“You can follow that data and you can see where an aircraft may have disturbed the radio signals and you can pick up those disturbances,” Godfrey told 60 Minutes Australia.
“In my view, there is no reason why we shouldn’t be preparing a new search and planning for that,” he stated. “It will only take one more search and we will find it.”
Incredibly, Godfrey managed to pinpoint the location of the crash to a 115-square-mile area in the Indian Ocean, which covers part of the 77,000-square-mile area searched by the Australia Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB). That failed search ended in 2018 at a cost of $200 million.