Investigators believe they may finally be gaining traction in the long-unsolved case of Amy Bradley, the 23-year-old who vanished from a cruise ship in 1998. According to law-enforcement sources, three new leads have emerged that could dramatically reshape the investigation into what happened nearly three decades ago.
The first lead involves a woman who worked as a bartender aboard the ship; she has now come forward with what she claimed were the words “Señorita kidnapped!” shouted during the night of Bradley’s disappearance. The second lead centers on digital activity: a hit traced to the missing-person website maintained by the Bradley family reportedly originated from a device on a boat near Barbados. The third suggests Bradley may have become a mother in the Caribbean—a possibility long discussed but never previously substantiated.
The renewed surge of tips followed the July 2025 release of a documentary series focusing on the case, which reportedly triggered hundreds of new contacts to the FBI and private investigators supporting the Bradley family. Despite being legally declared dead in 2010, Amy Bradley’s case remains open, and authorities say they are treating the three developments as “very significant.”
With the case entering a new phase of scrutiny, investigators say they are analyzing the new information and may deploy fresh resources overseas to follow up on the leads. The Bradley family has expressed cautious optimism that the latest breakthroughs could at last deliver answers to a mystery that has haunted them for years.
