With respect to your degrees in chemistry:
I am aware of the fact that the amount of bromide increases in the developer as it reduces Ag (Agbr). My point was a simple one: If the developer is fogging the paper, you could add a little restrainer to alleviate the problem. As far as bromide not oxidizing: I have witnessed KBr turn brown in the jar. If it was not oxidized, It was contaminated. In fact, I still have some sitting in my lab. I probably should have used the term "Contaminated" instead of oxidized. Regardless, the compound was affected by another compound.
I don't know what could have affected the developer, but I read that the solution was fogging the paper.
My suggestion was valid and is worth testing:
1. Take the remaining developer in question:
2. pour out half into a separate container
3. Add a little KBr to one of the developer solutions
4. expose two test strips.
5. Process each strip in each of the two solutions
6. compare the results.
If the solution with the additional KBr reduced the general fog to an acceptable level, then my suggestion to add restrainer makes sense.
I'm sure you know more about the chemistry than I. But I have been mixing my own photochemistry for 15 years. I never said that a paper developer doesn't increase the level of bromide as it exhausts. And I don't have enough information to know what happened to the develpoper in question, but the first thing I would have done in the same situation was add restrainer. if it didn't work, I would pour it out and start over.