DEC 1, 2022
In some cases, the missing children have been declared legally dead, but their disappearances remain under investigation until they can be found.
www.wate.com
Charlie Hall III
On Dec. 31, 1981,
Charlie Hall, also known as “Little Charlie” left his apartment on 40th Avenue North in Nashville to head to his girlfriend’s house.
It should have been a normal day, but when Hall’s mother, Mildred Carwell, spoke with reporters not long after his disappearance, she told them it was anything but normal.
According to Carwell, Hall had left his girlfriend’s house after she “broke it off with him” at around 5 p.m. that day. However, the 15-year-old never came back home. He was last seen wearing a gray or black jacket, maroon pants and tennis shoes.
At the time, Hall was described as 5’8” tall, weighing around 140 pounds, with brown hair, brown eyes and a birthmark on his right cheek. Today, he would be 56 years old.
In a 1985 issue of The Tennessean, Metro Police told reporters, “Hall’s case is one we can’t resolve, and we don’t have any clues as to what happened.”
While it is unclear if any family members of Hall’s are still living, investigators are still taking any tips or information that would help solve the case.
If you have seen
Charlie Hall, contact the
Metropolitan Nashville Police Department at
(615) 862-7635, or the
TBI at
1-800-TBI-FIND.