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Missing woman Amy Bradley's brother breaks silence after family is 'killed' by cruel trolls

Missing woman Amy Bradley's brother breaks silence after family is 'killed' by cruel trolls

Daily Mail​2 days ago
The brother of missing woman Amy Bradley has spoken out after being 'chewed up' by 'toxic' social media users following the release of Netflix documentary, Amy Bradley Is Missing.
Amy disappeared during a cruise with her family in March 1998. Today, after decades of desperate searches and calls for information, they still don't have any answers.
The three-part series, which re-investigates the disappearance, arrived on the streaming platform on July 16 and has since opened the floodgates for new theories and speculation over what happened.
And, according to Amy's brother Brad Bradley, some of the response has been particularly hateful.
Speaking out about the backlash, Brad said that there has been lots of negative comments aimed at himself and his family.
'Me and my family are getting killed,' he said. 'The internet is a toxic place.'
In a new interview with People, he continued: 'Over the years, we've grown some pretty thick skin, because, you know, there's always that side, you have the side of prayers, and support, and love, and caring, and all that good stuff.
'And then you have people just trying to chew us up and spit us out.'
One aspect of the documentary that has garnered a lot of chatter online is Amy's sexuality.
While the series reveals that Amy did have a girlfriend in Mollie McClure months before going on the cruise, Brad stressed that at the time of her disappearance she had a boyfriend.
He also added that Amy was bisexual and that she had come out in 1995.
'That was one thing that was excluded,' he told the publication.
'I mean, she did write her boyfriend a letter shortly before the cruise, saying that she kinda needed, wanted to take it slow, and kinda step back a little bit.
'And I do believe, you know, she had some intention of rekindling things with Mollie when she had returned, hence the message in the bottle, a month prior to the cruise.'
The Bradleys are adamant that Amy neither fell nor jumped from their balcony, because she was scared of how high it was.
'We don't think she got anywhere near the rail,' Brad previously told Daily Mail. 'When we first got on the cruise, we're up on the eighth story and I'm looking over the rail, kind of looking straight down, like "Man, check this out."
'She said, "Nope,"' he remembers. 'And she wouldn't even get close to it.'
Before the release of Amy Bradley Is Missing, the family hoped the program would spark more tips, jog some memories and lead to real answers.
'Back then, there was no cell phones, there was not a whole lot of internet going on, there was no social media,' Brad told Daily Mail. 'There was none of that.'
'The upcoming series has been really tough on Mom, mostly, emotionally,' he added.
'And Dad obviously doesn't like that part of it for all of us.'
But the docuseries, he said, was still 'kind of a no-brainer.'
'Anytime anything happens - and this is, I mean, 24/7 for 27 years - we do it.'
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