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
downstairs.
At 8:04 p.m.-almost exactly an hour after he had first responded to a
call from the Allanson residence-Sergeant Callahan's radio crackled and
he heard a familiar address.
Too familiar.
This time, the complainant was a neighbor: Mary Dorton.
"Car 26-Evening: Signal 6-Holding: 1458 Norman Berry Drive."
"I'll take it, " Callahan responded.
"I was just there an hour ago.)$
To the East Point police, "Signal 6" meant there was a burglar in the
house, and "Holding" meant that a citizen was detaining the suspect by
physically holding on to him.
It was definitely an emergency
designation, intended for the B (burglary) car on the evening watch.
Other cars moved in to back that unit up.
Callahan arrived in two or three minutes-his was the first car on the
scene.
As he pulled up the driveway and around to the rear of the
Allansons' house, a young woman came running toward him, her eyes wide
open, screaming.
Callahan couldn't make any sense out of what she was
saying; she was a hair away from complete hysteria.
He called for backup, and for detectives.
Lieutenant Gus Thornhill, Jr
a nine-year veteran with East Point, was supervising the evening
watch.
He headed for the scene, right behind the patrol units that had been
dispatched.
Callahan edged cautiously around the house.
There were two cars parked
out in back, a 1963 Ford station wagon with several shattered windows,
and a 1964 Chevrolet sedan.
Most of the windows of the house were six
or eight feet above ground, but in the rear there were several
ground-level windows in the basement.
The cellar door was a'ar, but Callahan avoided that entry until he had
some backup.
Instead, he crouched down and shielded his eyes as he
peered into one of the basement windows.
He gasped involuntarily at what he saw.
A middle-aged woman dressed in
some kind of white uniform sat upright near the bottom of the steps
descending into the middle of the basement.
There was a great splotch
of blood across her breasts, and she didn't move at all.
Had she been there all along?
Callahan wondered.
No, she couldn't
have been-not unless Walter Allanson had shot her and that was why he
hadn't allowed him to search the house on the prior call.
The first
rule of crime scene investigation was "Don't assume anything."
Callahan had no more time to ponder what might have happened.
There was a cacophony of sirens approaching, and East Point police
units raced up the driveway and parked along Norman Berry Drive.
Officers surrounded the house.
They had no idea who might be inside,
alive or dead.
They knew only that there was a burglar in the house
and a dead woman was sitting on the basement steps.
Officers peering in the basement windows could make out sprays and
droplets of blood on many walls and items in the cellar.
There was
blood everywhere.
Whatever had happened in this house, it had been
horrific.
Patrol Officer Cecil McBurnett, Jr was working a "wreck car" (accident
investigation) that evening and heard the Signal 6 go out on the
burglary on Norman Berry.
He was only three blocks away, so he
responded to give backup to Callahan.
He turned off Martin and headed
east on Norman Berry.
He was checking house numbers when he saw a man
leap from the lawn near Mae Mama Lawrence's house and hit the sidewalk
running.
The man turned to look at the patrol car, not once but
several times, and McBurnett saw him full-faced.
McBurnett did not yet have a description of the burglary suspect, but a
running man near a crime scene couldn't be ignored.
He had just spun his car around and was heading back to apprehend the
man when he heard a "Help the officer" call on the radio: "I've got a
woman shot.
The perpetrator is in the basement holding a hostage."
McBurnett's natural response was to go to the aid of his fellow
officer, so he left off his pursuit of the running man and turned into
the Allansons' driveway just behind another patrol unit.
Still, the
image of that man stayed in his mind.
He was wearing Levi's, boots,
and a green and brown striped shirt.
McBurnett had no fix on the man's size; he had been running hunched
over.
He could have been five feet ten inches tall-or six feet six.
When McBurnett arrived at the Allansons' house, he found incredible
chaos.
A young woman was screaming and out of control; more and more
police and EMTs were arriving, with their blue and red whirling bubble
lights giving the night a psychedelic glow; and the falling rain made
it seem like anything but the eve of the Fourth of July in the suburbs
of Atlanta.
Sergeant William Vance and Detective J. E. Lambert noted gouge marks on
the open basement door; it had probably been jimmied.
They also saw a
light on at the top of the steps, the bulb eerily spotlighting the body
of the dead woman.
The rest of the basement was bathed in shadows of
black and gray.
Lambert peered toward the heating and air-conditioning
unit and thought he saw an arm protruding from behind it.
Spooked, he
fired his pistol in that direction.
The round hit something metal and clanged loudly, but there was no
human movement.
The arm had been only a shadow.
Captain J. D. Lynn ordered a canister of tear gas to be thrown into the
basement, and all the doors were sealed.
If there had been a burglar
in the house on Callahan's first visit an hour before, he might very
well still be inside.
The men surrounding the house fully believed
they had a hostage situation.
They waited, officers poised at each of three exterior doors of the
house and at all the windows.
Five minutes.
Ten minutes.
No one bolted from the house, vomiting and blinded by the gas.
After fifteen minutes, Lieutenant Thornhill, Detective Lambert, and
Sergeant Vance donned oxygen masks provided by the East Point Fire
Department and edged into the basement.
It was so hard to see; tears ran down their faces despite their masks
and the fans the fire fighters had set up to air out the cellar.
They
stumbled over lumber and tools, a half-finished boat, a surfboard, a
miniature railroad track mounted on a sheet of plywood.
It was like
anyone's cellar, a repository for things to be used later, or things
once used and no longer needed.
They could make out the white-clad body sitting on the basement steps,
and, just opposite, behind the heating system, there was the brick base
of a fireplace.
It had a large rectangular hole in it-three feet high
by about a foot and a half wide-easily large enough for a man to hide
in.
They had no idea how far back it went.
Outside the hole they found a bloodstained flashlight, turned off, and
a .32-caliber pistol wedged between a surfboard and the plywood that
held the electric train.
Their own flashlights picked up a profusion
of still-liquid puddles and droplets of blood on the floor around the
hole in the base of the fireplace.
Back toward the stairs they located a .45/70 rifle and a crowbar near a
stack of interior doors.
Their tear-gassed eyes burned and blurred,
but behind the doors they discerned what looked like a leg clad in blue
pants.
They moved closer with their guns drawn.
Ca tain L nn ordered the uniformed division to fan out on foot to check
the neighborhood for a suspect.
At that point, they knew only that an
older woman was dead.
The young woman on the scene was too hysterical
to be of much help, although they knew now that she was Carolyn
Allanson, the ex-daughter-inlaw of Walter Allanson.
She repeated over
and over that someone had been in the basement and Daddy Allanson had
gone down to "get him."
She continued to babble about "Daddy" and
"Mother."
Daddy had had someone "caught in the hole" and she had begged Mother
Allanson not to go down in the cellar.
Almost as an aside, the
distraught woman said that she had seen "Tom's new wife" driving around
the block in her blue jeep.
Beyond that, she was no help at all.
When they tried to probe deeper, she lost control again.
They couldn't count on much of anything the woman said in her current
state.
It was no secret to the East Point police that Walter Allanson and his
son, Tom, had been feuding.
They had heard rumors about an ambush up
at Lake Lanier and Tom and Pat had been in to the police station only a
few days before, trying to charge his father with indecent exposure.
If Pat Allanson was in the neighborhood, the East Point police wanted
to find her as quickly as possible.
They had so little to go on as
Captain Lynn, Sergeant R. W. Jones, and Sergeant Callahan drove their
police cruisers in ever-widening circles around Norman Berry Drive,
looking for anything that seemed unusual, for someone running, and for
either Tom Allanson's blue pickup truck or the blue jeep Pat had been
seen driving. from the Allanson house.
The King Professional Building occupied the triangle of land just
between Bayard Street and the point where Norman Berry drive intersects
eve avenue.
It was new
construction, a manystoried concrete structure whose white fretwork
panels made it resemble an out-of-place mosque.
The wide cement
parking apron was almost empty of cars at 8:20 on a rainy night, but
the East Point officers spotted the blue jeep they were looking for
parked there.
They suspected this was the vehicle Carolyn Allanson said she had seen;