Charity Beallis Warned She’d Be Killed — The System Ignored Her, Now Three Are Dead
True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
Tony Brueski
4.2 • 612 Ratings
🗓️ 17 December 2025
⏱️ 21 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
But instead of protection, she got a court ruling awarding joint custody to the man she said she feared. Three days later, Charity and her six-year-old twins were found dead from gunshot wounds.
No one has been charged.
Federal agencies — including Homeland Security and the Secret Service — have joined the investigation. And now, the 2012 shooting death of the same man's first wife — ruled a suicide at the time, with evidence later destroyed — has been reopened.
Former FBI Special Agent Robin Dreeke joins me to break down the behavioral indicators in this case, the system failures that may have placed Charity and her children at greater risk, and the patterns investigators look for when multiple deaths surround the same individual over time.
We discuss:
– Why strangulation is one of the strongest lethality predictors in domestic violence
– How victims often signal escalating danger long before systems recognize it
– Why courts prioritize parental rights even in high-risk domestic-violence cases
– How federal agencies approach complex or multi-jurisdictional investigations
– What reopening a prior death means behaviorally — not legally
– What investigators evaluate when someone’s partner has died in similar circumstances
– How abusers often use legal filings to assert control, even during investigations
– What professionals look for when interviewing someone connected to multiple deaths
This isn’t about speculation.
This is about patterns — behavioral, systemic, institutional — and why victims like Charity fall through the cracks even when they are shouting for help.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is Hidden Killers with Tony Bruske. Here now, Tony Bruske. Charity B. Alice did everything right. |
| 0:09.4 | She filed for divorce, got a protective order, went to a state senator and told him she feared for her life, posted publicly that the system was shielding her abuser, a doctor who had choked her in front of her six-year-old twins, |
| 0:22.1 | allegedly. She even shared research showing strangulation victims are 750% more likely to be |
| 0:28.7 | murdered by their partner. And the system's response? Plead his charges down to a misdemeanor, |
| 0:36.5 | award him joint custody, scheduled the kids to go back to him |
| 0:40.0 | three days later. She never made it to the emergency hearing she requested because by December 3rd, |
| 0:46.6 | the next day after that hearing, Charity and both twins were dead from gunshot wounds. No arrest |
| 0:52.2 | has been made yet. Federal agencies are now involved |
| 0:55.3 | and the doctor's first wife also died from a gunshot wound in 2012, ruled a suicide. Lots of people |
| 1:02.1 | going back and questioning that. That case, they're requesting to be reopened. There's so many |
| 1:08.0 | questions here. And like I said, no one's been charged yet. He is |
| 1:11.0 | maintaining his innocence, saying he's heartbroken and cooperating with authorities allegedly. |
| 1:17.1 | Former FBI special agent and chief of the counterintelligence behavioral analysis program, |
| 1:21.2 | Robin Drake, is here. Robin, in a behavioral assessment on this when you're looking at it. |
| 1:29.3 | Randall B. Alice's documented behavior, the strangulation, the pattern of control, |
| 1:34.8 | the legal maneuvering right after Charity's death because, oh yeah, the day after she died, |
| 1:42.0 | he went to his attorney and said, |
| 1:45.7 | can we basically kind of nullify this divorce thing here? |
| 1:50.1 | Because she didn't quite sign the paperwork yet, |
| 1:52.5 | and I kind of want to keep my stuff. |
| 1:56.9 | Not even a breath. |
| 1:58.4 | Not even like, it was like less, |
... |
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