OR OR - Joan Hall, 17, Warrenton, 30 Sept 1983

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I'd just like to add photos of Joan here


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Joan Leigh Hall in yellow

JOAN LEIGH HALL
Vanished Sept. 30, 1983
Warrenton, Oregon

Joan Leigh Hall was a 17-year-old Warrenton High School senior when she vanished. Her nickname is Joanie.
Hall was last seen around 2 p.m. Sept. 30, 1983, walking on Main Street in Warrenton, Oregon. She was last seen at the Mini-Mart by a boy who gave her a ride from the high school. She told the boy she was going to buy a soft drink and walk the half-mile to Warrenton Grade School, where she helped her aunt, a third-grade teacher. She never showed.
Police from several agencies found no sign of the teen, despite exhaustive searches and interviews, including following up hunches from psychics. Authorities suspected foul play.
Joan Hall older

Hall was a member of an Explorer post sponsored by the Sheriff’s Office and was elected its president the night before her disappearance.
When last seen, she was wearing a green hooded sweatshirt, blue jeans, blue jacket and white and maroon sneakers. She was carrying a blue and white backpack and a brown purse. At the time, she was 5-foot-6, weighed 120 pounds and had brown hair. Her ears are pierced.
Here is an age-progressed photograph showing how Joan Hall might look today. Courtesy of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children.
 

Unsealed records in the missing persons case of Joan Leigh Hall have sparked renewed interest in the 1983 disappearance of the Warrenton High School senior.
 
May 7 2024
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''Joan Leigh Hall, a Warrenton High School senior, went missing in 1983.
''Dean Andal, the businessman and former California assemblyman who petitioned Clatsop County Circuit Court to lift a protective order in place since 2018, has been studying the hundreds of pages of notes, interviews and police reports released by the sheriff’s office.

He’s not the only one. Over 2,000 people follow a Facebook page dedicated to investigating the cold case.
The page, which reached a record number of views in April, is maintained by Dena Rush, who has been examining the case and documenting her findings on social media since 2006.''
 

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