Anonymous wrote:None of the stories about the sightings were convincing and none of the tellers of those stories, either.
I think she went overboard, either on purpose or by accident.
I knew from so many of her photos that she was gay, before they broached that part of the story and her family's rejection of that side of her life was probably enough to make her consider ending it. I had a friend who did the same and was around the same age.
Its not rocket science. And the family are the last people on earth they want to blame. Who blames themselves?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The most compelling part was that the former fbi agent said their person was confident the picture was her.
I feel like that sort of analysis is something they are good at and they would definitely have the option of saying “inconclusive” if they thought it was possible but not highly likely.
A handful of people on that documentary felt confident about their perspectives, but they all conflicted.
Anonymous wrote:I just finished the last episode. Occam’s razor. She fell off the balcony. No one leaves to score drugs without slipping back on her sandals. Eye witnesses are notoriously unreliable. If Amy was of sound mind enough to confide in two strangers her identity, or Google her own website, she would have reached out to a family member.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://websleuths.com/threads/va-amy-bradley-23-petersburg-24-march-1998-3.187717/page-32
I don't know how to post pictures but if you click on that websleuth link and scroll down there is a forensic analysis comparing Amy to the sex worker.
Anonymous wrote:https://websleuths.com/threads/va-amy-bradley-23-petersburg-24-march-1998-3.187717/page-32
I don't know how to post pictures but if you click on that websleuth link and scroll down there is a forensic analysis comparing Amy to the sex worker.
Anonymous wrote:It is beyond annoying that posters are giving opinions without even watching the show! 🙄