After Brandon Lawson ran out of gas in the dead of night on rural Route 277, he made a series of strange phone calls — and was never seen again. When Brandon Lawson vanished in 2013, it left authorities baffled and his family in shambles. The series of events leading to his disappearance near Bronte, Texas, appeared wholly contradictory. He was a loving father of four, but he stormed out of his house in a rage on the night of August 8, 2013. An hour later, he called police when he ran out of gas — but hid from them when they arrived. “Yes, I’m in the middle of a field,” Lawson told an emergency operator. “My truck ran out of gas. There’s one car here. The guy’s chasing [inaudible] to the woods. Please hurry! We’re not talking to him… I told you I ran into ’em.” In addition to the police, Lawson also called his brother Kyle to ask him to bring some gas. When Kyle arrived just after 1 a.m. on August 9, however, Brandon Lawson was nowhere to be found. And no one has seen him since. The Disappearance of Brandon Lawson Born on November 18, 1986, to Bradley and Kimberly Lawson in Fort Worth, Texas, Brandon Lawson grew up in a big family and appeared to have a happy childhood. He spent a lot of time outdoors with his brothers, Kyle and Billy, and sister Brittany. He enjoyed fishing and camping, and he couldn’t wait to get his own pickup truck. Lawson was a junior in high school when he met sophomore Ladessa Lofton and asked her for her number. The couple became inseparable, and they went on to have three children together. Lofton also became a stepmother to Lawson’s child from a previous relationship. They had been together for 10 years when Lawson disappeared. Just before his disappearance, with the stress of working more than 60 hours per week in the oil fields and a newborn son at home, Brandon Lawson turned to methamphetamine. According to an interview with Lawson’s brother Kyle on the Crawlspace podcast, Lawson called Kyle on August 7, 2013, to see if he knew where to find the drug. Lawson did not go home to his family that evening, prompting a fight with Lofton when he did return to their San Angelo, Texas, home on Aug. 8. After their fight, he left angrily in his truck just before midnight. “When he left, I guess he didn’t have a lot of gas,” Lofton said. “I called my brother-in-law to tell him [Lawson] was going to run out of gas and put the gas tin on the porch to give to him so he could go get him gas, because he was pretty mad at me at the time.” Lawson had called his father at 11:30 p.m. to explain he was driving to his home in Crowley, Texas. Lawson never finished the three-hour drive, however, as he ran out of gas on Route 277 at 12:30 a.m. on Aug. 9. He called his brother Kyle in a panic, causing Kyle to worry that Lawson was high and hallucinating. “Three (expletives) are chasing me out of town,” said Lawson, going on to clarify he was talking about “the Mexicans in the neighbourhood.” Lawson denied being high when his brother asked him. With his wife and four-year-old son in tow, Kyle left his house and drove to Lawson’s to retrieve the gas can Lofton had left on the porch.
After Brandon Lawson ran out of gas in the dead of night on rural Route 277, he made a series of strange phone calls — and was never seen again. When Brandon Lawson vanished in 2013, it left authorities baffled and his family in shambles. The series of events leading to his disappearance near Bronte, Texas, appeared wholly contradictory. He was a loving father of four, but he stormed out of his house in a rage on the night of August 8, 2013. An hour later, he called police when he ran out of gas — but hid from them when they arrived. “Yes, I’m in the middle of a field,” Lawson told an emergency operator. “My truck ran out of gas. There’s one car here. The guy’s chasing [inaudible] to the woods. Please hurry! We’re not talking to him… I told you I ran into ’em.” In addition to the police, Lawson also called his brother Kyle to ask him to bring some gas. When Kyle arrived just after 1 a.m. on August 9, however, Brandon Lawson was nowhere to be found. And no one has seen him since. The Disappearance of Brandon Lawson Born on November 18, 1986, to Bradley and Kimberly Lawson in Fort Worth, Texas, Brandon Lawson grew up in a big family and appeared to have a happy childhood. He spent a lot of time outdoors with his brothers, Kyle and Billy, and sister Brittany. He enjoyed fishing and camping, and he couldn’t wait to get his own pickup truck. Lawson was a junior in high school when he met sophomore Ladessa Lofton and asked her for her number. The couple became inseparable, and they went on to have three children together. Lofton also became a stepmother to Lawson’s child from a previous relationship. They had been together for 10 years when Lawson disappeared. Just before his disappearance, with the stress of working more than 60 hours per week in the oil fields and a newborn son at home, Brandon Lawson turned to methamphetamine. According to an interview with Lawson’s brother Kyle on the Crawlspace podcast, Lawson called Kyle on August 7, 2013, to see if he knew where to find the drug. Lawson did not go home to his family that evening, prompting a fight with Lofton when he did return to their San Angelo, Texas, home on Aug. 8. After their fight, he left angrily in his truck just before midnight. “When he left, I guess he didn’t have a lot of gas,” Lofton said. “I called my brother-in-law to tell him [Lawson] was going to run out of gas and put the gas tin on the porch to give to him so he could go get him gas, because he was pretty mad at me at the time.” Lawson had called his father at 11:30 p.m. to explain he was driving to his home in Crowley, Texas. Lawson never finished the three-hour drive, however, as he ran out of gas on Route 277 at 12:30 a.m. on Aug. 9. He called his brother Kyle in a panic, causing Kyle to worry that Lawson was high and hallucinating. “Three (expletives) are chasing me out of town,” said Lawson, going on to clarify he was talking about “the Mexicans in the neighbourhood.” Lawson denied being high when his brother asked him. With his wife and four-year-old son in tow, Kyle left his house and drove to Lawson’s to retrieve the gas can Lofton had left on the porch.

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