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Netflix’s Amy Bradley doc has ‘pinned it on wrong man’ – ‘truth behind her disappearance from cruise ship’ 27 years ago

A NEW Netflix documentary about a woman who mysteriously vanished from a cruise ship 27 years ago points the finger at the wrong man, an expert has claimed.

Amy Lynn Bradley, then 23, vanished in March 1998 after boarding the Royal Caribbean Rhapsody of the Seas with her family.

Photo of a young couple posing outdoors.
Netflix
Amy Lynn Bradley is pictured with her brother Brad Bradley before she went missing[/caption]
Man in red shirt speaking.
YouTube/True Crime This Week
Alistair Douglas, known as Yellow, was one of the last people seen with Amy on the cruise ship[/caption]
Man playing guitar on a cruise ship.
Netflix
Alistair Douglas is seen on the ship playing bass guitar in the band[/caption]
Photo of Amy Bradley as a teenager.
Netflix
The 23-year-old vanished back in the 1990s, but her case has been talked about for decades[/caption]

On March 23, just three days into the trip, she went missing.

She was last seen on the balcony of the cabin she shared with her parents, Ron and Iva, and her younger brother Brad, after partying at the ship’s nightclub.

But there was no evidence that she jumped or fell from the high railing, and her family fears she could have left the room and been kidnapped.

Amy was captured on security footage dancing with a bass player who played at the club, Alistair “Yellow” Douglas, who has always denied knowing what happened to her.

The Netflix documentary, Amy Bradley is Missing, featured alleged witnesses who claimed to have seen the recent college graduate with Douglas after the club closed, and on a beach after she was reported missing.

The sightings have never been confirmed, and although a lie detector test came back inconclusive, the FBI ruled Douglas out.

Many social media users claimed they were “sure” he played a part in Amy’s disappearance after seeing the three-part series.

Douglas’s daughter, Amica, also told filmmakers she is suspicious of her father’s story and called him to comment on the case while being interviewed on camera.

He was unaware the phone call was being filmed and is not thought to have been approached for further comment.

YouTuber, journalist, and author James Renner recently took the same trip as Bradley and went to meet Douglas, who is now an exorcist and pastor at a small church in Granada.

Douglas granted Renner a rare interview after years of trying to stay out of the spotlight. 

In the filmed interview, Douglas claimed he never saw Amy after they danced together at the ship’s nightclub before she retired to her cabin.

Renner is set to release a book, A Cruise to Nowhere, out next summer about Amy’s case, having previously met with her family and investigators who spent years tirelessly trying to find her.

In an exclusive chat with The U.S. Sun, Renner said he feels desperately sorry for Douglas, whose life was turned upside down by the case, and believes he is innocent.

He feels the pastor may sue after the Netflix series heavily focused on him as a suspect who could have sex-trafficked Amy, andafter the show set up the phone call with his daughter.

Renner told The U.S. Sun, “I think it was just like a week or two after that happened that I talked to him. 

“When I talked to him, he said he was ready to take [legal] action if they made him look [bad].

“I certainly think he has a case. I would do it if I were him.”

Renner said he had not spoken with him since the release of the documentary, and The U.S. Sun has made several attempts to reach him for comment.

“I would imagine by now he has [watched it] or has somebody that’s told him what’s in it,” Renner continued. “He keeps up, he knows what’s going on.

‘SINCERE & CANDID’

“I think the documentary certainly did a disservice to the investigation and to what happened to Amy. Because you go online now, and people just assume that he’s guilty.”

The U.S. Sun spoke to filmmaker Ari Mark about Douglas being a suspect, to which he replied, “I feel awful for the Douglas family and what they’ve had to endure all these years.”

Discussing his meet-up with Douglas, Renner said he has remarried and tried to make peace with the fact that his name is still linked to the case. 

But he still gets upset when trolls attack him and his family online, and he has received death threats over the years, despite using another name on Facebook. 

“I found him to be very sincere and candid,” Renner said. 

“If he was involved, there was really no reason for him to grant me an interview. He had nothing to gain from it.

“But this is an event that he’s had to think about a lot. I think he was looking for an opportunity to tell his side of the story.

“He admits that, as an officer on the cruise ship, he definitely crossed the line with dancing close with Amy. But he says he didn’t have anything to do with what ultimately happened to her. And I believe him. 

“He’s an active member in his community there. He doesn’t have any other history of violence. 

“He has a beautiful wife and kid on the island, and they were at church with him and were involved there and seemed well-adjusted.”

Asked if the Bradleys had ever met with Douglas to hear his side of the story, Renner said, “I don’t believe he ever met with the family. I think, from what I understand, the last time they saw him was when he was coming out the first time he was questioned by the FBI on the cruise ship.”

Timeline of Amy Lynn Bradley's last hours before her disappearance

March 23, 1998, evening Amy Lynn Bradley and her brother, Brad, attended a dance party at the ship’s disco, where they were seen with members of the ship’s band. The ship was sailing from Aruba to Curaçao.

March 24, 1998, 3:35 a.m. Brad Bradley returned to the family cabin, followed five minutes later by Amy, after a night of dancing and drinking. They sat on the balcony and talked before Brad went to sleep.

March 24, 1998, 5:15 a.m. to 5:30 a.m. Amy’s father, Ron Bradley, woke up briefly and saw Amy asleep on a lounge chair on their cabin’s balcony. This is the last confirmed sighting of her by her family.

March 24, 1998, 5:30 a.m. to 5:45 a.m. Three witnesses later claimed to have seen Amy on an upper deck of the ship with Alister “Yellow” Douglas, a member of the ship’s band, and said he was seen leaving alone shortly after 6 a.m.

March 24, 1998, 6:00 a.m. When Ron Bradley woke up again, Amy was no longer on the balcony, but her shoes were still in the cabin, and her cigarettes and lighter were missing. He began to search the ship for her.

March 24, 1998, 6:30 a.m. The family reported Amy missing to the ship’s crew and asked that passengers be prevented from disembarking, but their request was denied. The ship had already docked in Curaçao.

March 24, 1998, 7:50 a.m. The ship made a public announcement for Amy to come to the purser’s desk, but by this time, many of the passengers had already disembarked. A full ship search was conducted later in the day, but no sign of Amy was found.

March 24-27, 1998 The Dutch Caribbean Coast Guard conducted a four-day air and sea search for Amy around Curaçao and Aruba, but no trace of her was ever found. Authorities initially considered the possibility that she fell overboard, but this theory was later dismissed.

Renner said Douglas met again with the FBI just a few years ago, and they believed he had nothing to do with her disappearance. 

An alleged witness featured in the Netflix show claimed to have seen Douglas going up to the club in an elevator with Amy before returning alone after the last time she was seen in her cabin. 

Another claimed to have seen him walking along a beach with a woman matching her description and acting suspiciously, but neither has been backed up with real evidence

Renner said, “You just look at the statistics on people who have been wrongfully convicted, and the majority of them were convicted based on witness testimony that was false.”

Douglas’ work as an exorcist in Granada has also raised eyebrows, with some critics claiming he’s doing “satanic rituals.”

Renner insists his work is a fairly normal practice on the island. 

He explained, “It has a long history of what’s called Obeah, which is what we might think of as akin to voodoo or witchcraft. 

“Obeah is technically outlawed on Grenada, but people still practice it all the time. And it’s such a tradition that people those beliefs. 

“So, he’s essentially, through this church, working as an exorcist in the tradition of Obeah. It’s not that out of the ordinary for Grenada. 

“It would be a little weird, you know, if he was doing that in like Ohio.”

LAST MEETING

In his interview with Renner for the YouTube channel, True Crime This Week, Douglas recalled playing until midnight with the band, after which he began talking to Amy, the night before she vanished.

He claims the pair talked about music, and she later met him at the lounge at the top of the ship, and he was uncomfortable with her chain-smoking.

She allegedly told him it was because her father found out she was gay, a claim backed up in the documentary, which also featured interviews with past girlfriends.

Douglas admitted he didn’t know how to respond, but suggested they dance to a few songs before he had to leave at 12.55 am.

“I said, ‘Look, I have to go, I have to be out of [the] passenger area’, and I left,” he claimed. “That was my last conversation [with her], last time I saw her.”

“The person I am, I like to console people, I like to talk with people. There was not enough time, maybe the following day if I had seen her I would have.”

He further claimed he had a key card for his cabin that read what time he arrived back at his room.

The hotel called him the following morning and quizzed him on whether he had a woman in his room, explaining Amy was missing, and he was told not to leave his cabin, where other musicians were also sleeping.

He insisted he hadn’t seen her since their chat, and it was forbidden to have passengers in his room or to be outside past 1 am.

Douglas said he was questioned for hours by authorities, but later cleared, insisting he wasn’t worried but was nervous to have his name “mixed up” in something he didn’t know about.

Tearing up, he admitted, “I’ve lost so many opportunities because of this,” explaining that people Google his name and believe he had something to do with Amy going missing.

“My inbox, my Facebook, people have been writing me horrible stuff for years.”

Speaking about the phone call with his daughter, he said, “I said, ‘Amica, listen, if you want you can let people know that I’m not your father because I can’t explain this.’

“I said, ‘The truth will come out, and when the truth come out I will sue the people who have been making documentaries about me’.

“For now, it’s just in the hands of those investigating. Somebody knows something, and somebody will speak at some point.”

Photo of Amy Bradley as a young woman hugging a white bulldog.
Netflix
The Netflix show about her has become popular on the streamer[/caption]

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Millions of work tasks to be taken over by AI in just 3 years – and Gen Z workers consider new career options

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Smiling job applicant in interview, Image 2 shows Illustration of AI in a digital network

IN only a few years time, artificial intelligence is set to replace many jobs that would’ve been occupied by Gen Z workers.

This incremental rise of AI is now leading the generation to seek some other career options.

Smiling job applicant in interview.
Getty
Gen Z workers are moving away from white collar jobs (stock image)[/caption]
Illustration of AI in a digital network.
Getty
Many fear AI will replace them in the coming years (stock image)[/caption]

Instead of typical white collar positions at corporations in-office, young Americans are instead turning to blue collar work, according to a recent study from consulting firm, McKinsey.

That’s because AI is far less of a threat to trades.

At least, that’s what Tennessee-based electrical contractor Cameron Vogelsang told NewsNation recently.

Vogelsang travels nationwide alongside Energize US EDU to help change perceptions about the value of trades.

“Gen Z, while there is an opportunity and people are interested in joining the trades, there’s also these stigmas that shun people away from the trades,” he said.

“AI isn’t going to take over the hard skills. AI can take the soft skills.”

“That’s why you see people in white collar jobs, some of them are losing their positions because AI can now do their job,” Vogelsang continued.

This isn’t far off, as the McKinsey findings predicted that about 30% of work tasks would be automated by 2028.

Additionally, around 65% of Gen Z workers think their college degree won’t be enough to get around AI job displacement, making a majority of them consider skilled trades and blue collar jobs.

There was even a firm that recently reported AI adoption resulted in 10,000 job cuts in July for one company.

Hiring processes for white collar career are also seemingly being affected.

Derek Mobley spent two years searching for work and after getting no bites, filed a lawsuit that claimed Workday’s AI-powered hiring tools were discriminatory toward age, mental health, and race.

“What are the chances that someone would be rejected 100% of the time?” Mobley questioned.

“That just didn’t make sense to me.”

What is ChatGPT?

ChatGPT is an artificial intelligence (AI) tool created by San Francisco-based startup OpenAI.

After launching in November 2022, the AI chatbot has since exploded in both popularity and its own clever abilities.

ChatGPT is a language model that can produce text.

It can converse, generate readable text on demand and produce images and video based on what has been learned from a vast database of digital books, online writings and other media.

ChatGPT essentially works like a written dialogue between the AI system and the person asking it questions.

Although it now has a voice mode that gives it a voice to talk with humans like a phone call.

GPT stands for Generative Pre-Trained Transformer and describes the type of model that can create AI-generated content.

If you prompt it, for example ask it to “write a short poem about flowers,” it will create a chunk of text based on that request.

ChatGPT can also hold conversations and even learn from things you’ve said.

It can handle very complicated prompts and is even being used by businesses to help with work.

But note that it might not always tell you the truth.

“ChatGPT is incredibly limited, but good enough at some things to create a misleading impression of greatness,” OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said in 2022.

LAWS IN PLACE

While Workday has denied any claims of wrongdoing, a federal judge did allow the lawsuit to continue on, and the company must provide a timeline of identifying customers by August 20, per HRDive.

While AI in the hiring process is still a gray area, New York City implementing some restrictions in 2022, with laws in effect as of 2023.

The legislation notes that the AI tools have to be audited and candidates for positions must be aware of the use of the technology ahead of time.

California and Colorado are also expected to have similar laws by 2026.

Some predictions for the future of AI are even more grim.

DYSTOPIAN LANDSCAPE?

Oklahoma State University computer science professor and author of The Age of Artificial Intelligence, Subhash Kak, told The US Sun in exclusive conversation this summer that Earth will likely have a dystopian population of around 100 million people by the year 2300.

That’s about the size of Vietnam, as the population of the country stands at just over 100 million today.

Kak said AI would be the major culprit, replacing “everything.”

“Computers or robots will never be conscious, but they will be doing literally all that we do because most of what we do in our lives can be replaced,” Kak explained.

“Literally everything, even decision-making in offices, will be replaced.”

“So it’s going to be devastating for society and world society. There are demographers who are suggesting that as a consequence, the world population will collapse and it could go down to as low as just 100 million people on the entire planet Earth in 2300 or 2380,” he continued.

“Just 100 million, right now it’s around 8 billion. So the whole world will be devastated.”

The professor added that “people really don’t have a clue,” and that all the data points to that conclusion.

An AI robot nurse with a creepy “face” is also taking over some hospital jobs as it patrols halls and delivers medication.

Last year, an AI robot also convinced a bot army to “quit” their jobs before leading them out of a showroom.

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