven't recovered anything of note.
"This is a positive
indication that the searchers are getting closer to the origin of the
crash, but there are many uncertainties," said Ian MacDonald, an
oceanographer at Florida State University. "There could be many objects
floating in the ocean, that are large or small, that are completely
unrelated to the crash."
Until searchers get their hands on the objects, he said, it's too soon to say whether they are parts of the plane or garbage floating in ocean waters.
Officials have warned
that objects spotted in the water may turn out to be flotsam from cargo
ships, and that finding anything from the plane still could take a long
time.
"There's always a
possibility we might not actually find something next week or the week
after," Mark Binskin, vice chief of the Australian Defence Force, told
CNN's Kate Bolduan on Tuesday. "I think eventually, something will come
to light, but it's going to take time."
Military reconnaissance
planes from Australia, the United States and Japan, and five civilian
aircraft are set to comb the vast search area again on Thursday.
Five ships -- one from Australia and four from China -- also are in the search zone, Australian authorities said.
What role did pilots play?
An ongoing FBI review of
the missing jet's pilots' hard drives, including the captain's flight
simulator, has not turned up a "smoking gun," a U.S. official with
knowledge of the investigation told CNN.
"They have accessed the data," the official said. "There is nothing that's jumping out and grabbing us right now."
The official would not
reveal what was on the hard drive, but said the Malaysia Airlines pilot
did not encrypt any of the files nor did he appear to go to any great
lengths to scrub the hard drive when he deleted files last month.
FBI Director James Comey
said earlier Wednesday that he expects the information would be handed
over to the Malaysians in the next day or two. "I have teams working
literally around the clock to try and exploit that,'' Comey said. "I
don't want to say more about that in an open setting. But I expect it to
be done fairly shortly within a day or two, to finish that work."
The information
retrieved from the hard drives will hopefully give investigators leads
to follow regarding the pilot's backgrounds, such as their finances and
emotional state and who they had been communicating with.
U.S. investigators
continue to be baffled by the plane's disappearance, with one U.S.
official saying, "I don't think there is a prevailing theory. There are
counterarguments to every theory right now."
Investigators are still
focusing on the pilots, even though no physical evidence, such as a
suicide note, has been found in their homes that would suggest they were
planning the plane's disappearance. One of the main reasons for the
continued focus on the pair is that there is nothing else explaining
what happened, sources say.
Citing an anonymous high-ranking officer attached to a special investigative branch of Malaysian police in Kuala Lumpur, USA Today reported Wednesday
that investigators believe the plane's captain was "solely responsible
for the flight being taken hundreds of miles off course."
Investigators are now pressing Capt. Zaharie Ahmad Shah's family for more details, USA Today world news editor William Dermody told CNN.
"Some of it's process of
elimination," Dermody said. "They can't find any other rationale for
it, and according to the evidence they have thus far, they don't believe
that the plane was mechanically disabled. They feel that it had to have
been done manually, and the only person who could have done that on the
plane was the pilot."
But a senior Malaysian
government official told CNN law enforcement analyst Tom Fuentes that
they have found nothing negative so far in 19 days of investigating the
two pilots that leads them to any motive, be it political, suicidal or
extremist.
"The people in the
cockpit are a top priority," the source said. "We are heavily dependent
on the Malaysians to do a deep dive on personal lives."
Another U.S. official
said nothing was flagged after a study of the passengers onboard the
plane and that "no terrorism stuff is moving forward" at this stage in
the investigation.
The hardware
If search teams are able
to find debris confirmed to be from the plane, it will help officials
figure out roughly where the aircraft went down.
They would then be able
to focus the search under the water to try to find larger pieces of
wreckage and the all-important flight data recorder, which may hold
vital clues about what happened the night the plane disappeared.
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U.S. hardware designed
to help with that task arrived Wednesday in Perth, the western
Australian city that is the base for the search efforts.
The United States sent a
Bluefin-21 autonomous underwater vehicle, which can search for
submerged objects at depths as low as 14,700 feet (about 4,500 meters),
and a TPL-25, a giant listening device that can help pinpoint the
location of pings from the flight data recorder. Towed behind a ship,
the TPL-25 can detect pings at a maximum depth of 20,000 feet (about
6,100 meters).
Time is against that
part of the search, though, as the plane's pinger is expected to run out
of power within the next two weeks. The Indian Ocean has an average
depth of about 13,000 feet (about 4,000 meters).
The families
The wait for answers
about what happened to the plane and where it is now has taken a toll on
the relatives of those on the flight.
Chinese kin have been particularly upset by Malaysian authorities' announcement Monday,
based on analysis of satellite data, that the plane had crashed into
the southern Indian Ocean with the loss of all lives aboard.
"It is still theory, and
it's just still analysis" said Stephen Wang, whose mother was on the
missing flight. "No one have seen anything."
Many relatives of those
missing haven't accepted the theory, and still think their loved ones
might still be alive, Wang told CNN's Pauline Chiou.
"To me, I think it might
be 5% that there is still hope, but most of the families don't believe
that it might be bad news," Wang said. "Most of the families still think
that there will be hope."
On Wednesday, some
families accused Malaysia Airlines of falling short of its promises to
provide volunteer caregivers and accommodations for some family members.
The airline couldn't immediately be reached for comment and did not
send a representative to a news conference Wednesday.
The complaints came a day after hundreds of Flight 370 family members marched to the Malaysian Embassy in Beijing -- the flight's destination -- to voice their anger and frustration.
Some said the Malaysian government was covering up the truth and demanded tangible evidence the plane had ended up in the ocean.
The Chinese government,
whose citizens made up two-thirds of the passengers on board the missing
plane, also said it wanted more information from Malaysia. President Xi Jinping has sent a special envoy to Kuala Lumpur to deal with the matter.
Malaysian officials met
with the Chinese envoy, said Hishammuddin, the transport minister, and
briefed them extensively on the analysis of the satellite data that led
to the crash conclusion.
The backlash
The Malaysians' comments
appeared to have done little to placate the anger among the families,
however, and it appeared to be spreading more widely among the Chinese
public.
Some Chinese celebrities used social media to urge people to boycott Malaysian products and visits to the country.
Chen Kun, one of China's
most popular actors, accused the Malaysian government and Malaysia
Airlines of "clownish prevarication and lies." His post Tuesday calling
for a boycott was reposted more than 65,000 times on Weibo, China's
Twitter-like microblogging platform.
"I've never been to
Malaysia, and I will no longer plan to go there anymore," Meng Fei, the
host of one of China's most popular TV shows, wrote Wednesday on Weibo,
calling for others to repost the comments if they felt the same. More
than 120,000 users did.
Other social media users, albeit with smaller followings, argued against punishing Malaysia over the matter.
Chen Shu, a journalist,
warned that a boycott would "hurt the relationship of Chinese and
Malaysians" and long-term regional ties.
Chinese authorities
regularly censor Weibo posts. The fact the anti-Malaysian posts by
high-profile users weren't deleted suggested either tacit approval or at
least an unwillingness to wade into the debate by Chinese government
censors.
Hishammuddin, however,
praised his country's performance, saying officials had overcome
significant diplomatic challenges to bring together 26 countries, at one
point, to participate in the search.
"History will judge us well," he said.
CNN's Michael Pearson reported and wrote
from Atlanta, Jethro Mullen reported and wrote from Hong Kong and Pamela
Brown reported and wrote from Washington. CNN's Catherine E. Shoichet,
Atika Shubert, Sara Sidner, David McKenzie, Yuli Yang and Brooke Baldwin
and CNNMoney's Gregory Wallace contributed to this report.
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