Search teams found a radio still transmitting in the wreckage of Flight 2976

0
8

HEARTBREAKING UPDATE: Search teams working at the crash site of UPS Flight 2976 have made a deeply emotional discovery — a radio that was still transmitting faint static signals, buried under layers of debris. But when investigators turned it over, what they found on the back left everyone speechless.

According to official sources, the radio was discovered early this morning by a recovery team sweeping through the cockpit remains. At first, rescuers thought the sound was just background interference from nearby communication towers, but as they cleared the debris, they realized the signal was coming directly from one of the aircraft’s emergency transceivers — a model that should have stopped functioning within hours after impact.

When the team carefully flipped the device over, they found something unexpected: a message scratched into the metal casing with what appeared to be the tip of a broken pen. The message contained just five words:

“Don’t let him take control.”

Experts immediately sealed off the area and called in both aviation and forensic specialists to examine the device. What’s particularly unsettling is that the radio’s internal battery showed signs of having been manually rewired — as if someone had deliberately tried to keep it transmitting even after power loss.

Investigators are now working to determine whether the message was written by the pilot, co-pilot, or another crew member during the final minutes of the flight. The handwriting appears rushed, almost desperate, with pressure marks deep enough to dent the metal surface.

An NTSB spokesperson confirmed that the discovery could significantly reshape the current theory of what happened on board Flight 2976. “This wasn’t just a malfunction,” one official said quietly. “Someone was trying to send a warning.”

As recovery efforts continue, the static signal from the radio has now been preserved and isolated for analysis. Families of the victims were informed this afternoon — many left in tears after hearing that even in his final moments, the crew may have been fighting against something — or someone — to the very end.