Roy Hallums (born June 23, 1948) is an American contractor who was kidnapped in Iraq on November 1, 2004. He was held in Iraq for 311 days and freed on September 7, 2005.
Hallums grew up in Memphis, Tennessee. In 1971 he married Susan Hallums, and they had a daughter, Carrie Anne. The couple divorced in 2003 but remained good friends.
Hallums had been working in Saudi Arabia since 1993 and eventually came to work for the Saudi Arabian Trading and Construction Co. After the outbreak of war with Iraq, Hallums went to Baghdad, where his company provided food for the Iraqi Army. Now after being released from his captives, he has settled down in Memphis.
On November 1, 2004, twenty gunmen stormed the compound where Hallums and his colleagues were working, in the upscale Mansour district of Baghdad. Hallums was taken hostage along with Roberto Tarongoy of the Philippines, Inus Dewari of Nepal, and three Iraqis. Dewari and the Iraqis were released soon after their abduction.
On December 18, American diplomats identified Hallums as the American kidnapped on November 1. His family had pleaded for his release weeks before, however, and Hallums had been identified on several Web sites. Hallums recounted that The Jawa Report was where his wife Susan first saw his name mentioned in public.
His daughter Carrie Anne Cooper soon set up a website [1] asking for Hallums' release. His family also appealed for his release on Al Jazeera.
A videotape of Hallums was released by insurgents on January 25, 2005. It is unclear when the tape was made. Hallums had a long beard, and was seated with a gun pointed at his head. "I have been arrested by a resistance group in Iraq," Hallums said. "I am asking for help because my life is in danger, because it has been proved that I work for American forces."