The Truth About Amy

A 24 year-old mum tries to escape a violent relationship.

She quickly packs the car – her two young daughters are strapped into the back seat.

The engine’s running.

She heads back inside to get one last thing … and never comes out.

From the creators of the groundbreaking murder mystery podcast The Lady Vanishes, this is the story of Amy Wensley.

A decade after her death was written off as a suicide, it is now being treated as a homicide and a new investigation is underway.

Finally, The Truth About Amy will be revealed.

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Recent Reviews
  • byyyeeee1234567890
    I tried
    The podcast goes so slow and constantly repeats itself. The texts/letters that are being read are extremely annoying, no one can put a full sentence together. Do not recommend.
  • Julie Tampa
    Excellent and in-depth but sadly lost me with ignorance and arrogance
    This podcast is a wonderful examination of a pretty typical DV / intimate partner violence (IPV) homicide. They do an incredible job for many episodes portraying wonderful Amy and her “murder in slow motion” (as Laura Richards calls it) and how the male system ignored and / or incompetenced the murder and stonewalled perpetrator accountability while gaslighting the family for years. Great job-excellent investigating and reporting! Then in the most recent episode the reporter (male) and the attorney (male) veer off into a bizarre tangent that most IPV murders - femicides- are primarily increasing because of meth. I have a degree in criminology and studied and work in the IPV and family violence field. Over 90% of IPV perpetrators are male. Male violence against women is a centuries old, world wide public health crisis rooted in power and control, patriarchy, and misogyny. (Not meth). Ask any DV- IPV- femicide expert anywhere worldwide why DV is increasing and the answer is “not meth”. That is an erroneous and simplistic view of a complex societal construct of male power over women. It was deeply disheartening to hear these two males talk about women being murdered by men, blaming it on meth, and talking OVER the one female in the room, because THEIR experiences of women’s lives (and deaths) are more valid. When you study the history of DV, going back to England several centuries back, when crime laws were first created (and then adopted worldwide), you’ll learn that DV/IPV/Femicide/child abuse was 100% looked at as a “family problem that should be handled by the man of the family.” Standard Police routine was NOT to intervene until the late 1970’s and then it was still more of “why didn’t she leave” victim blaming, as opposed to holding perpetrators accountable, similar to … blaming it on the meth. Yes, meth is horrible, it’s an epidemic, and it exacerbates violence and anger but it is NOT a root cause of increasing femicides. Amy’s unseen murder is a typical example of how police, courts, prosecution, and the system in general systematically fails women. That’s why women don’t come forward - they are blamed and made to feel “crazy” and … they are much more likely to be killed when leaving and after a TRO is filed. When women are murdered by their current/former/ex-partner, if the perpetrator is charged he usually gets a small “crime of passion” sentence. I beg you. Please stop calling male-violence against women a “crime of passion”. That is language that has been used for centuries to minimize men murdering their partners and get them a manslaughter and not a murder conviction. I live in the U.S. and some of our states are now finally getting rid of that horrific “crime of passion” false defense. It’s why now with a deeper understanding of DV, when men batter women we don’t give them anger management classes, we give them Batterers Intervention treatment. Because their “passion” for homicide is almost always only against their female partners as an act of power and control. It’s also why “the meth made do it” is not a defense in most courts. But the men in the room think they know everything about how women live in the world facing male violence every day. When are you going to bring in Laura Richards or Jess Hill? Please bring it all together with someone who actually knows the world-wide facts, history, and current stats on IPV and femicide.
  • Quesie Twosie
    Interesting story but unreasonable expectations.
    It seems apparent that Amy did not shoot herself, but I don’t understand how the people making this podcast think that it would be in any way possible for someone to be charged with homicide with absolutely no proof. It’s unfortunate that the police did not do their job in the first place, but it certainly seems way too late to rectify the matter. Don’t waste your time listening to all the conversations that follow, they just keep rehashing the same thing over and over again.
  • Jetsy156
    Good show, but….
    I really like the show, a lot but the voice of God narration is extremely dated and hard to take seriously. I think all the information is great and I can’t stop listening but am slightly perplexed by the voice of God narration? Makes it almost seem like it could be a joke😔
  • Ginger..Snap
    Very hard listen 2.5
    The male narrator absolutely killed what could be a great podcast. His narration is over enunciated, halting and so slow it lacks emotion. The female narrator is almost as bad but not quite as slow. Almost sounds more like AI. I can’t listen more than 20-30 mins at a time. Speeding it up makes it worse as hard as that is to believe. If you’re looking for something to fall asleep to, you have found it! Such a disappointment for something by Allison. Bigger disappointment for the family of Amy.
  • ltavor
    Overall, good.
    This is a good podcast and I’m early into the episodes. I do find Liam hard to listen to, though. In interviews he’s so natural. The narration though, he speaks haltingly and stiff. It’s quite hard to listen to during those parts because it doesn’t sound genuine. Sorry mate… Don’t like leaving feedback like that.
  • Hagstoz
    Criminal and Domestic Violence
    Are the crippling vestigial limbs still attached to our lives that comes from our dark understanding of people as property; whether they be women, children, or men. We then have to take a critical look back into our long journey through history and cultures that glorify so many aspects of this, with critical race theory, feminism, post colonial trauma syndromes, etc and then even see how this has carried us forward into the present day where our institutions are failing those who we would have protected. It’s then we need to look at the legal jargon of words such as “custody”, the strange separation between domestic and other forms of violence, understand why one is not seen as serious, marriage or divorce courts, and on and on. It’s only when you realize that the systems are working exactly as intended. It’s we who have begun to wake up to the fact that they harm us mostly. Whole philosophies of paternalistic morality and power trips must be unwound and reimagined. This story proves the point that for many people, especially smaller people who are physically marked by their identity classes, well, we’re damned if we do and damned if we don’t, and mostly blamed for things we never had control over. I hope for Amy’s little ones and mom that they get the truth they need to set her life’s end straight once and for all. David, it seems, is being punished by a greater force and has no real peace for himself. His life is not enjoyable and the road he is on has very well defined endings, whether he ever ends up in prison or not. Tragedy is never one sided.
  • BonBon2214
    Brilliant
    Another great podcast from this team!
  • SissyOfRin
    Well Done!
    Amy’s is a heartbreaking, interesting and infuriating case! But so well done by Allison! Well explained with lots of info and angles!
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