Primary Investigation

What Really Happened to
MH370?

On March 8, 2014, Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappeared with 239 people on board. The official investigation concluded the aircraft crashed in the Southern Indian Ocean. Ashton Forbes presents a radically different explanation — one supported by satellite footage, plasma physics, and advanced propulsion theory.

75
Theories
70
Claims
70
Videos
Flight Analysis

The Flight Path

The confirmed radar track, military radar data, and the alleged location of the anomalous event that Forbes identifies as the site where three plasma objects intercepted the aircraft.

Kuala Lumpur Beijing → Ho Chi Minh LAST CONTACT 01:19 AM MYT MILITARY RADAR TRACK ALLEGED EVENT SITE OFFICIAL SEARCH AREA (Southern Indian Ocean) 7th Arc (Inmarsat) FLIGHT PATH LEGEND Confirmed track Military radar Alleged event site Anomalous objects Official search area ~90°E ~115°E ~15°N ~10°S
Chronology

Timeline of Events

From the night of the disappearance through ten years of investigation, cover-ups, and discovery.

Disappearance
Search
Footage
Investigation
Controversy
March 8, 2014 Disappearance

MH370 Disappears

Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 departs Kuala Lumpur at 12:41 AM local time bound for Beijing with 239 people aboard. The aircraft loses contact with air traffic control at 1:19 AM after transponders are turned off.

March 8, 2014 Disappearance

Military Radar Tracking

Malaysian military radar tracks an unidentified aircraft crossing the Malay Peninsula and heading northwest over the Andaman Sea. This contradicts the initial southern trajectory narrative.

March 8, 2014 Investigation

Inmarsat Satellite Handshakes

The Inmarsat-3F1 satellite records seven "handshake" signals from the aircraft over the next 6 hours, used to calculate possible flight paths along two arcs — northern and southern corridors.

March 2014 Footage

Satellite Footage Surfaces

Satellite and thermal imaging footage allegedly showing MH370's final moments emerges online. The videos appear to show three anomalous orb-like objects in formation around the aircraft before it vanishes.

March–April 2014 Search

Multinational Search Begins

The largest and most expensive search operation in aviation history commences in the southern Indian Ocean. 26 countries participate. No wreckage is found during the initial surface search.

July 2015 Search

Flaperon Found on Réunion Island

A flaperon from a Boeing 777 washes ashore on Réunion Island, 4,000 km from the search area. Forbes questions the chain of custody and the condition of the debris.

January 2017 Search

Official Search Suspended

After searching 120,000 square kilometers of ocean floor, the Australian-led underwater search is officially suspended with no aircraft found. Total cost exceeds $200 million.

2023 Investigation

Ashton Forbes Investigation Begins

Ashton Forbes begins systematically analyzing the satellite and thermal footage, connecting the anomalous objects to field-reverse configuration fusion drives and plasma physics.

2023 Footage

Orb Physics Analysis

Forbes presents detailed analysis connecting the orbs in the footage to known physics: field-reverse configuration reactors, toroidal plasma containment, and electromagnetic propulsion systems.

2023–2024 Controversy

Corridor Crew Controversy

YouTube channel Corridor Crew attempts to debunk the footage using VFX analysis. Forbes responds with frame-by-frame counter-analysis, sparking a major public debate about the footage's authenticity.

2024 Investigation

Gorgon Stare Connection

Forbes identifies the thermal footage as potentially originating from the ARGUS-IS / Gorgon Stare surveillance system — a classified wide-area persistent surveillance platform operated by the US military.

2024–2025 Investigation

Expanded Research

The investigation expands beyond MH370 to connect fusion reactor physics, zero-point energy, consciousness research, and alleged government suppression of advanced technologies into a unified framework.