After 28 years and eleven episodes, two theories about Amy Bradley’s disappearance are eliminated by the evidence. Accidental overboard: eliminated by physics. Voluntary disappearance: eliminated by the behavioral record. One framework remains.
This is the final analytical episode of the series — the keycard discrepancy nobody pressed, the video suppressed from two directions, the 2002 grand jury the Bradley family didn’t know about, and the sightings record across three countries and seven years.
Before the family speaks in Part 2, here’s what the record actually shows.
After 28 years, two theories about Amy Bradley's disappearance are eliminated by the evidence. One remains. This is the verdict.
Episode 12, Part 1 is the final analytical episode of the Amy Bradley series — the account of everything eleven episodes of documented evidence has established, and everything it could not. Before the Bradley family speaks in Part 2, this episode lays out the record in full.
What the record establishes: Amy spent the evening of March 23, 1998 with the ship's bass player, Alistair Douglass, in the Viking Lounge — documented by multiple witnesses and partially preserved on video. Between approximately 5:30 and 6am on March 24th, two witnesses watched Amy and Douglass enter the ship's glass elevator together. Douglass came back down. Alone. Keycard data places Douglass entering his cabin at 3:40am — directly contradicting the 1am account he has maintained for 28 years, a discrepancy the FBI never pressed. And in the hours after Amy was reported missing, two separate ship's employees were independently instructed to remove her image from ship video — a detail this series can now document from both sides.
What the FBI investigation produced — and didn't. Agents didn't board the ship for 48 hours. No federal reward existed for 19 years. And in 2002, a federal prosecutor not assigned to this case convened a grand jury and got seven witnesses on the record under oath, without telling the Bradley family it had happened. One of those witnesses has since died. Her testimony is preserved.
The sightings record: four documented post-disappearance accounts across Curaçao, Barbados, and Venezuela over seven years — evaluated against the same evidentiary standard applied throughout this series. Individually credible. Geographically consistent. Collectively difficult to dismiss.
And the diagnosis: accidental overboard, eliminated by physics. Voluntary disappearance, eliminated by the behavioral record. What remains is the most credible framework this series has identified — and this episode names, precisely, the line between credible and confirmed.
This is not a series that closes Amy Bradley's case. It's a series that, after 28 years, says plainly what the evidence supports.
If you have information about Amy Bradley's disappearance: Call 1-800-CALL-FBI or submit a tip at tips.fbi.gov. Anonymous. $100,000 reward.
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Thanks to our monthly supportersMidnight Mystery Archive explores unsolved cases, disappearances, conspiracies, and forgotten mysteries through research, storytelling, and clear analysis. Hosted by Kevin Hall, the show takes listeners deeper into the cases that shape our curiosity and haunt our history — always with respect for the victims and their families. Part of the Archive Podcast Network.