Amy Bradley disappeared from a Royal Caribbean cruise ship in 1998. 28 years later, her case is unsolved — but it isn’t unsolvable.
Episode 11 is the most forward-looking episode of this series. What a federal prosecutor actually needs. What forensic genetic genealogy and facial recognition now make possible. What the FBI reward increase and the newly assigned agent could mean. And the one variable that matters more than technology, jurisdiction, or evidence: institutional will.
If you have information: tips.fbi.gov | 1-800-CALL-FBI. The reward is $100,000.
Amy Bradley disappeared from a Royal Caribbean cruise ship on March 24, 1998. 28 years later, her case remains officially unsolved — but unsolved and unsolvable are not the same thing.
Episode 11 turns forward. After ten episodes documenting what happened, what failed, and what the evidence shows, this episode asks the harder question: what would it actually take to move Amy's case toward resolution?
Part 1 delivers a systemic diagnosis — not a list of what went wrong, but the four structural components that have kept this case in place for nearly three decades: the jurisdictional gap that limits what the FBI can compel in foreign waters, the evidence window that closed before investigators arrived, the institutional momentum that cold cases systematically lose over time, and the information asymmetry that has kept the Bradley family locked out of the very file their work helped build.
Part 2 answers the question directly. What a federal prosecutor would actually need to bring charges. What forensic genetic genealogy, advanced facial recognition, and digital forensics now make possible that was impossible in 1998. The specific jurisdictional changes — mandatory evidence preservation standards, international cooperation frameworks, a dedicated federal resource for international cold cases — that would make future cases like Amy's more investigable. What the public can do that genuinely helps, and what crosses the line. And the variable that matters more than all of it: institutional will.
This is the most forward-looking episode the series has produced. It is also the most urgent. The FBI raised Amy's reward to $100,000. A new agent has been assigned. Two persons of interest have been questioned. Whether this represents a genuine reinvestment in the case is something the next year will answer.
What this series has established across eleven episodes, dozens of sourced documents, seven firsthand witnesses, and the documented record of a family that has never stopped, is that Amy Bradley's disappearance is not unsolvable. It is unsolved.
If you have information about Amy's disappearance: Call 1-800-CALL-FBI or submit a tip at tips.fbi.gov. Tips are accepted anonymously. The FBI reward is $100,000.
AmyBradleyisMissing.com
Sign the Amy Alerts petition:
Invisawear — 100% of commissions go to the Bradley family GoFundMe during the series run:
Support MMA on Patreon (early access, case notes, behind-the-scenes)
Echo 1953 — The Hollis Files Book 1 — pre-order now, launching July 27, 2026:
Midnight 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.