Compound: A view of the entrance to Zaharie Ahmad's residence. Police have been stationed outside for the last week
Officers are said to have spent two hours searching the pilot's home today inside the luxury compound
Luxury: Shah is said to live at the property with his wife Faisa
In
Shah's house a flight simulator has been set up and is understood to
have interested police following up one line of investigation - that he
had used the equipment to practice making his real-life Boeing 777
‘invisible’ by turning off all communications.
Today, a police van with a large contingent of officers inside passed through a security gate at the entrance to the wealthy compound where father-of-three Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah lives with his wife Faisa.
Four plain-clothed police officers were also, reportedly, seen at the home of the other pilot Fariq Abdul Hamid, 27.
Both
pilots live in the upmarket Kuala Lumpur district of Laman Seri, about
an hour's drive from the city centre - and each was visited today by a
team of detectives who arrived in a white 'people mover' vehicle.
The homes are substantial and are, said one resident, typical of high income earners.
It is believed a team of search
specialists entered Shah's house and spent two hours searching for signs
of foul play, before moving into search the co-pilot's home a short
distance away.
The New Straits Times reported last night
that before police turned up at Hamid's home, his two brothers arrived
there in a Mini Cooper, believed to belong to a friend.
They hurried into the house and remained
there for a short time before hurrying away in the same car, taking with
them transparent blue plastic bags containing clothes and toiletries.
Fariq's father, Abdul Hamid left with them. An hour later, the plain clothed officers left the house carrying two brown bags.
The
concentration by police on the homes of the Captain and the co-pilot
adds to suspicion that one - or both - of them might have had been
responsible for the plight of the aircraft.Despite the
investigation, Malaysian officials and friends of the pilots have told
MailOnline this week that there are no reasons to suspect either the
Captain or co-pilot of having personal problems that would have resulted
in them taking control of the aircraft.
Mr Razak added authorities have not ruled
out any possibilities in the international search for the plane, which
now involves 14 countries, 43 ships and 58 aircraft.
'Clearly
the search has entered a new phase. Over the last seven days, we have
followed every lead and looked into every possibility,' Mr Razak said.
'For family and friends (of the passengers), we hope this new
information brings us one step closer to finding the plane.'
Entrance: The gates outside the home of co-pilot Fariq Abdul Hamid who is also under police investigation
Journalists
gathered outside Hamid's home in Shah Alam as police turned their
attention to those on board as part of the wide-ranging probe
Suspicions:
Jonti Roos (centre) claims she and her friend were entertained by Fariq
Abdul Hamid, 27, who is one of the pilots of the missing Malaysia
Airlines flight (right). He is now part of an investigation by police in
Kuala Lumpur
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