Amy Bradley: Inside the Case File | Part 8 episode artwork

EPISODE · May 15, 2026 · 23 MIN

Amy Bradley: Inside the Case File | Part 8

from Midnight Mystery Archive · host The Midnight Mystery Archive

There is a principle at the foundation of every sound investigation: find the information and let it lead you to the answer. You do not begin with the answer and work backward. Episode 8 examines the FBI's documented record in Amy Bradley's case against that standard — and names, specifically and on the evidence, where the investigation fell short. The 48-hour boarding delay. When the FBI finally boarded Rhapsody of the Seas, nearly two days had passed. Every passenger had disembarked. Amy's cabin had been cleaned. The physical environment of March 24th had been reset. They weren't investigating a scene. They were investigating a memory. The witnesses who weren't contacted. Lori and Crystal reported seeing Amy with Alistair Douglass in the glass elevator on the morning she disappeared. The FBI dismissed their account — characterizing them, in Lori's own words, as nothing more than drunk little rich white girls on vacation. They never interviewed Lori's aunt, who heard the girls' account and directed them to security. They never interviewed Lori's mother, who can confirm the timeline of when the girls returned to the cabin. Two corroborating witnesses. Never contacted. The Douglass problem. His stated timeline — in his cabin since 1am — was directly contradicted by keycard data placing him entering at 3:45am. That discrepancy was never pressed. He was allowed to change his statement. And today, 28 years later, he still says 1am. No federal reward for nineteen years. The FBI did not establish a reward in Amy's case until 2017. For nineteen years, the Bradley family — and Mike McCord, Ron's employer — privately funded reward efforts while the federal government offered nothing. The people most likely to know something on Curaçao weighed the risk of coming forward against the benefit. For nineteen years, the federal government set that benefit at zero. The DC meeting. The Bradley family and their private investigator Jim Carey made the trip to Washington to meet with the FBI. They were shown nothing. Told nothing. The case file that exists in Amy's name — built across 28 years of federal investigation — remains inaccessible to the people who have done more to keep it alive than any institution. David Carmichael tried the official channel after recognizing Amy on America's Most Wanted. Nothing happened. So he found the Bradley family himself. Ron called him back within 24 hours. This episode also examines what the FBI's workload and jurisdictional constraints genuinely explain — and what they don't. Maritime attorney Michael Winkleman, heard in Episode 4, described the structural reality: cases like Amy's are not always at the top of the FBI's priority list. That is a real constraint. It does not explain the dismissal of Lori and Crystal. It does not explain nineteen years without a reward. It does not explain a suspect whose lie was never confronted. And it closes with what's moving now: a new FBI agent assigned after the Netflix documentary, two persons of interest with trafficking ties questioned, and what may be the first genuine forward momentum this case has had in years. The file is open. The question is what was done with it. If you have information about Amy's disappearance — 1-800-CALL-FBI or tips.fbi.gov. Tips can be submitted anonymously. The FBI reward is now $100,000. 100% of Invisawear commissions go to the Bradley family's GoFundMe. 10% off through the link in the show notes. Support the show at no extra cost through our Amazon link. amybradleyismissing.com | Amy Alerts petition | tips.fbi.gov | 1-800-CALL-FBI | Invisawear | Bradley family GoFundMe #AmyBradley #AmyLynnBradley #AmyBradleyIsMissing #TheFile #FBI #FBIInvestigation #FBIFailed #ColdCase #MissingPersons #BradleyFamily #RonBradley #IvaBradley #BradBradley #AlistairDouglass #LouCostello #RhapsodyOfTheSeas #RoyalCaribbean #CruiseShipDisappearance #JimCarey #PrivateInvestigator #MikeMcCord #MichaelWinkleman #CVSSA #FBIReward #MidnightMysteryArchive #TrueCrimePodcast #InvestigativePodcast #DocumentarySeries #TrueCrimeDocumentary #InvisaWear #UnsolvedCases

The FBI didn’t board the Rhapsody of the Seas for 48 hours. They dismissed two eyewitnesses as drunk girls on vacation and never contacted the aunt or mother who could have corroborated their account. They let Alistair Douglass change a statement that the keycard data directly contradicted. They had no federal reward in place for the first nineteen years. And when the Bradley family and their private investigator made the trip to Washington to meet with the FBI, they were shown nothing. In Episode 8, host Kevin Hall examines what 28 years of federal investigation has actually produced — and what the documented pattern of decisions tells us about an investigation that may have arrived at its conclusions before the evidence was fully examined. A 12-part investigative series from Midnight Mystery Archive, produced in cooperation with the Bradley family.

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Amy Bradley: Inside the Case File | Part 8

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This episode was published on May 15, 2026.

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There is a principle at the foundation of every sound investigation: find the information and let it lead you to the answer. You do not begin with the answer and work backward. Episode 8 examines the FBI's documented record in Amy Bradley's case...

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