So “trajectory” isn’t the right word, but local authorities evaluated the currents and tides during the timeframe she would have gone overboard and where the ship was located during that timeframe, and they determined a geographical range where her body should have washed ashore. It never did. They feel confident that it would have had she gone overboard. |
Yes and no clothing or anything ever was found - no trace of her. It doesn’t seem plausible she went overboard. |
That's because they were using the father's timeline, which is highly uncertain. The first reporting of the incident said it happened around 4:30, when the ship was further out. |
What a combination: obnoxious and incorrect!! https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1312/12/6/1016#:~:text=The%20task%20of%20drift%20trajectory%20prediction%20is,on%20a%20series%20of%20historical%20drift%20data. You owe PP an apology. |
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And they never found Amelia Earhardt either.
It doesn't mean she was abducted. FFS people. |
Don’t be a moron. Obviously the technology had advanced significantly in over 100 years. |
Yeah? Flight MH370 disappeared in 2014 with 239 people on board while traveling from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. Its disappearance is one of the world's greatest aviation mysteries, which continues to haunt the families of the passengers. Despite extensive searches in the years since it vanished, no wreckage has been found. You are the moron, sadly. |
Aviation mysteries with no known survivors and wreck sites that haven’t been located are a totally different animal from a cruise ship that never lost communications and came into port on time with all crew members and passengers alive and accounted for except one. The search for Flight MH370 covered 2 seas and one ocean because no one knew for sure where it went down. Eventually, debris from the wreckage did wash ashore, unlike Amy Bradley’s body or personal effects, even though it was much easier to determine where she might wash ashore based on the ship’s known locations and course during the timeframe when she disappeared. |
Exactly. He claims to have woken up and saw her legs on the balcony but can't be sure of the exact time. Estimates range anywhere from 4 to 5:30am. |
Cruise ships aren’t fast. In that amount of time, the ship probably only sailed around 30 miles, so the timeline doesn’t require precise timing to determine the general area where the currents would have carried items. Local authorities were notified and prepared to recover a body. Nothing.ever.washed.ashore. |
30 miles = approximately 2,827 square miles. That is a massive search area. Her body could have been anywhere. You're following the brief Netflix clip, which gave no details or context but was crafted to follow the Bradley family's preferred (unconfirmed) timeline. |
follow the thread, don't deviate. If you can't find an entire plane full of people, you're not going to find one body in the ocean. that's the bottom line. |
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Look folks, the recent debate about her falling overboard came about because it just sounds really dismissive to just jump on the thread and say I think she drowned. While that is certainly a possibility, people are simply pointing out that that would be highly unlikely given that scenario was explored, there was a search, and she didn’t disappear in the middle of the ocean, but much closer to when they were coming to port.
Again, not impossible but unlikely. It’s also a very rare occurrence to have an upper middle class adult traveling on a cruise with her family to become a victim of sex trafficking. The point is there is no straightforward answer for what happened to her so if people simply say things like she drowned people are going to argue why that is unlikely. |
It would have been EASIER to find her body because authorities knew where it should end up. It wasn’t like searching the vast expanse of water where a plane that’s disappeared from radar and is traveling much, much faster might have gone down. |
Nobody searched the ocean. We’re just talking about the expanse of shoreline where the currents would have carried a body. |