Texas Wine and True Crime

The Fatal Night in Englewood: The Story of T'Anda Hall

Brandy Diamond and Chris Diamond Episode 160

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When neighbors felt the walls of their Chicago apartment growing hot on a summer night in 2018, they knew something was terribly wrong. Behind those walls, 38-year-old bartender and mother of three T'Anda Hall lay beaten and dying as flames began consuming her bedroom — the tragic culmination of what had started as a friendly card game hours earlier.

T'Anda had recently met Wes Arnold, a man whose violent history remained hidden from her until it was too late. Friends who'd been playing cards with them that evening described Arnold growing increasingly agitated, particularly when money from T'Anda's "Rainy Day Fund" went missing. Sensing danger, they left. Minutes later, neighbors heard running footsteps down the stairwell.

The investigation revealed a pattern all too familiar in cases of domestic violence. Arnold, on parole for battery at the time, had an extensive history of abusing women — so severe that even his own family refused to shelter him. Security footage, witness testimony, and forensic evidence painted a clear picture of what happened after T'Anda's friends departed: a brutal beating followed by arson meant to cover his tracks. Most disturbing was the medical examiner's finding that T'Anda had smoke in her lungs, meaning she was still alive when Arnold set the fire.

While evading capture, Arnold's violence continued. He assaulted another woman who had briefly given him shelter, leaving her with 17 stitches. This pattern of escalating violence ultimately led to his conviction and life sentence plus 50 years for arson.

T'Anda's story serves as a haunting reminder of how quickly violence can escalate and the importance of recognizing warning signs in potentially dangerous relationships. Through our exploration of this case, we honor her memory while examining the factors that led to this preventable tragedy.

Have you witnessed warning signs in a friend's relationship? Sharing your story might help others recognize dangerous situations before they escalate. 

This week, we enjoyed a delicious selection from Robert Clay Vineyards. The 2017 Texas Hill Country Ruby Cabernet is a mellow, long-aged wine with unique aromas and flavors of maple, brown sugar and vanilla bean, but bone dry and medium bodied with rounded tannins. Absolutely phenomenal.

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Speaker 1:

Welcome all of you wine and true crime lovers. I'm Brandi and I'm Chris and this is Texas wine and true crime. Thank you for being here, friends, for this week's episode. Murder in Englewood. Hey, chris.

Speaker 2:

Hey Brandi.

Speaker 1:

Something to tell our listeners. We have a live show coming up on April the 5th in Mason Texas at Robert Clay Vineyards. They are also our winery of the month. We've been enjoying some of their wines, which you're about to talk about, with what you paired, but we've got some exciting news about that show. So come out April 5th. There's a big wine festival going on in Mason Texas and we'll be doing a show from 12 to two, so come see us.

Speaker 2:

It is a fantastic winery.

Speaker 1:

It is.

Speaker 2:

They're great people I really like. You know. When you visit there, you get a very personalized experience.

Speaker 1:

That's right.

Speaker 2:

I feel like they really explain their process, their wines and go great and so much passion in what they do. Absolutely, yeah, Very knowledgeable, and you know, if you're, I'm kind of a nerd, I guess you'd say, about listening about that stuff, and so I really kind of. That's why I really dug about the place. I thought they did a great job of talking about their wines, explaining their process and their land and just yeah, true joy. Yes and just fantastic wines as well. Some of the best.

Speaker 1:

I mean, they're delicious. So what did we have on tap for this week and what did you pair?

Speaker 2:

Well, this week we had the 2017 Ruby Cabernet Grand Reserve, which was absolutely delicious Such a mellow drinking wine. This particular bottle is a Ruby Cabernet Hybrid created in 1936 by Dr Harold Olsmo at UC Davis, and it is a cross between a Cabernet Sauvignon and Carnigan, and so, I'm sorry, carignan.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I think Carignan. It's hard to pronounce.

Speaker 2:

My apologies, but designed for structure, heat tolerance and high yields, and so they really make this grape shine with this wine, and so I made kind of a weird dish. I don't know, I thought you, I think you, it tasted great.

Speaker 1:

It looked.

Speaker 2:

I kind of got a little creative, but I made some deconstructed mushroom Swiss burgers or yes.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it looked like a little tapas dish to me.

Speaker 2:

Yes. So I took some baby bell caps and stuffed with basically what I would use for a hamburger mix and some Swiss cheese caramelized onions, and then placed that on some toasted chive and garlic French bread slices, I guess you'd say. And then I made a little jus with just some of the leftover mushrooms, juice and gravy.

Speaker 1:

Yes, it was a perfect pairing.

Speaker 2:

I believe so as well.

Speaker 1:

Great wine, great food. Thank you again, Robert Clay. Go visit our friends at Robert Clay Vineyards in Mason, Texas, or come and see us April 5th. Get your tickets now. You can find that link on all of our socials or you can go to their website directly. Okay, Chris, are you ready to jump into this week's case?

Speaker 2:

Absolutely.

Speaker 1:

All right, friends, it's time to sip some wine and talk some crime. All right, so we are going back to July, the 12th of 2018, in Englewood, chicago area we call it more of an urban area of Chicago Population used to be a lot greater, based on stats that I looked at. Now they're looking at about 20,000 to 25,000 people that still live in Englewood. So calls to the fire department police department are not unusual in this area South side of Chicago correct.

Speaker 1:

South side of Chicago. So when police get a phone call and fire department that there is a fire, I think the first thought is that it's an abandoned building.

Speaker 1:

There's a lot of abandoned houses a lot of abandoned apartments, but people are actually living in this apartment that's on fire. Police and fire show up. You have frantic residents who thankfully have been able to get out of the apartment because of a neighbor who was able to knock on all the doors. Get everyone out. But the one person that's missing is where the fire started, in the apartment of Teanda Hall. So she's a 38-year-old mom of three. She was working as a bartender at this time. She had lots of friends. I think she was only in this apartment for about three months, so I think she was trying to get her bearings and the landlord said she was pleasant and didn't really cause a ruckus. So people really liked this girl and so when neighbors are trying to alert everyone, get everyone out. They tell them this is Tionda Hall's apartment and they quickly go in and realize that she is deceased in the bedroom. And they do find her body.

Speaker 2:

And they must have gotten this fire extinguished somewhat quickly, I would assume, because it only contained, or was contained in her apartment, solely correct, that's correct, the neighbor who went over there and started alerting other neighbors, or was contained in her apartment solely?

Speaker 1:

correct, that's correct. The neighbor who went over there and started alerting other neighbors, his wall was hot.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he could feel the warmth. Yeah, he could feel the warmth in his room.

Speaker 1:

And then when he put his hand to the wall which backs up into Yonda Hall's apartment, he realizes something was very wrong. So when police and fire arrive they see that her door has been kicked in. So they're thinking did somebody kick in her door, murder her, set this place on fire? To cover up evidence but come to find out, the neighbor is the one who actually kicked down the door when there was no answer from her, in an effort to save her. In an effort to save her.

Speaker 2:

Yes, let her know, you know I.

Speaker 1:

In an effort to save her. Yes, let her know, you know. I mean, he probably thought something was very wrong, considering she was not exiting the building like everyone else, and so I guess he did. But he didn't go back far enough into the bedroom.

Speaker 2:

Well, I was going to say the next step, save everybody else, that's right, save everybody else.

Speaker 1:

So, and he did just that. So police, unfortunately, they find T'Anda Hall's body. She is then taken, you know, to the morgue. They end up doing an autopsy on her, and what they find? Well, one thing they realized when they arrived the bedroom is burned, right, there's a fire that had been started, they can smell accelerants, but there was blood underneath their head and there was also what they noticed was little markings on her body. And so, by the time they got her to the medical examiner and once they confirmed that this was actually her, they had to let friends know, family know, um, they realized that she had been beaten to death. She had lacerations on her head, she had multiple uh, what, what I would say would be like um, when they found her, that looked like her face had maybe been shifted, it was not lining up. We know she had a broken jaw, that so she had been beaten to death.

Speaker 1:

There were some reports that there was some injury to the neck as well. Um, but clearly the person who did this was trying to cover up evidence that's what I'd say. Clearly, something else is going on here not just fire started in an effort to um cover up whatever cover it up um so police are investigating, trying to figure out what actually happened to this woman.

Speaker 1:

Um chris people who live in the apartment I would call them ear witnesses, not eyewitnesses because, they heard something instead of seeing something, and what they actually tell police is they heard two people running down the stairs I would say, about 30 to 45 minutes before this call comes in, that there's a fire. So I think this whole time, and they're looking for camera footage. So they're asking the landlord to pull the camera footage. Thankfully, there was footage in this case, which is always helpful. And please, if you own a business, own a company, own a parking lot and you don't have working cameras, get your cameras working. You never know when they're needed. So they are able to get some of this evidence, but what they want to find out is who are these two people? One thing they do notice when they're going over the scene is that there's playing cards, there's glasses on the table. It looked like people had been over there when this occurred.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and honestly I'm shocked that they even had a working camera, quite frankly, I know, but they did so thankfully yes yeah, um, so by this time police are well, here's the first thing.

Speaker 1:

Tayonda hall's information is now on the news, like that. They have found the body, that there was a fire. People realize it's her building. So word spreads quickly. Two people come forward and said that they were at Tanda Hall's apartment the night this happened. But they weren't the only other two there. There was another person there by the name of Wes Arnold. So you have two friends that come forward and tell police that they were playing cards with Tionda Hall and Wes Arnold. They were also telling police that Wes was acting a little strange, a little angry. They had actually met him before, but he just seemed more agitated than usual. I kind of got the vibe from the research that this was not a fun guy to be around. They couldn't enjoy themselves in their friend's apartment and, by the way, these were, like her, close friends not his friends.

Speaker 2:

They were normal, or it gets normal for them to be over there without him there. Oh yeah, absolutely.

Speaker 1:

He's new in this picture. I don't know exactly how long Teyanda Hall knew Wes Arnold, but I'm willing to bet it was within a month, maybe two months, not very long at all. So these two people tell them that around 11 o'clock Wes seemed very agitated. I think that they were ready to go at this point and they could tell that their friend looked like she wasn't really having a great time. So I think it was time for them to go. They asked to end a haul if they can borrow $50. Now, Tionda, the friends tell the police this was not unusual for us. This wasn't unusual for us to ask each other for money and then pay it forward eventually. So she went in her bedroom to get what we know now she had as a jar called the Rainy Day Fund and she was going to give the money.

Speaker 1:

Her tip jar and she was going to give them the money. Well, while this is happening, the two friends tell police that Wes Arnold is saying things like we're not giving you shit, we're not giving you any money, you're lucky if we give you $20. And they thought this was strange because he's using the word we and it's not his money, definitely not his apartment, and it's nothing is his definitely not his apartment and it's nothing is his.

Speaker 2:

So you wonder too, like I mean time um timeline wise, was he angry? Because they say it was angry, of course, when they were, that's right did they ask for the money kind of early in the game in this little. I don't want to call it altercation, but um, his attitude changed perhaps when they were asking for money um well maybe well, the agitation increased I would say that for

Speaker 1:

sure. But you know, the first thing he got upset about was something with the dishes. If I can remember when I was going through the reports, right um, that he was annoyed by either the dishes not being done or the fact that he was asked to clean his dish. Not exactly sure, but I do know that the progression of the agitation was through the night, based on the friends, based on the two friends testimony. So Taya Hall comes out of that bedroom and because her, her rainy day fund is gone, the jar is absolutely gone. So she comes out, tells her friends you know my money's missing, you know you can. You probably can feel the tension in this room at this point.

Speaker 1:

I think she knew that wes arnold had taken this money in this jar, probably because he was probably the only one accessing her apartment at this time besides her close friends, right?

Speaker 1:

so only intimate person that's probably in her bedroom that would have access to this. And so her friends quickly see that this is not going to go well, that she looks very annoyed and she says it's time to go. And this is when these two flee down the stairs, which is what the neighbor heard. Hey, chris, so I have been taking Magic Mind gosh 30, 60, 90 days now, and well, the one thing, that first thing I noticed on Magic Mind was the energy that I have in the morning without my coffee. I do have one cup of coffee with my Magic Mind, but I would have another one about 45 minutes later, and then another cup of coffee with my magic mind, but I would have another one about 45 minutes later, and then another cup of coffee by around 10 or 1030, just based on my schedule, right.

Speaker 2:

And just so y'all know, that's a lot of Nespresso pods, that is a lot of Nespresso.

Speaker 1:

It does. Yeah, I actually did the calculation. Magic mind is less expensive than a bunch of Nespresso. But the one thing I noticed was the clarity in how ready I was for my day and I would have energy and I would be focused. You know, that was another thing I thought of was the focus and the energy that I had when I within like 20 minutes after taking this. It's just a small little green shot. You keep it in your refrigerator. I literally pop it every morning with my coffee and I'm ready to go.

Speaker 2:

I concur with those statements. I do like in the morning too, before I really eat anything. I think it just kind of hits a little better.

Speaker 1:

That's right.

Speaker 2:

As you may say, but yeah, just kind of that one cup of coffee as a you know to go kind of parallel, but yeah, I feel great with it. I that's one one thing I noticed too.

Speaker 1:

I just think it's kind of that mental sharpness, that clarity, um, I, when I walk into work, everybody, when everybody walks to work, of course you've got to be, um, yeah, on your best game, yeah, well, and two things that are in there that I want people to research for themselves are nootropics and adaptogens and what that does to your, to your body, what it does to your focus, what it does to your mental clarity, because these were things that you know. We take things and we don't know what's in them sometimes, right, but this company has had scientific research. They have been working on this formula a very long time. There's a lot of people who take this product, so we did our research on it. So I suggest you do the same and check out Magic Mind can, uh, use our code, magicmindcom slash texas wine 20. That's magicmindcom slash texas wine 20 and tell them your friends at texas wine and true crime sent you reclaim your brain okay, chris.

Speaker 1:

So now they have statements from the two friends that have fleed the scene, which is now what they know the neighbor heard. So they want to know who this Wes Arnold is, and so they look him up. Now they have a name, they have a name to go with. They look him up and they realize he has quite an extensive history for battery, domestic violence.

Speaker 2:

On parole for battery.

Speaker 1:

On parole for battery, domestic violence. On parole for battery. On parole for battery, and they realize that this guy is not a good guy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you almost wish she would have had that capability to do a little background research too.

Speaker 1:

You know we talk a lot about that and to come and to, you know I think you meet people and I always want to say this, sometimes the most the people that we want to save, because friends will come and say that Tiana halls, um, um, her taste in men was not this guy. He did not fit the mold of what, of who she would typically date, and so I think for her, this was someone who she wanted to help, who she wanted to help, maybe save a little bit. Do I think she knew the extent of what this guy had done in his previous life? No, but it stems back all the way to 2011 on a battery charge, but you do have him having to see a parole officer. So quickly, police find out exactly who he is, what he looks like and thankfully now they're going to be able to see this video footage of him being the last person seen in her apartment, which he was. But they're looking for this guy.

Speaker 2:

Well, and then just to go back to the statement of the friends coming forward, when they see this on the news, they hear nothing from him.

Speaker 1:

Nothing. But he says he heard it on social media the following day and he knew he was going to be a suspect, which is why he ends up doing what he's doing. And what he's trying to do is flee and I don't mean flee out of the city, because we know he stays in Englewood, but he basically is not going to go back to the last address that's listed on his parole officer's list, because that's where police go. And the woman who's living there says you know what? Yeah, he's family, but we don't allow him to stay here because of his abuse of women. And so then they actually know again that who they're dealing with, based on what family is saying Well, in this time they're looking for him.

Speaker 1:

A call comes in from a woman who says that she wants to report a domestic violence abuse with a guy she had living in her apartment or staying in her apartment. So she tells police that she met. What we know now is Wes Arnold. She meets Wes Arnold. He is able to schmooze her enough to get into her apartment because he needs a place to hide out and stay right yeah, he's not looking to just walk the streets well, that's what we had discussed too.

Speaker 2:

If, if you know, depending on when he took this money the rainy day fund that is you know why was he hanging around the city? But you had said too, perhaps he just didn't have enough money to, I guess, truly flee and leave the city, but that just seems yeah, but her rainy day fund wasn't all of her money.

Speaker 1:

Her rainy day fund was like an extra five bucks or ten bucks, so it just accumulated and she would use it on different things.

Speaker 2:

No, I know we don't really know what the value was. I just don't think he had enough money to do any of those things. Well, I know, I mean, I just or he wasn't smart enough. It just seems odd. Know somebody who's at least in the town. You know a couple towns over or something, but you know who knows?

Speaker 1:

well, you've wasted all your resources. Family doesn't even let you in, right, so probably probably not very many places to go. So he ends up in this woman's apartment. She calls police, reports this and she tells them that she has a guy. She had a guy living with her for a week, like not very long, and just even a few days, not very long at all. So she tells police that she could tell by the conversations that they were having that he was kind of up to something. She realized he was on a parole charge. She realized that she could just tell like he might be in trouble for something and she wanted to have nothing to do with it. So she tells police she asked him to leave and he basically went crazy and told her that he wasn't leaving and then hits her so hard that it knocks her unconscious when she comes to Wes Arnold and all of his things are gone and he left her with 17 stitches.

Speaker 2:

Yes, Arnold and all of his things are gone, and he left her with 17 stitches?

Speaker 1:

Yes, he did, and so she will call police and report that this has happened to her. And police, now, you know, I think they worry about the fact that now they have the same guy beating, you know, hitting a woman so hard, knocking her out, and then not only that, you hit and kill a woman and beat her to death and then try to cover up by lighting the apartment on fire. So they are dealing with someone in a very small area population and I think they're kind of concerned about this.

Speaker 2:

Yes, so while Clearly he's violent, clearly he's violent population and I think they're, I think they're kind of concerned about this.

Speaker 1:

Yes, so, while clearly he's violent, clearly he's violent and the girl actually agrees, chris, to kind of um help find him. Like where could he be?

Speaker 1:

like help set him up yeah, help said like where could he be? Where can we find him? Well, in this time another call comes in and says that there is someone acting erratically or strange, basically like in the front of a convenience store in Inglewood, and so police respond to the call and what we know now, who is? Wes Arnold gives a different name. Well, this name just happens to be associated with a DUI that was actually never taken care of Either. No show to court, there was a warrant out for the arrest on the DUI and I thought to myself, out of all the people you could have used, you used someone who has a warrant out for their arrest.

Speaker 1:

And you look nothing like them.

Speaker 2:

I was going to say, too, that in this day and age, when somebody gives a fake name, a picture comes up on the screen.

Speaker 1:

That's right.

Speaker 2:

On the carpenters.

Speaker 1:

That's comes up on the screen, you know that's right on there on the carpenters, that's right, and so looks nothing like him. And then, finally, you know it comes out that it's actually him. So they start, they take him down to the station. Okay, and they want to know a few things. First they want to talk about, they wait on the new girlfriend question about her beat, her being hit in that domestic violence situation. They are focused on what happened to Teyanda Hall. Now he will tell them that he was in the apartment, that he was in the apartment and that he was the last to see her. But when he left her, you know she was alive and that there wasn't any reason for him to think that she would be dead. So but when detectives press him more about the fire, he doesn't really have an answer other than like maybe she started it herself. Um, he says cigarette or something.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

He does, he uses that. He also says they had gone to a bar because they were talking about you know how could she? We know that she was beat up, right, we know that she had had injuries to her and his excuse was that they had gone to a bar. And she can get mouthy when she drinks and and she started, you know, spouting her mouth off to a couple of guys in a bar, so they started roughing her up a little bit, which is what? And then when he says they get back to the apartment, he sees the bruises on her. So none of it's really making any sense. Um, police aren't, aren't buying it and they pressing him more. You know, they want to know and and by this time, chris, they've got the footage.

Speaker 2:

I mean, they don't see anyone else entering or exiting that apartment yeah, and you have to really wonder too because clearly he was um on parole for battery he beat another woman after this murder. Uh, what was so different about the situation with her that drove him to that? You know?

Speaker 1:

I mean, like he's beating women, he's never that's just like what made him cross that line um, I would say that tanda hall's friends describe her as someone who would not have put up with that I think she was angry, I think she fought back and I think that makes people angrier when they want the upper hand, very sure and we don't know what was said.

Speaker 1:

In that apartment the only two people left were were both of them? Um, you know it. Looking back in hindsight, you know, maybe the friends could have thought but you're, you don't think someone's going to do that and I think that's.

Speaker 2:

I guess I'm just kind of wondering too like, because even just you know that's anger yeah pushed him over that boundary yeah, anger.

Speaker 1:

And then, not only that, you have a woman who you barely even know and you've gone into her apartment and she's found out, like what you're really about, and has asked you to leave, and you and you hit her because she wants you to go, because you have no other options, and but thankfully he did not cross the line with her. But who knows, I mean, maybe he had hit her so hard that he thought he killed her. I mean, we, we really don't yeah all right, so let's talk about or you know, like too.

Speaker 2:

Did he just go too far, you know, like, with beating her, you know, and beat her to death, and then realize he had gone too far at that point, like that, wasn't it? I mean, was that his intention to murder her, or did just, you know, did the beating go past beyond that point?

Speaker 1:

and then well, and I also think when you're beating someone, you never know when it's going to kill them. Right like it can come to a point where you can hit someone once and kill them well, in the right way.

Speaker 2:

Right and, as we know, she had smoke in her lungs, so she did was not dead when the fire was started not, and that's the you know that's hard to think about.

Speaker 1:

You know the fact that she had all these injuries, that she had suffered multiple lacerations to her, hadn't been beaten so badly, but she was still alive when the fire was started. Now he says that the new girlfriend who makes this phone call into the police that she's lying. That actually what happened.

Speaker 1:

Disgruntled yeah, that she basically wakes him up in the middle of the night and she wants him to hold her and he tells her to go back to sleep and then she gets like mad and pulls the covers off of him. So he grabs her arm, tells her to calm down. He says she starts going nuts and that she probably just called police to get even with him. Okay, that doesn't explain her 17 stitches. But okay, all right, detectives have had enough of this. Um, at the end of this interview, they book him on a first degree murder and arson charges. Um, so he is charged with tanda halls murder.

Speaker 1:

Um, this case will actually go to trial, but because of COVID, it was delayed quite a bit. It wasn't until September of 2023 that he finally stands trial for the murder of Teandahol. So his argument was that. So his argument was that prosecutors basically say that when the two people left the apartment, tensions were high and at some point he lashes out at her, he hits her, she goes down and in this rage, he basically doesn't stop. He just continues to hit her, to hit her, to hit her but yeah, I mean prosecutors to hit her.

Speaker 1:

Um, but yeah, I mean, prosecutors have to come in with something right. So you know that's what they're saying is he's doing to her and his defense team is basically saying that you know there was there may have been a fight or an argument, but really it was her lit cigarette that started this fire and that there was other. You know that that, that they did get into the argument, but then he maintains that he didn't kill her. But then they know, like he was the last one to leave. It's just not going well for him.

Speaker 1:

I mean, it's the prosecution has a really good case here they saw like wine and wine glasses for him. I mean, it's the prosecution has a really good case here.

Speaker 2:

They saw like wine and wine glasses. I'm sure they probably tried to play the angle that you know she was drunk and the cigarette you know, cigarette slipped out of her hand and ignited the fire.

Speaker 1:

Well, and the defense has to do something right. They're there to defend their client, so they have to come up with some stories they did find the stove on right.

Speaker 2:

With the gas turned on Like no pilot light. But the gas was turned on, yeah, which this fire could have been 10 times worse, 10 times worse.

Speaker 1:

And blown up the place not just had a fire either. So the verdict comes down. So he's found guilty. Of course he's found guilty. The judge sentenced him to life in prison for the murder, plus a consecutive 50-year sentence for the arson charge. So this guy is a real piece of work. I was looking at his report history because this case is closed. He is in prison of things he was doing to women and the abuse and the allegation and what was on his record and the fact that he was, you know, denied by family because of his abuse of women and the fact that you know he's going to be a 38-year-old woman who's been just trying to help him and be a friend to him. He's going to just murder her because he knows he did something wrong, which was probably steal her money, and this is how this argument started. So you know, thankfully, chris, he's behind bars and exactly where he should be and will hopefully never see the light of day again. Thank you, bye.