Diego Garcia Island: Does Malaysian flight 370 mystery lead to remote base?
Diego Garcia is one the sites believed by some to be a possible landing place for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370.That theory was bolstered when it was discovered that the flight simulator used by pilot Zaharie Shah included the island atoll.
Someone anonymously posted on the social media website on March 18 under the title help. It was written as I have been held hostage by unknown military personal after my flight was hijacked (blindfolded), the poster said. I work for IBM and I have managed to hide my cell phone in my [expletive] during the hijack. I have been separated from the rest of the passengers and I am in a cell. My name is Philip Wood. I think I have been drugged as well and cannot think clearly.
Wood was the only American aboard the flight, which vanished after taking off from Kuala Lumpur on March 8. The reports say that he sent the coordinates of his location and they showed that they were from an area just a few miles off the location of Diego Garcia Island. In his message he said he is being kept in a cell by himself and he is in a state of confusion and possibly drugged.
The reports continue saying that he was able to conceal his cell phone, as he may have had two, one for personal use and another for his work with IBM. If hijackers had the passengers dump their cell phones in a bag, it would stand to reason if he had two, he could keep one concealed down his pants, as this rumor suggests.
Why would anyone want to take the plane and the passengers? The theory explaining this has to do with the 20 top employees from Free scale Semiconductor Inc. on the flight. They had worked on a semiconductor and were waiting for a patent and now that they are gone, the patent goes to one man, billionaire Jacob Rothschild.
Jim Stone reports that there were five people holding this microchip patent and if four of them are gone on the plane that leaves one owner. Suggesting the disappearance of this plane is to benefit Rothschild is a bit ridiculous because he is already a billionaire many times over
In Perth, Australia searchers looking for the missing Malaysia Airlines plane have discovered signals consistent with those emitted by black boxes in the Indian Ocean, but they may still be a long way from finding the first piece of wreckage.
Diego Garcia is one the sites believed by some to be a possible landing place for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370.That theory was bolstered when it was discovered that the flight simulator used by pilot Zaharie Shah included the island atoll.

Wood was the only American aboard the flight, which vanished after taking off from Kuala Lumpur on March 8. The reports say that he sent the coordinates of his location and they showed that they were from an area just a few miles off the location of Diego Garcia Island. In his message he said he is being kept in a cell by himself and he is in a state of confusion and possibly drugged.
The reports continue saying that he was able to conceal his cell phone, as he may have had two, one for personal use and another for his work with IBM. If hijackers had the passengers dump their cell phones in a bag, it would stand to reason if he had two, he could keep one concealed down his pants, as this rumor suggests.
Why would anyone want to take the plane and the passengers? The theory explaining this has to do with the 20 top employees from Free scale Semiconductor Inc. on the flight. They had worked on a semiconductor and were waiting for a patent and now that they are gone, the patent goes to one man, billionaire Jacob Rothschild.
Jim Stone reports that there were five people holding this microchip patent and if four of them are gone on the plane that leaves one owner. Suggesting the disappearance of this plane is to benefit Rothschild is a bit ridiculous because he is already a billionaire many times over
In Perth, Australia searchers looking for the missing Malaysia Airlines plane have discovered signals consistent with those emitted by black boxes in the Indian Ocean, but they may still be a long way from finding the first piece of wreckage.