Read Everything She Ever Wanted Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: #General, #Murder, #Social Science, #Case studies, #True Crime, #Criminology, #Serial Killers, #Georgia, #Murder Georgia Pike County Case Studies, #Pike County
Both Don Stoop and Michelle Berry were bitterly disappointed,
ultimately frustrated.
They had given it everything they had.
Georgia passions being what they were, there would be other cases.
They devoutly hoped not to run into Pat again, although it was
certainly possible that they would, given world enough and time.
On June 12, 1991, less than two months after she was arrested, Patricia
Taylor Allanson aka Patricia Radcliffe Taylor appeared with her
attorney in the Hon.
William H. Alexander's courtroom in Atlanta.
A plea had been negotiated in Indictment No.
Z-32688.
Pat took the stand and looked stolidly at Bill Akins as he approached
her.
His questioning was routine.
He needed to establish that she was
competent and understood what she was about to do, that she felt she
had been fairly represented.
"Were you satisfied," Akins asked, "with the services that he rendered
on your behalf?"
"More than satisfied."
"Counsel," Akins turned to Steve Roberts.
"Do you waive formal
reading?"
"Yes, we do."
"His.
Taylor, do you understand," Akins began, "that you are charged
in seven counts in the bill of indictment?
Count I charges you with
aggravated assault with intent to murder, which carries with it a
penalty of one to twenty years in the penitentiary.
Count 11 charges
you with aggravated assault, which also carries with it a penalty of
one to twenty years.
. . . You can't be convicted of both.
. . .
Count I'll charges you with violation of the Georgia Controlled
Substances Act dealing with being in possession of Halcion .
. . one
to five years.
. . . That is a Schedule IV drug."
Count IV was the
same.
"You can't be convicted of both.
Count V charges you with theft
by taking, specifically a stainless-steel Rolex watch .
. . ten years
in the penitentiary.
Count VI charges you with theft by taking of some
specifically named items of jewelry .
. . one to ten years."
Akins explained that the matter two charges were could be convicted of
both.
"Count VII charges you with unlawfully posing as a registered nurse
without a license.
That is a misdemeanor, which carries with it a
maximum penalty of twelve months in jail and a one-thousand-dollar
fine.
Do you understand all of those charges and the penalties for them?"
"Yes, I do."
Pat Taylor was prepared, she said, to plead guilty to aggravated
assault, to violation of the Georgia Controlled Substances Act, to
theft by taking of the specific items, and to posing as a registered
nurse: Counts 11, IV, VI and VII.
She understood full well that she
could be sentenced to a total of thirty-six years in prison, and that
she had the right to a trial by jury.
She was waiving that right.
Pat was eager to make a statement about why she was pleading guilty.
Her attorney explained she could do that when the judge Bill Akins
reviewed Pat's long, long history with the legal system in Fulton
County, giving a summary of what he would have presented in a trial if
there had been one: the violent deaths, the poisonings, the forged
wills.
Moving into the recent past, he told Judge Alexander that Pat
had been paroled, trained to work only in nursing homes.
"She also
cared for an elderly lady by the name of Mansfield.
She essentially
worked with His.
Mansfield through a nursing home and the children
didn't have much contact with her.
His.
Mansfield subsequently died
and was cremated.
And that's really all we know about that."
The Crist assignment was next.
Akins described the lies and questioned
her later.
misrepresentations, and Pat's constant dismissal of all other
employees.
"It was essentially she and her codefendant, Debbie Cole
Alexander, who were the primary caretakers of the elder Mr.
Crist....
Mrs. Crist's ... doctor prescribed a sedative known as Halcion.... The
doctor prescribed thirty pills ... to take no more than one
pill-preferably just half a pill-at bedtime.
Within the span of some thirty-six days, Your Honor, the defendant
acquired an additional one hundred and twenty tablets of Halcion from
two different drugstores."
The case that Don Stoop and Michelle Berry had built step by step was
stunning to listen to.
Judge Alexander sat quietly, absorbed, as Bill
Akins told of the huge drugstore bills, the Crist childrens'growing
suspicions and fears.
"Dr. Watson .
. . drew a blood sample [from Elizabeth Crist] which
subsequently showed almost double the normal dosage of Halcion, and
this was at a time when the elder Mrs. Crist was not as drugged as she
was at other points.
. . . I would expect the evidence at trial to show further .
. . that
the overdoses of Halcion that Mr. Crist was getting exacerbated his
condition with Parkinson's and accelerated his decline .
. . and also
harmed the health of Mrs.
Crist."
After noting the valuables missing from the Crists' estate, Akins gave
the state's recommendation for sentencing.
"As to Count II-aggravated
assaulttwelve years to serve eight, the balance on probation.
. . .
Count IV, five years to serve concurrent.
As to Count VI, ten years to
serve ei lit, concurrent, and, as to Count VII, twelve months to serve
concurrent.
. . .
"As a condition of probation, Your Honor, I recommend that the
defendant receive counseling and that she at no time be employed either
for compensation or voluntarily in anything which might be remotely a
health-related field."
That certainly seemed a given.
Steve Roberts asked for two additional conditions.
"He [Bill Akins]
has agreed as a condition of this plea .
. . that the codefendant,
Debbie Alexander, who is Mrs. Taylor's daughter .
. . be put into the
pretrial intervention program and, upon successful completion of that,
that case would be dead-docketed against her and that she will not be
further prosecuted."
She had also promised to make restitution for Mr.
Crist's Rolex watch.
And next, the big carrot.
The humongous carrot.
"As a condition of this plea, he [Bill Akins] will in no way attempt to
indict Mrs. Taylor for, in connection with, the death of Mr. Walter
Allanson, which occurred, I believe, in 1974."
Akins nodded and rose to explain .
this condition further to Judge
Alexander.
"Your Honor, that is correct.
It came to light during the
course of our investigation of this case that this defendant was
substantially Involved as a party to the murder .
. . of her
ex-husband's-Tommy Allanson'sparents.
It is my position that, if she
enters a plea as outlined, the state will not proceed further with the
indictment or prosecution of that case - " Steve Roberts spoke again.
He said that his client was pleading guilty against his advice.
He had
advised Pat to plead not guilty and go to trial.
"My client is entering this plea today.
She will tell the court freely
and voluntarily she wishes to enter what is in effect an Alford
plea."
(An Alford plea has nothing at all to do with Bill and Susan Alford;
the etiology of the name is from some landmark case a long time back.
It was an ironic match-nothing more.) Margureitte and Clifford
Radcliffe, who were, of course, in attendance, flinched a little at the
sound of the name.
But t ey sat as proudly and benevolently as ever,
gazing upon their daughter.
"She wishes the court to understand the reasons why she is entering her
plea," Roberts continued, "that the nature of the charges made against
her and her daughter lead her to the belief that, if the evidence as
outlined by Mr. Akins is presented to a jury, that there is a
substantial likelihood that she would be convicted, and, if convicted,
would receive a harsher sentence than the state is recommending
today.
. . . The state has indicated it would introduce her prior crimes-which
they would contend is a similar crime.
Mr. Akins has notified me that
he would put up evidence to that effect.
"So all of those things, as well as her intention to put an end to this
matter once and for all-both with regard to this crime, the crime
involving Mr. Allanson in 1974, and her prior offense involving the
alleged poisoning-all of those things, Your Honor, are entering into my
client's decision to enter her plea today Pat lumbered to her feet
to face judge Alexander.
She wore jail-issue blue pants and top, and
sandals.
Fourteen years and thirty-five days had gone by since the
last time she was sentenced to prison, but she still had her cheering
section.
Debbie was there, along with her new husband, Mike
Alexander.
Miss Loretta was too brokenhearted to come to Pat's sentencing, but she
still had Boppo and Papa, just as she always had.
Judge Alexander looked down upon Pat and intoned, "Mrs. Taylor-as to
Count II, I will sentence you to twelve years, to serve eight, balance
probated.
. . . Count IV, I sentence you to serve five years,
concurrent with Count 11.
As to Count VI, I sentence you to ten years
to serve eight, and to run concurrently with the others.
. . . On
Count VII, I will sentence you to serve twelve months.
All of those
sentences to run concurrently."
Adhering to Bill Akins's request,