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Undated Brandy Hall photo |
Brandy Hall, 32, was a firefighter, wife and mother of two
when she disappeared on August 17, 2006 from the Central Florida town of
Malabar.
I feel badly about going into Brandy’s past as much as I am
going to, but her past might hold clues to her disappearance. In fact, I think
there are clues in her past.
Brandy almost died as a child in a three-wheeler accident.
She had extensive surgeries on her face and had chronic pain for the rest of
her life. However, she was a tough kid and grew up to be an excellent
firefighter, which she loved doing. She
married Jeffrey Hall, who was the fire chief, and they had two children, Taylor
and Clayton. She and Jeffrey both worked
the same shift, so their kids could stay with her parents. By all accounts, up
until July, 2005, she was very happy in her job and marriage.
Then, in July of 2005, her husband Jeffrey and another
firefighter were arrested for growing and selling marijuana on the Hall
property in Palm Bay, FL. The men had a
fairly small scale operation (no cartels or drug running was going on) although
they reportedly netted $30,000 every two months for over a year. Although
Brandy knew nothing of the operation, the land was in both of their names so
she was arrested and charged as well.
All charges against Brandy were dropped, and despite her accolades and
perfect record as a firefighter for ten years, she was fired from her job in
Palm Bay.
This did throw Brandy into a slight tailspin. Along with
losing her job and now sole source of income, she also had to find a new firefighting
job or she would lose all of her credentials. So, she worked doing home repairs
for a friend of hers and volunteered with the Malabar Fire Department to keep
her credentials while she appealed her termination with Palm Bay.
She remained supportive of her husband, who was out on bail,
but she also began to have an affair with a district chief firefighter, Randal
Richmond. Richmond’s wife, Anne-Marie,
allegedly confronted Brandy six months before her disappearance during a community
festival and Brandy had mentioned it to her best friend. However, it is not
known whether the affair continued up to the time of Brandy’s disappearance.
On the night of Brandy’s disappearance, she complained of
stomach pains and left her shift at the fire station at 10:45PM instead of
working the full overnight shift. Video from the fire house shows that Brandy
was relaxed and left alone. Outside surveillance shows that Brandy got into her
truck alone and no one followed her out. She was scheduled to testify on her
husband’s behalf in court the next day and she told her co-workers that she
planned to go home.
Jeffrey did not expect her home until early morning, so he
did not become concerned until it was time to bring the kids to school and she was
still not home. He continuously tried to call Brandy, but she didn’t answer and
her voicemail was full. He hurried the kids to school and then drove,
alone, an hour to the courthouse. He
kept trying to call Brandy, and finally decided that maybe she went to court
ahead of him. When he arrived at court and Brandy was not there, he started to
panic. He went to court and was sentenced to 18 months in prison and then
probation. He claimed he barely heard the judge because he was so worried about
Brandy. His family left the court and immediately went to retrieve the kids and
file a missing person’s report. Jeffrey finally was able to make a call and he
got in touch with his mother, who informed him of that Brandy was not found.
The police immediately began an investigation. Her last
phone call was made at 10:53PM, to Randal Richmond. When he was questioned, he
told police that Brandy was calling from a gas station. She told him she planned to leave and “get
away from everything.” However, no one remembers her truck idling at the service
station and her debit and credit cards had not been used since the day before. Although there is overwhelming evidence that
she did not leave by her own volition, Richmond insists this is what happened.
The next day, her
truck was found submerged in a small, local pond. Brandy’s body was not in the
truck, and neither was her gun, which she always carried with her. What was
found was a substantial amount of Brandy’s blood, though not enough to prove
she was dead. Also in the truck was her firefighting equipment and a small
cooler filled with soda and beer, which were still cold. Over the next week, the small pond was
completely drained, and neither the body nor gun was found. The police, at this
point, also suspected suicide or stranger abduction were unlikely.
In July, 2007, a backpack containing Brandy’s personal
belongings was found in a canal in western Indian River County, FL. This is
about twenty minutes from where her truck was found, and there is no river that
leads between the two bodies of water. The backpack contained her day planner
and a few items of clothing, but not enough for longer than one night. Also notably missing from the backpack were her prescription painkillers, which she used daily to control pain from her childhood accident. The gun was also not in the backpack.
Jeffrey Hall has been eliminated as a suspect. He has been released from prison and is currently raising their children in Florida.
Jeffrey Hall has been eliminated as a suspect. He has been released from prison and is currently raising their children in Florida.
Brandy Hall was born September 13, 1973. She has blonde hair, blue eyes, and
is 5’7 and weighed around 140 pounds at the time of her disappearance. She has
a pierced tongue and naval, and she has two tattoos-a fishing scene on her
lower back and a Tweety bird by a fire hydrant on her ankle.
Her children are now teenagers. Her youngest child asks
every day if they are still looking for his mom.
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Original "Missing" Poster |