I recently read this
"It (the Hall effect) describes the transverse deflection of moving conduction electrons in a Hall bar when time-reversal symmetry is broken."
in an article. As far as I know, the Hall effect is the formation of a voltage difference across an electrical conductor, when a magnetic field is applied transverse to the current direction. This is generated due to the deflection of the electron by the Lorentz force.
$$\mathbf{F} = q \left( \mathbf{E} + \mathbf{V} \times \mathbf{B} \right)$$
When time is reversed,
$$ \mathbf{F}' = q \left( \mathbf{E} + \mathbf{(-V)} \times \mathbf{(-B)} \right) $$ $$ \mathbf{F}' = \mathbf{F} $$
So basically, even when the current, velocity of charge carriers ($\mathbf{V}$), and magnetic field $(\mathbf{B})$ are reversed. The direction of the force $\mathbf{F}$ will remain the same and the Hall voltage will remain in the same direction.
for example, if the current is in the $+X$ direction, (electron velocity along the $-X$ direction) and the magnetic field is in the $+Z$ direction, then the force will be along the $+Y$ direction. If we reverse time, electron velocity will be along $+X$ and the field will be along $-Z$, and the force will remain the same along $+Y$.
Where exactly do we break TR here?