TX SUZANNE CLARK SIMPSON: Missing from Olmos Park, TX - 6 Oct 2024 - Age 51

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Police searching for missing 51-year-old woman last seen Sunday night​

Police are looking for a woman who has been missing since Sunday night.

Suzanne Clark Simpson, 51, was last seen in the 500 block of East Olmos in Olmos Park at around 11 p.m.

Husband of missing Olmos Park woman arrested on family violence charges in Kendall County​

The husband of a woman at the center of a missing persons case out of Olmos Park has been arrested on family violence charges, according to the Kendall County Sheriff’s Office.

Brad Simpson, 53, was booked early Wednesday morning on charges of assault causing bodily injury-family violence and unlawful restraint. His bond amount is still pending.

He was arrested off Interstate 10 East on a frontage Road in Kendall County, Olmos Park police said.

The Olmos Park Police Department and the Texas Department of Public Safety are searching for Simpson’s wife, Suzanne Clark Simpson, who has been missing since Sunday.

During a news conference on Wednesday, Olmos Park Police Chief Fidel Villegas said Brad Simpson is not currently a suspect in his wife’s disappearance at this time.

Suzanne Clark Simpson was last seen around 11 p.m. Sunday in the 500 block of East Olmos Drive, near Shook Avenue. Police said she was wearing a black dress that she went out in that night.

Sergeant Deon Cockrell said the search began in a woods area near Simpson’s home. Roads are closed off as the investigation continues and will be for the next 24 hours, according to police.

Police said there was a disturbance between the Simpsons after they left The Argyle in Alamo Heights between 10 p.m. and 11 p.m. on Sunday.

According to an arrest warrant affidavit, Brad Simpson told officers that at 3 p.m. on Monday, their child’s school called him and advised him that their child had not been picked up from school. Suzanne Clark Simpson typically picks up their child from school, the affidavit states.


Villegas said Brad Simpson was supposed to have an appointment with him about his missing wife, but he was not cooperative and didn’t show up.

Police said they spoke with a neighbor who reported he saw the couple in a physical altercation on Sunday night. He added that he heard screams from a wooded area east of his residence.

Villegas said, to his knowledge, there is no history of domestic violence between the couple, but police are still investigating. However, he said many witnesses reported to police that there had been tension between the family.

Villegas said officers searched that wooded area and found two articles that they’re looking into, but he did not give any details about what those items were. He said he does not want people to try to search for Suzanne Simpson without police supervision.

“We’re very concerned,” Villegas said.

Suzanne Simpson’s cell phone is also missing, according to the chief. He said they’re working on obtaining search warrants to investigate the family’s home and trying to locate the cellphone.

Villegas also said they were looking into other properties that the family owns as well.

Olmos Park police are asking the public for tips in connection with Brad Simpon’s vehicle, a 2019 dark-colored GMC Sierra pickup truck. They are looking for any people who may have seen the truck Sunday night after the family violence incident.


media - SUZANNE CLARK SIMPSON: Missing from Olmos Park, TX - 6 Oct 2024 - Age 51
 
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Neighbor reports hearing screams during fight before Suzanne Simpson's disappearance
The husband of the woman missing for days out of Olmos Park is under arrest, according to Olmos Park Police.
Suzanne Clark Simpson, a mother of four and a realtor, was last seen Sunday at the Argyle Private Club in Alamo Heights.

Olmos Park Police officials said the husband, Brad Simpson, was arrested in Kendall County on a family violence charge in relation to his wife's disappearance.

According to the police report, a neighbor told police he saw Brad and Suzanne arguing outside his window. The two then began physically fighting with each other, with the neighbor saying he saw Brad "grabbing her upper torso area to gain control of her body." He said Brad was clearly trying to keep Suzanne from running away.

After several minutes, the neighbor went outside with his flashlight to look for the couple when he heard screaming coming from a nearby wooded area and he ran back into his home. After about an hour, he told police he saw Brad drive off in his pickup truck, returning about one or two hours later, according to the police report.

Earlier on Tuesday, a family member told investigators that they saw Brad hit Suzanne in the face and “possibly push her into a wall.” Later, the family member said they saw a bruise on her elbow and was told that Brad had taken Suzanne’s cell phone.

According to the police report, Brad was uncooperative during the investigation and failed to show up for a follow-up interview, as he relocated to his ranch in Bandera, appearing to separate himself from his family.”

San Antonio Police and Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) are all a part of the search and investigation. Through the morning, local law enforcement have been searching for Simpson, but so far, they haven't found any signs of her.

Searches are underway at the San Antonio River by the intersection of East Olmos Drive and East Contour Drive near where she lives.

" Basically, we’re looking for anything," said DPS Sgt. Deon Cockrell. "The search crews will go through and continue to search for her in any possible area that she may be missing or possibly located."

Simpson is 5 feet, 5 inches tall, weighs about 140 pounds with brown hair and hazel eyes. She was last seen wearing a black, knee-length dress and wearing black heels that she may have taken off.

Officials with Olmos Police Department said they are also searching wooded areas. Simpson's family has also joined the search.
 
Missing Olmos Park mom last scene alive Sunday; husband arrested high bond set
The Alamo Search and Rescue Team is searching for anything that could lead to finding Suzanne Simpson.

What we know so far, Suzanne was last seen fighting with her husband at their home in Olmos Park. According to an arrest report, Simpson’s husband was arrested early Wednesday traveling along I-10 in Kendall County.

Olmos Park Police won't say what evidence they've collected so far. What the police chief did say is in his experience, something doesn't feel right about this very involved mom not being in contact with her 4 kids, her workplace, or other community members. The arrest affidavit says the couple was initially seen arguing at the Argyle in Alamo Heights. It’s an exclusive member-only club. According to the arrest report, later that evening a neighbor heard the couple arguing and physically fighting outside their home. The neighbor states he heard two to three screams from a wooden brushy area east of the house. Olmos Park Police Chief Fidel Villegas says investigators found two pieces of evidence there but didn’t say.

"Many of the people are telling us that there has been tension in the family," says Chief Villegas.

More than 24 hours after Simpson disappeared, her husband Brad Simpson was arrested in Kendall County. Chief Villegas says Simpson has been uncooperative with police.

"Surely foul play, the more time passes the more we believe foul play was involved," says Chief Villegas.

The owner of Nix Reality says Suzanne is a realtor and has been with the company for 13 years. She’s been married for 22 years, and they have 4 children. The arrest report says Brad Simpson called the police to report his wife missing. This was a day after the couple’s daughter wasn’t picked up from school on Monday.

Police do plan on searching the couple's Olmos Park home and other properties they may own together.
 

Friends of missing Olmos Park mother, Suzanne Simpson, struggle to stay positive​

An arrest affidavit also mentioned that one of the couple’s children had told a staff member at their school about a fight between her parents.

The affidavit said the child told the staff member that her father had hit her mother in the face, causing her mother to hit a wall.
 

Friends of missing Olmos Park mother, Suzanne Simpson, struggle to stay positive​

An arrest affidavit also mentioned that one of the couple’s children had told a staff member at their school about a fight between her parents.

The affidavit said the child told the staff member that her father had hit her mother in the face, causing her mother to hit a wall.
I’m sorry, but this isn’t going to end well. I hope he cracks and tells them where she is.
 
An arrest affidavit obtained by KSAT provides a loose timeline for the events surrounding Suzanne Clark Simpson's disappearance.
  • Sunday evening: Suzanne and her husband Brad, 53, attended a party at The Argyle in the Alamo Heights neighborhood of San Antonio. This was close to their home in the 500 block of East Olmos Drive, near Shook Avenue. Suzanne was wearing a black dress.
  • Sunday, between 10 and 11 p.m.: A neighbor told investigators he heard screams and saw Suzanne and Brad Simpson in a physical altercation. The neighbor said Brad appeared to grab Suzanne "and gain control of her body" as he "was clearly attempting to keep Ms. Simpson from running away." He last saw the couple walking westbound, and he went outside to see what was happening.
  • A short time later: The neighbor reports hearing two or three screams, from a brushy area east of his home.
  • About an hour later: The neighbor saw Brad Simpson get into his black GMC pickup truck and leave the house.
  • About an hour or two later: Brad Simpson returned to his house.
  • Monday, 3 p.m.: Brad Simpson receives a call from their child's school, saying the child had not been picked up. Brad told police that Suzanne usually picks up the child from school.
  • Tuesday afternoon: Law enforcement interviewed staff at one of the children's schools. The child told staff her parents were "fighting," and that her dad had hit her mom in the face and taken her phone. After the assault caused her mom to hit a wall, the child recalled seeing a bruise on her mom's elbow.
After failing to appear for a follow-up interview with police, an arrest warrant was issued for Brad Simpson. According to the affidavit, he had gone to his Bandera County ranch and "appeared to be separating himself from his family." Olmos Park police report he was arrested off Interstate 10 East on a frontage road in Kendall County early Wednesday morning.

Simpson was booked into the Kendall County jail and charged with assault causing bodily injury - family violence and unlawful restraint. The bonds are $1 million for each charge, adding up to $2 million.

One of Simpson's relatives was interviewed by Olmos Park Police Chief Fidel Villegas, who told the officer that Simpson “had called him and apologized for all the problems that he had caused.”


Police are asking the public for tips on the location of Brad Simpson's vehicle Sunday night following the family violence incident. The vehicle is a 2019 dark-colored GMC Sierra pickup truck, with Texas license plate MWD7050.

Police are looking for tips regarding the location of Brad Simpson's vehicle Sunday night. The vehicle is a 2019 dark-colored GMC Sierra pickup truck, with Texas license plate MWD7050.
 
An arrest affidavit obtained by KSAT provides a loose timeline for the events surrounding Suzanne Clark Simpson's disappearance.
  • Sunday evening: Suzanne and her husband Brad, 53, attended a party at The Argyle in the Alamo Heights neighborhood of San Antonio. This was close to their home in the 500 block of East Olmos Drive, near Shook Avenue. Suzanne was wearing a black dress.
  • Sunday, between 10 and 11 p.m.: A neighbor told investigators he heard screams and saw Suzanne and Brad Simpson in a physical altercation. The neighbor said Brad appeared to grab Suzanne "and gain control of her body" as he "was clearly attempting to keep Ms. Simpson from running away." He last saw the couple walking westbound, and he went outside to see what was happening.
  • A short time later: The neighbor reports hearing two or three screams, from a brushy area east of his home.
  • About an hour later: The neighbor saw Brad Simpson get into his black GMC pickup truck and leave the house.
  • About an hour or two later: Brad Simpson returned to his house.
  • Monday, 3 p.m.: Brad Simpson receives a call from their child's school, saying the child had not been picked up. Brad told police that Suzanne usually picks up the child from school.
  • Tuesday afternoon: Law enforcement interviewed staff at one of the children's schools. The child told staff her parents were "fighting," and that her dad had hit her mom in the face and taken her phone. After the assault caused her mom to hit a wall, the child recalled seeing a bruise on her mom's elbow.
After failing to appear for a follow-up interview with police, an arrest warrant was issued for Brad Simpson. According to the affidavit, he had gone to his Bandera County ranch and "appeared to be separating himself from his family." Olmos Park police report he was arrested off Interstate 10 East on a frontage road in Kendall County early Wednesday morning.

Simpson was booked into the Kendall County jail and charged with assault causing bodily injury - family violence and unlawful restraint. The bonds are $1 million for each charge, adding up to $2 million.

One of Simpson's relatives was interviewed by Olmos Park Police Chief Fidel Villegas, who told the officer that Simpson “had called him and apologized for all the problems that he had caused.”


Police are asking the public for tips on the location of Brad Simpson's vehicle Sunday night following the family violence incident. The vehicle is a 2019 dark-colored GMC Sierra pickup truck, with Texas license plate MWD7050.

Police are looking for tips regarding the location of Brad Simpson's vehicle Sunday night. The vehicle is a 2019 dark-colored GMC Sierra pickup truck, with Texas license plate MWD7050.'s vehicle Sunday night. The vehicle is a 2019 dark-colored GMC Sierra pickup truck, with Texas license plate MWD7050.
TYVM. What a moron. Good.
 

Photo of Suzanne Simpson shared from night she disappeared; Olmos Park police chief says no signs she's not alive​

The husband of a San Antonio-area woman missing since Sunday night is being booked into the Bexar County jail after he was arrested in Kendall County earlier this week.

Brad Simpson, 53, faces charges of domestic violence and unlawful restraint. An Olmos Park neighbor told police he saw Brad and his wife, Suzanne, involved in a physical altercation the night she went missing. His bonds total $2 million.

Authorities, however, have not definitively connected him with the disappearance of his wife, which police said he reported 24 hours later. They're asking for the public's help in ironing out where his black truck, pictured below, was on the evening of Sunday, Oct. 6, as well as the days prior.

Authorities on Thursday also released a new photo taken the night Simpson disappeared, from outside the Argyle where she and her husband were attending a party hours before. The Olmos Park police chief said it's their hope someone will remember seeing Simpson in her dress and heels, and call authorities.

Meanwhile, Police Chief Fidel Villegas said that while there's "nothing concrete" to indicate she's dead, they're pursuing every possible avenue for signs of where she might be.

"We think she was in distress," Villegas said. "She may be somewhere and we don’t know about her. It’s very suspicious, though, that she’s not going to work and she’s not checking in on her children."

Villegas added police have found "possible evidence" in their investigation, including from inside the Simpson residence along East Olmos Drive, but it has yet to be fully analyzed. Search warrants are also being sought so Olmos Park police can access electronic records, and the chief said other properties were being searched, but he wouldn't specify where.

He also said that while Brad Simpson hasn't cooperated with the investigation, other members of the Simpson family are.

"These four kids miss their mom," Villegas said. "We’re doing everything we can.”

At this time, he added, there's no evidence suggesting authorities might upgrade Brad Simpson's charges. He said it isn't uncommon for female victims in domestic violence situations to physically remove themselves from the situation, but said it was "unusual" that Suzanne Simpson would drop all contact.

"(She) was very dependable and loved her children and was always in contact with her children and her family and her friends. Suddenly that stopped after Sunday night.”

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Photo of Suzanne Simpson shared from night she disappeared; Olmos Park police chief says no signs she's not alive​

The husband of a San Antonio-area woman missing since Sunday night is being booked into the Bexar County jail after he was arrested in Kendall County earlier this week.

Brad Simpson, 53, faces charges of domestic violence and unlawful restraint. An Olmos Park neighbor told police he saw Brad and his wife, Suzanne, involved in a physical altercation the night she went missing. His bonds total $2 million.

Authorities, however, have not definitively connected him with the disappearance of his wife, which police said he reported 24 hours later. They're asking for the public's help in ironing out where his black truck, pictured below, was on the evening of Sunday, Oct. 6, as well as the days prior.

Authorities on Thursday also released a new photo taken the night Simpson disappeared, from outside the Argyle where she and her husband were attending a party hours before. The Olmos Park police chief said it's their hope someone will remember seeing Simpson in her dress and heels, and call authorities.

Meanwhile, Police Chief Fidel Villegas said that while there's "nothing concrete" to indicate she's dead, they're pursuing every possible avenue for signs of where she might be.

"We think she was in distress," Villegas said. "She may be somewhere and we don’t know about her. It’s very suspicious, though, that she’s not going to work and she’s not checking in on her children."

Villegas added police have found "possible evidence" in their investigation, including from inside the Simpson residence along East Olmos Drive, but it has yet to be fully analyzed. Search warrants are also being sought so Olmos Park police can access electronic records, and the chief said other properties were being searched, but he wouldn't specify where.

He also said that while Brad Simpson hasn't cooperated with the investigation, other members of the Simpson family are.

"These four kids miss their mom," Villegas said. "We’re doing everything we can.”

At this time, he added, there's no evidence suggesting authorities might upgrade Brad Simpson's charges. He said it isn't uncommon for female victims in domestic violence situations to physically remove themselves from the situation, but said it was "unusual" that Suzanne Simpson would drop all contact.

"(She) was very dependable and loved her children and was always in contact with her children and her family and her friends. Suddenly that stopped after Sunday night.”

fb30b3e3-74e1-4053-9f88-13bab1b58da3_1140x641.jpg
While I totally understand their point here, there is also no sign that she is alive, either.
 

The search for missing Olmos Park woman moves to Boerne​

As the search for Suzanne Clark Simpson continues, officials are now searching for her in Boerne.

Multiple agencies, including the Texas Department of Public Safety, Texas Search and Rescue, Sisterdale Fire and Rescue, Kendall County Fire Marshal, Boerne Fire and Boerne EMS, have been searching a wooded area near The Tower at Boerne Shopping Center.

The ongoing search has moved from Olmos Park, where police on Wednesday searched the wooded area near Simpson’s home, to an area along I-10 and Business U.S. Highway 87 in Boerne, which is northwest of San Antonio.

Olmos Park Chief Fidel Villegas told reporters at a press conference at the time that police are working to file search warrants for other properties.

Officials have not confirmed what they are looking for. Search dogs were on site as of Friday afternoon as crews searched the wooded area.

“There is a search going on in that area, but I do not have any additional information to release at this time,” said DPS spokesman Sgt. Deon Cockrell.

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Inside the case of Olmos Park mom Suzanne Simpson days after vanishing​

The search for missing mother Suzanne Clark Simpson in the Olmos Park Basin area has ended, according to the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS). Law enforcement and search teams are now focusing the search for Suzanne solely in Boerne.

While search efforts for the mother of four remain underway, her husband, Brad Simpson, is now facing a hold for questioning by federal authorities as of Friday, October 11. Simpson, 53, is being held at the Bexar County jail on bonds totaling $2 million. He was arrested in Kendall County Wednesday, October 9, on charges of family violence and unlawful restraint.

Simpson is scheduled for a bond hearing Tuesday morning, according to a KSAT report. If he posts bond on the country charges, he could be transferred into the custody of the U.S. Marshals, a Bexar County Central Records officials told KSAT.
 
I have not followed this one but he was arrested some hours ago! I swear I saw the last name Morphew but on clicking in, it was Simpson. So I do not plan to follow, I'm not doing new ones but am letting those know who are, there was an arrest today.
 

Suzanne Simpson's husband to remain in custody if bond is paid until he's retrieved by US Marshals​

A U.S. Marshals hold has been placed on the husband of missing Olmos Park woman Suzanne Simpson, meaning that even if he pays his bond, he will remain detained until he's picked up by federal authorities.

Brad Simpson, 53, has been in custody since early Wednesday morning. He faces charges of assault and unlawful restraint after a neighbor said they witnessed him and Suzanne Simpson in a physical altercation the night she disappeared.

Brad has bonds that total $2 million, but county officials told KENS 5 he has been placed under the U.S. Marshals hold.
 

'Immensely grateful' | Suzanne Simpson's family releases statement thanking law enforcement as search continues​

It has now been one week since a 51-year-old woman has been seen by anybody.

Numerous searches have been conducted by the Olmos Park Police, Department of Public Safety, Kendall County Sheriff's Office and more. As of Sunday, October 13, she has not yet been found.


The family of Suzanne Simpson has released a statement thanking law enforcement for their efforts.

"As the search for Suzanne continues, we are immensely grateful for the extraordinary efforts of law enforcement," said a FB post from Barton Tinsley Simpson. "The Olmos Park Police, the Texas Department of Public Safety, the Texas Rangers, and many others have been vigilant and tireless in their efforts to find Suzanne. We want to extend a special thanks to Chief Fidel Villegas, Ranger Jessie Perez, and the DPS Victim Services team for guiding us through this unimaginable ordeal and helping us protect and support Suzanne’s children."

"We are also deeply thankful to the community and to everyone who has supported and continues to support the search. To all of you who have reached out with love and encouragement, please know that your support means the world to us. We will not stop until we find her."

"As you attend church this morning, please keep Suzanne’s children in your prayers. We ask God to bless them and give us the strength to endure this painful and heartbreaking situation."



Officials say Brad Simpson has not been cooperating with the investigation. He is due in court on Tuesday for a bond hearing.
 

Missing mom of 4 Suzanne Clark Simpson told her mother she was physically abused before vanishing​

Missing mother of four Suzanne Clark Simpson told her own mom just an hour before she vanished that her husband had physically abused her, according to the parent who fears her daughter is dead.

Simpson, 51, has not been seen or heard from since Oct. 6 when she and her property tycoon husband, Brad Simpson, allegedly got into a shouting match.

“Suzanne and I had an opportunity to talk an hour before a lot of this has happened,” Simpson’s mother, Barbara Clark, said at a vigil for her daughter on Sunday night.

She called me up and told me the things that Brad had done to her physically,” Clark said, suggesting the violence was “alcohol-related.”

Suzanne said that around 9 o’clock that night, Brad Simpson had hurt his wife’s arm and back, according to KSAT.

The worried mother immediately came up with a plan to get her daughter out of the house, she said.

“I came up with an alternative plan for her that she would move in with me and have her little toddler go to the elementary school in my neighborhood,” Clark said.

“I never got to tell her the plan.”

Clark said that although the family is trying “to be positive,” they do not believe Simpson is still alive.

“I don’t think she is because I have not heard from her,” the alarmed mom said.

Brad Simpson, 53, was arrested on Wednesday and charged with assault causing bodily injury – family violence and unlawful restraint.

He is being held in Bexar County jail, where he has been uncooperative with investigators, police previously said — further distressing his mother-in-law.

“I would like to visit him and ask him why. What happened?” Clark said at Sunday’s vigil.
 
I'd like to know how the children got to school on Monday. Was it different than their usual routine?
I can't imagine they could concentrate. And, The other kids with questions, Possibly bullying. I've heard of it before, Eventhough they are victims. I think they probably have something in place for out of school learning. I would hope.
 

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