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
there was already a statewide want out on it-and on its alleged driver,
Patricia Taylor Allanson.
Callahan noted the license plate number, CY
242, a 1974 Georgia-issued plate.
A quick radio check with "Wants and
Warrants" elicited the information that the plate had been issued for a
new jeep, purchased three months before in Marietta, Georgia, and that
it indeed was registered to Patricia R. Taylor of the Kentwood Morgan
Farm in Zebulon.
In the rapidly dimming light, the three policemen could make out the
form of a woman sitting in the jeep.
There was no way of knowing if
she was alone, or if someone was crouching down beside her or behind
her.
They leaped from their police unit and approached the jeep from behind
with guns drawn.
The woman in the vehicle didn't move at all-not even
to turn her head to glance at them.
"Get out of the jeep!"
Callahan shouted.
"Get out of the jeep with
your hands up!"
For a moment there was no movement in the little blue ragtop jeep, and
then a pretty, slender woman wearing a miniskirt and a halter top poked
one bare leg out, slid to the ground, and turned to stare back at
them.
She held up one arm and gestured that she could not raise the other
because it was injured.
"Anyone else in there?"
Callahan called.
She shook her head.
"You sure?"
"I'm all alone."
Callahan and Jones moved to either side of the woman they presumed to
be Pat Allanson and led her inio the police car.
She didn't resist,
but she winced as if her shoulder hurt her.
"What is going on?"
she asked.
"What has happened?
Where is Tom?"
"Are you -A4rs.
Allanson?"
"Yes.
"Well, he shot his mother."
Pat sagged a bit, and then said forcefully, "No, he couldn't have s of
"Well, his ex-wife said he did."
Pat didn't care about what Tom's ex-wife said.
She insisted that if
anybody did any shooting, it wouldn't have been Tom.
At this point, they couldn't argue with her.
The only thing they could
be sure of was that the elder Carolyn Allanson was dead.
For all they
knew at this point, Tom might be dead too and, as improbable as it
seemed, they might be looking for Walter Allanson.
The basement up the
street had been so obscured by walls, doors, and junk that they
couldn't be sure of anything, and they hadn't yet been informed about
what the investigators back at the house might have found.
None of the police units circling the area had made any definite
sightings of Tom.
His new wife seemed to be in shock.
All she knew
was that she had been waiting for him for hours.
She was worried
sick-so much so that she had called her parents, Colondl and Mrs.
Clifford Radcliffe, to come and be with her.
She would, of course, be
glad to talk with the officers about anything they wished-if only she
could wait for her mother and daddy to get there.
She appeared panicked that the officers would remove her from the
parking lot before her mother and father arrived.
"Please don't take
me away.
They're on their way, and they won't know where to find me if
you take me away from here."
She said she had no idea where her husband might be at the moment.
He
had been wearing a brown shirt, blue jeans, and cowboy boots when she
last saw him.
"How tall is your husband, ma'am?"
Lynn asked.
"Tall.
Real tall-six foot three or better.
He's a very large man-but
very gentle.
I believe he weighs over two hundred pounds.
Captain Lynn got on the radio and broadcast a BOLO (be on the lookout
for) on Tom Allanson, giving the additional descriptive information on
his appearance.
The details fit the running man that Officer Cecil
McBurnett had observed just after hearing the report of "Burglar in the
house" at 1458 Norman Berry Drive.
The man had been running toward the
intersection of Cleveland and Norman Berry, and, incidentally, the King
Building.
Of course, that man had been hunched over and no one knew how tall he
was.
Had it been Walter?
Or Tom?
There was no way Lynn could be
sure.
Tom had last been seen in blue Levi's and Callahan had said
Walter was wearing blue trousers when he talked to him earlier.
Lynn, Jones, and Callahan had far too much to do to wait for Pat
Allanson's parents.
They took Pat with them as they drove slowly
around.
the neighborhood.
They stopped now and again to check garages
where a shooter might be hiding.
Pat heard the radio chatter constantly and tried to understand the
police codes.
They had told her only that Tom's mother was dead.
Shot.
They hadn't said anything about Tom's father.
Or Tom.
She bit
her lip and stared nervously out the squad car's window.
They turned from Cleveland onto Stewart Avenue and drove right past the
very spot-Nalley's Chevrolet-where Pat's brother, Kent, had died eight
years earlier.
Shot too.
Pat looked away, her thoughts known only to
herself.
After a while the police took Pat back to the King Building, where the
colonel and her mother were waiting for her.
Her mother took her hand,
and the colonel demanded to know just what was going on and why his
daughter was being detained.
The police retrieved Pat's pocketbook and sewing things from the jeep,
and they instructed the Radcliffes to follow them to the East Point
Police Department.
And there they waited, the three of them.
The
police were too busy even to talk to them.
Pat thought about sewing on her Fourth of July parade costume-just to
keep her panic down-but there didn't seem much point.
Probably she and Tom wouldn't be riding in the parade Saturday after
all.
She didn't even know if Tom was alive.
The blue jeep was towed into the city garage.
The detectives saw a
container of take-out fried chicken in the front seat, and noted it
along with their other observations.
. . .
Back at 1458 Norman Berry Drive, East Point officers had completed
their search of the basement.
Milford Carolyn Allanson still sat on
the basement steps, shot through the heart.
They had found another
body there too.
Walter Allanson lay on the floor parallel to the
steps; his body had been hidden by the stack of doors.
His new rifle
was on the floor four feet from his body, and a few feet from the body
of his wife.
There was no way of telling which of them had fired the
rifle, or if, indeed, either had.
One round had been fired from it,
and it was partially cocked with a live round half into the chamber.
Walter Allanson had obvious gunshot wounds in his face, neck, and
torso.
In all likelihood, it was his blood that had left trails of
gore over half the basement-particularly near the hole in the base of
the fireplace and then pooled beneath him as he bled out.
After Detective Marlin Humphrey, Jr took photographs, Lambert, Vance,
and Patrolman Bob Matthews removed the bodies of Walter and Carolyn
Allanson, carrying the victims up the steps to be laid out on the wet
grass of their side yard for more police photographs and to await
transportation to South Fulton Hospital.
They could not be declared legally dead without a physician; the bodies
would then await postmortem examination.
Bob Matthews, who worked as an identification officer, bagged the
.45/70 carbine rifle and the .32 pistol, which had six empty
chambers.
The investigators could not hope to do a thorough crime scene
investigation until daylight, which was still hours away.
Lieutenant Thornhill ordered the property cordoned off and stationed
patrolmen to guard it until morning.
They now knew what had
happened.
It would take them a long, long time before they knew how and why.
Jean Boggs, Walter Allanson's sister, hadn't felt well all day.
She
was standing at her stove fixing something to eat at 8:30 on the night
of July 3 when a neighbor came to the back door.
"I don't want to
frighten you, but I think something's wrong at your brother's house.
Maybe you'd better call him.
There are ambulances and police cars and everything up there."
Alarmed, jean heard the phone at Walter's house ring six, ten, twelve
times with no answer.
She didn't know, of course, that the phone line
was severed and the rings she heard were silent in her brother's
house.
When she called Mae Mama's house, a policeman answered and suggested
that she had better go on down to her brother's house.
He wouldn't
tell her anything else, nor would the desk sergeant at the East Point
police station.
That scared her.
Her husband wasn't home, but her neighbor said he would drive her over
to Walter and Carolyn's place.
"When we got up there," Jean said later, "I remember seeing oodles and
oodles of people going up and down the bank where my brother lived and
up and down the driveway-many strangers.
I also remember seeing a
television station there .
. . Channel Five."
Jean walked up to a policeman who was holding people back with his
extended arms.
When she told him who she was, he summoned Captain