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topicnews · July 16, 2025

23yo disappeared to sea. New Netflix Doc asks: Where is Amy Bradley?

23yo disappeared to sea. New Netflix Doc asks: Where is Amy Bradley?


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  • A new Netflix Docuseries “Amy Bradley is missing” examines the disappearance of 23-year-old Amy Bradley from a Royal Caribbean cruise ship from 1998.
  • The documentary includes interviews with family, friends, law enforcement authorities and includes archive material.
  • The FBI examination for Amy Bradley's disappearance remains open.

In the first episode of “Amy Bradley is Missing”, a new Netflix documentary series, precisely “John” mentar recalls a hectic search for a guest who has disappeared from a cruise ship than was arrived on the Dutch Caribbean island of Curaçao.

As the chief of police of port, he was part of a multi-agency effort to find 23-year-old Amy Bradley, who was missed in 1998 at Royal Caribbean International's Rhapsody. In view of the strong current in the region, he found that a passenger who had walked overboard showed up at some point. “I tell you when she came from the ship or fell off the ship, we would get a body,” he said. “She would have washed ashore …”

“E Kos Ta Straño,” he adds in Papiumsum, one of the country's official languages. “It means: 'The thing is strange.'”

The secret is the focus of the show, which was premiered on Wednesday on the streaming service. The series examines Bradley's disappearance with her family during a cruise, a case that remains unsolved almost 30 years later.

After the co-director Ari Mark had hit the Bradleys, he said: “It became clear that this was a family who really suffered and was very long.”

“Really, that was the impetus that we can really move the needle in this case,” he told USA. “Of course, the complexity of the case, the different theories and only the many, many layers are impossible to ignore than we get into the case.”

What happened to Amy Bradley?

The show spends three episodes with this question with interviews with relatives, friends, law enforcement authorities and others. The series contains both original and archive material, including Bradley's relatives to tell history.

“There is quite a lot of material that is trapped in this time capsule from this time when media are brought in, photos, videos,” said co-director Phil Lott.

Bradley's parents won a one -week Caribbean cruise on board the sea through a work competition and took them and their younger brother in March 1998. A few days later, her father Ron noticed that in the early morning hours of March 24, shortly after seeing her on a lounge chair on the balcony.

The family announced the crew that she was looking for but could not find them. The law enforcement authorities searched the water between Aruba – where the ship had previously stopped – and Curaçao without success. Federal Bureau of Investigation Agents entered the ship, but the examination was not conclusive.

The Docuseries underline a number of possible scenarios, including this Bradley could have been deliberately or accidentally overboard. was smuggled by the ship; Or went away and never returned. Several witnesses claim that they had seen them in various parts of the region in the following years.

According to the series, the cruise ship also represented challenges. The FBI special agent Erin Sheridan said that the Bradleys' cabin, which they shared, was cleaned before agents could go on board, for example.

The Bradleys later sued the cruise line, but the claims were rejected. Royal Caribbean did not immediately shared a comment on USA Today in the documentary films.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8gkrbfpjrhq

How long is “Amy Bradley”?

The three episodes of the series range from around 40 to 50 minutes each.

How do I see “Amy Bradley is missing”?

The show is available for Netflix.

The investigation of the FBI remains open. Mark said he hoped that the audience will “be activated to get involved in a way that could lead to answers”.

“I think people will empathize with (the Bradleys) and get a feeling for the purpose,” he said. “And I think we can come together as people with a clear meaning at any time, we are better off.”

Nathan Diller is a consumer traveler reporter for USA Today based in Nashville. You can reach him at ndiller@usatoday.com.