The Case of Carl DeBrodie: Timeline of events
ABC 17 News has been following the case of Carl DeBrodie from the moment he was reported as missing, and will continue to cover the case until it comes to a close.
ABC 17 News has created a timeline of events for the case, starting from the endangered missing person alert for DeBrodie and ending with the Callaway prosecutors reviewing the case’s documents. Tonight on ABC 17 News at 10:00 p.m., Jordana Marie will break down the investigation and tell you what we’ve uncovered.
See the full timeline below.
DeBrodie is reported as missing
April 17 – Endangered person alert for Fulton man
April 19 – Search continues for missing Fulton man
April 22 – K-9 search teams help search for missing Fulton man
DeBrodie’s body is found
April 24 – UPDATE: Body found in Fulton storage container likely missing man
April 26 – Police: Missing Fulton man likely found in crate, may have been missing longer than reported
Department of Mental Health: By contract, Second Chance responsible for care of people in home
Former guardian says DeBrodie changed in Second Chance’s care
April 27 – UPDATE: Fulton Police nearing 200 leads in DeBrodie case, body identified
Investigators look into DeBrodie’s life and living conditions
May 2 – Family, friends hold vigil for missing Fulton man
May 4 – DeBrodie’s financial support required monthly, in-person visits
May 11 – Fulton police wanting to serve new search warrants in Carl DeBrodie case
May 16 – FBI, Missouri Attorney General assisting with DeBrodie investigation
Reports missing from Second Chance Homes’ records
May 17 – Records show missing reports for Second Chance Homes
May 19 – Missing, inconsistent records at Second Chance facility, Second Chance case manager no longer employed with Callaway County Special Services
DeBrodie case gets state-wide attention, spurs concerns about conditions in assisted living facilities
May 22 – Fulton residents, family wanting answers from CCSS after failure of oversight in Second Chance
May 25 – DeBrodie case spurs policy review by statewide association
Columbia-based supported living facility speaks out; reacts to group home failure