US and RAAF search planes are back for a second day to the Indian Ocean some 2,500 kilometers west-southwest off Perth, looking for any sign of missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370.  Naval Vessels are also steaming to the area and some merchant ships have been sent there to assist the search.

Four military planes, including two Orions belonging to the Royal Australian Air Force, are taking part in the search.  This comes after the WorldView-2, a high definition imaging satellite belonging to the US company DigitalGlobe, detected two objects bobbing around in rough waters that ‘could’ be debris from the missing 777.  Officials in Australian and Malaysia seem to think it’s as good a lead as any they’ve come across in this mystery.

This is day 14 of the search, as Flight MH370 disappeared in the early morning hours of 8 March just an hour into its scheduled Kuala Lumpur to Beijing run with 239 people on board, including six Australians.  Investigators believe that someone inside the cockpit rerouted the plane via the flight computer.  They don’t know where to, or why.  But there ‘could’ be a hint left behind.

An anonymous US official familiar with the investigation told the American news network CNN that the FBI is confident that it will be able to retrieve at least some files deleted from the hard drive of the personal flight simulator owned by Flight 370 Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah.  They’ll also analyze websites that Zaharie and co-pilot Fariq Ab Hamid may have visited recently.