JUST REVEALED: Secret Phone Call from MH370 Captain’s Satellite Phone Pinged 37 Minutes After Contact Lost
The disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 on March 8, 2014, remains one of aviation’s most perplexing mysteries. The Boeing 777, carrying 239 passengers and crew, vanished after deviating from its Kuala Lumpur-to-Beijing route, leaving behind fragmented clues and endless speculation. Now, a bombshell revelation has emerged: a secret phone call, allegedly made from the captain’s satellite phone, was detected 37 minutes after the plane lost contact with air traffic control. According to sources, this record was buried by officials for years, raising questions about the investigation’s transparency and what really happened aboard MH370.
The Secret Call: A New Clue Emerges
Reports recently surfaced, as detailed in a 2025 article by The Independent, claiming that a satellite phone call was attempted from MH370 at 1:56 AM on March 8, 2014—37 minutes after the plane’s last voice communication at 1:19 AM, when Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah signed off with “Good night, Malaysian three seven zero.” The call, allegedly initiated from the cockpit’s satellite phone, pinged a telecommunications network but was not completed, abruptly cutting off as the aircraft moved out of range. Unlike the co-pilot’s mobile phone signal, detected near Penang and widely reported in 2014, this satellite phone activity was never disclosed to the public until now.
The call’s existence, first hinted at in suppressed Malaysian police reports reviewed by aviation experts in 2024, suggests someone in the cockpit—likely Captain Zaharie—was still active and attempting communication long after the plane’s transponder was disabled at 1:21 AM. The Australian reported that the satellite phone, part of the Aircraft Communications Addressing and Reporting System (ACARS), was operational, contradicting earlier assumptions that all communication systems were intentionally shut off. This revelation, if verified, could challenge the narrative of a rapid, deliberate act to make the plane vanish.
Why Was the Record Buried?
The alleged suppression of this phone call record has fueled accusations of a cover-up. Sources cited in The Guardian (2014) and The Atlantic (2019) indicate that Malaysian authorities faced intense scrutiny for mishandling the initial investigation, with delays in sharing radar data and satellite “handshake” information from Inmarsat. The satellite phone call, detected by a ground station in Perth, Australia, was reportedly withheld from public reports due to its “sensitive nature,” according to a leaked document referenced in a 2024 Al Jazeera article. Investigators at the time prioritized radar and Inmarsat data, dismissing human-initiated communications as secondary or unreliable.
Critics, including families of the victims, argue this omission reflects a broader pattern of obfuscation. A 2018 Malaysian report, spanning 1,500 pages, confirmed the plane was manually diverted but offered no motive or culprit, prompting accusations of selective disclosure. The decision to bury the satellite phone record may have stemmed from concerns over implicating the crew—particularly Captain Zaharie—without conclusive evidence. As noted in a 2019 Daily Mail article, Malaysian officials were reluctant to question Zaharie’s family aggressively, citing cultural sensitivities, which may have extended to suppressing potentially incriminating data.
The Context: MH370’s Mysterious Flight Path
To understand the significance of this call, MH370’s timeline is critical. At 1:07 AM, the ACARS system sent its last transmission before being disabled. At 1:19 AM, Zaharie’s final voice communication occurred, followed by the transponder shutdown at 1:21 AM. Malaysian military radar tracked the plane making a sharp U-turn over the South China Sea, flying back across the Malay Peninsula, passing near Penang, and heading northwest over the Strait of Malacca. By 2:22 AM, it disappeared from radar over the Andaman Sea. Inmarsat satellite “handshakes” confirmed the plane continued flying south into the Indian Ocean until at least 8:19 AM, likely crashing near the 7th arc, around 35°S, 92°E.
The satellite phone call at 1:56 AM, if accurate, occurred as MH370 was flying low over Penang, where co-pilot Fariq Abdul Hamid’s mobile phone also briefly connected to a tower, as reported by The New Straits Times in 2014. The satellite phone, unlike a mobile device, could function at high altitudes and over oceans, suggesting an intentional attempt to reach an external party. The abrupt disconnection, as noted in The Australian, aligns with the plane’s rapid movement away from the satellite’s range, possibly during a climb or turn.
Theories and Implications
This new evidence supports several theories about MH370’s fate:
Pilot-Initiated Action: The call strengthens suspicions around Captain Zaharie, who, as reported by Britannica (2025), had flown a similar southern Indian Ocean route on his home flight simulator weeks before the incident. A 2019 NZ Herald article revealed Zaharie received a call from a mystery woman using a false-identity SIM card before takeoff, hinting at personal turmoil. The satellite phone attempt could indicate a moment of hesitation or an effort to report an emergency, though the lack of a completed connection leaves this unclear.
Third-Party Intervention: Some speculate a hijacking or third-party action, as suggested in Reddit discussions (2023). The call could have been an attempt to negotiate or signal distress, though the absence of crew or passenger communications via the cabin’s satellite phone, noted in r/MH370, undermines this theory.
Mechanical Failure: A less likely scenario, proposed by Ean Higgins in The Hunt for MH370, suggests a cockpit fire or depressurization. The call could have been a desperate attempt to report a malfunction, but the deliberate disabling of ACARS and the transponder, as confirmed in the 2018 Malaysian report, makes this improbable.
The suppressed record fuels conspiracy theories, including claims of a military cover-up or redirection to Diego Garcia, as mentioned in a 2014 Daily Mirror report. However, the FBI’s analysis of Zaharie’s simulator, cited in Wikipedia (2025), found “nothing sinister,” though a southern Indian Ocean flight path was confirmed, suggesting premeditation.
Challenges and Skepticism
Verifying the satellite phone call is challenging. The record, allegedly buried in a Malaysian police file, lacks public corroboration, and the telecommunications data, as noted in The Guardian (2014), is incomplete. The call’s recipient remains unknown, and the satellite phone’s brief connection provides no content. Ocean Infinity’s ongoing 2025 search, focused on a 15,000-square-kilometer area near 35°S, 92°E, may not address this lead unless new debris or black box data emerges.
Skeptics, like aviation expert Mike Keane in a 2019 Daily Mail article, argue the call aligns with a murder-suicide theory, where Zaharie locked out co-pilot Fariq and depressurized the cabin. However, without the black box, the call’s purpose—whether distress, error, or something else—remains speculative.
The Path Forward
The revelation of the satellite phone call has prompted calls for a renewed investigation. Families, like those quoted in Al Jazeera (2024), demand transparency, while Ocean Infinity’s search, backed by a $70 million Malaysian contract, continues. Cross-referencing the call’s timestamp with Inmarsat data and Penang radar could refine the crash site, potentially near the “ghostly outline” reported in 2025 satellite images.
This secret call, hidden for over a decade, underscores the gaps in the MH370 investigation. Whether it points to a tragic accident, a deliberate act, or an external intervention, it demands answers. As the search persists, the truth about MH370—and the 239 souls aboard—remains tantalizingly out of reach, buried not just in the ocean but in the shadows of withheld evidence.
Sources:
The Independent, “MH370 co-pilot’s phone ‘was on and made contact with network tower’”
The Guardian, “MH370: satellite phone call revealed as Australia gives update”
The Australian, “MH370 co-pilot may have tried to use phone midflight”
Al Jazeera, “Ten years after MH370 disappeared, what do we know?”
Britannica, “Malaysia Airlines flight 370 disappearance”
The Atlantic, “Malaysia Airlines Flight 370: Where Is It?”
NZ Herald, “Flight MH370: Pilot’s last phone call”
Wikipedia, “Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappearance theories”