
When Amy Bradley disappeared from the Rhapsody of the Seas, the institutional response moved slowly. The FBI didn't board the ship for nearly 48 hours. Local authorities in Curaçao had limited resources. The cruise line controlled access to everything.
The Bradley family didn't wait.
Within hours of landing back in Virginia, the home had become a command center. Letters went to senators and congressmen. Tip lines went up. And within a week, Iva's brothers made a decision that deserves to be named for what it was: they booked the same cruise. The same ship. The same route. The same ports. Back on the Rhapsody of the Seas — not to vacation, but to search.
Meanwhile, a formal search of the waters between Curaçao and Aruba had already concluded. In the Netflix documentary Amy Bradley Is Missing, harbor police chief John Mentar described the operation: the Marines, the Venezuelan Coast Guard, and the Navy all covered that corridor. He called it the biggest search the island had ever seen. His conclusion was direct — given the currents, the wind, and the wave height, if Amy had entered that water, something would have washed ashore. Not a piece of clothing. Nothing. In his own words: strange.
Three and a half weeks after coming home, the family flew back to Curaçao. Brad was there. His uncle Paul was there. And so was Tom — Amy's boyfriend, heard in this series for the first time — who went because he believed Amy was waiting for someone to find her.
This episode covers:
— The command center: how a grieving family organized themselves into an investigative operation within hours — The uncles' cruise: retracing the same route the week after Amy disappeared — and what the harbor master's records showed about another ship that left ahead of schedule — The search: Mentar's account of the air and sea operation, and what the absence of any physical evidence actually means — The return to Curaçao: following tips across the island, including through the backcountry in the middle of the night on roads that barely deserved the name — Deshy: the taxi driver who walked up to Ron and Brad outside a hotel and said their daughter did not fall from that ship — and named three places to look — The pipes and the shack: a desolate corner of the island, steel pipes in the ground, a makeshift pallet — and an empty Tic Tac container that has never left Brad's memory — The stoplight: the moment Brad heard something in the night that he has never stopped believing was Amy calling his name — Coming home again: what it costs to leave the island a second time with no answers
Brad Bradley and Tom are heard throughout, sharing firsthand accounts that no other source in this series can offer.
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 | Invisawear | Bradley family GoFundMe | Amazon
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