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
from the hillside, and finally the very foundation of their lives.
As it was in most felony cases of such importance, there was a delay in
going to trial.
Tom's pretrial motions wouldn@t be heard until October
and Pat told him she had hit bottom.
She had no money and no strength
to go on.
She couldn't bear it that the trial had been delayed.
She
told him she really needed to be in the hospital.
"But I won't go,
Sugar," she said softly.
"Because that would mean I couldn't see you at all, couldn't come and
visit you-and that would surely kill me.
Besides, the premiums on the
medical insurance are past due and I can't pay for that or for my
medicine."
There could have been no more degrading purgatory for a man like Tom
than to be caged and see this fragile woman he adored reduced to
poverty and illness gone untreated.
Pat had become the only person who
mattered to him.
Her moods, worries, opinions, and well-being
determined his own.
Her fears and sorrows had the power to leave him
twisting in the wind.
Tom's attorneys would far rather' have seen him plead guilty to- lesser
charges than innocent to murder.
Pat would not have it.
She came to
every lawyer-client conference, attached to her husband's side, it
sometimes seemed, like an annoying growth.
It was almost as if she had
a secret fear that Tom would tell the Garlands and John Nuckolls
something that would endanger her.
But that was ridiculous.
Ed Garland finally got a!chance to talk with Tom alone, and he seized
it.
"Tom,- listen to me.
I cannot defend you unless I know the truth.
I'll defend you on what you say to do, but I've got to know .
. .
because all this stuff cannot be true."
Tom would later admit that he did finally tell Ed Garland what had
happened that night in the basement of his parents' house.
But he
would not let Garland repeat what he had saidnot to anyone.
Tom
exacted a promise that Garland would not use that information in
defending him.
He had promised Pat.
She, of all people, loved him more than anyone on earth.
And they
would do it her way.
Garland was supremely frustrated; he was one of
the best criminal defense attorneys in the state of Georgia, and he was
ethically bound to proceed with one legal arm tied behind his back.
Mary Linda Patricia Vann-"Patty"-two and a half in 1940, the most
beautiful baby in Warsaw, North Carolina.
Always in delicate health and subject to frequent fainting spells, Pat
suffered pulmonary emboli (blood clots in the lungs) and was
hospitalized in 1973.
Suitors filled her room with roses, but the one suitor she wanted most
backed away.
(INSET) Pat, 1973, when Tom Allanson fell in love 14 with her and they
moved to Zebulon, Georgia, to build their dream plantation: Kentwood
Morgan Farm.
(BELOW) It was a high point in her life when Georgia Governor Jimmy
Carter rode with Pat, costumed in velvet, in one of the Kentwood Morgan
Farm surreys.
Pat was distraught when she learned what Tom had told his onorney.
"I
thought she was going to divorce me right there," Tom remembered.
But
they did what Pat wanted.
She absolutely refused to consider a plea
bargain that would dictate that Tom would go to prison, if only for a
few years.
She would die without him.
He had to be free, and he would
be, she promised him.
She would brook no compromise.
It was agreed that Tom'would plead innocent to all charges.
And that left his attorneys precious little ammunition with which to
defend him.
They had character witnesses who admired Tom, and
witnesses who would demean the character of those who testified against
him.
Hardly the stuff of which a powerful defense is constructed.
Private investigators for the defense had tried to find someone who had
seen Tom far away from the shooting scene.
They had even advertised
for such a witness in the Atlanta Yournal personals: REWARD ANYONE
SEEING TOM 6FT 4, 250 POUNDS, LIGHT HAIR, 2 WEEKS AGO, WEDNESDAY, JULY
3RD BETWEEN,4:30 AND 9:00 ON CLEVELAND AVENUE BETWEEN S. FULTON
HOSPITAL AND I-75 OR GIVING HIM A RIDE ON I-75 FROM CLEVELAND TO
CENTRAL, PLEASE CALL 344-5729, 436-8435.
URGENT!URGENT!
The ad backfired, and became State's Exhibit No.
102.
It was an endless hot summer and fall as they waited for the trial, and
a relief when October 14, 1974, finally came.
Both Pat and Tom seemed
to believe that he would be found innocent and they would be together
again, perhaps in time to save their plantation.
Hoyt Waller expected a balloon payment by December or he would
repossess their paradise.
Tom thought he could find some way to scrape
the money together, if only he were free before the end of October.
Tom's divorce skirmishes had been held in small county courthouses; his
murder trial would be held in the Fulton County Courthouse in downtown
Atlanta.
Outside the massive white marble courthouse, the oak trees of
Atlanta glowed golden, the dogwood's leaves were tinged with red, and
the maple's turned a clear bright coral.
Inside, as in all courtrooms,
there was no sense of season, only the dust of many seasons, many
years.
"The court calls for trial," Judge Charles A. Wofford, white-haired and
benign, intoned, "the case of The State of Georgia v.
Walter Thomas Allanson, charged with murder, Indictment No.
A22765,
Colonel Edward T. M. Garland for the defendant and Colonel William
Weller for the state."
Customarily, relatives of the accused sat behind the gallery divider,
but Pat insisted on sitting at the defense table.
That was fine with
Tom, but Garland threw up his hands.
Dressed in a dazzling new outfit
each day, sewn by her own hand, Pat was the picture of the anxious,
devoted wife standing by her man.
Her vantage point at the trial also
allowed her to instruct Garland and,to nudge and whisper to Tom.
It took only a day to pick a jury, although they went through more than
four dozen candidates before both Ed Garland and William Weller
accepted a panel of seven men and five women, eight blacks and four
whites, with two alternates.
An inordinate number of the prospective
jurors had relatives in law enforcement, or knew either the prosecutor
or the defense team, or had very strong feelings about the death
penalty.
In the end, Tom Allanson's fate would be decided by a Sears
Roebuck store manager, a retired teacher, two postal employees, an
insurance analyst, a grocer, a physical education teacher, a phone
company clerk, a retired waitress, a payroll administrator, a
housewife, and a retired airline pilot.
As Assistant D.A. William Weller called his witnesses one by one, they
painted a devastating, unrelenting picture that would be hard for Ed
Garland to erase.
Sergeant Butts of the East Point Police Department
testified that Tom had been so angry two days before the killings-as he
sought to charge his father with public indecency-that he had said, "If
this kind of stuff keeps up, I'll kill him!"
Deputy Richard
Satterfield of Forsyth County, an investigator into the abortive ambush
at Lake Lanier four days before the murders, described how Walter and
Carolyn Allanson had almost died in a storm of bullets.
Mary Rena
Jones of the Jones store said she had seen a blue pickup truck with a
round decal on the door the morning of the ambush.
Weller called Walter Allanson's employees and neighbors, and then all
of the East Point police investigators who had pored over the house and
the yard on Norman Berry Drive or who had gone to Zebulon and arrested
Tom.
Twenty-two convincing witnesses for the state, none of whom had
particular axes to grind.
Step by step, Weller built his case,
implying to the jury that Tom Allanson was not only guilty of shooting
his parents on July 3, but that he had been present at all the earlier
attacks and harassments.
Tom sat frozen at the defense table, his longish hair cut now above his
ears and his shoulders straining at a tailored navy blue sport coat.
When Mary Jones testified that she had seen him drive by her store on
the morning of June 29, 1974, in a blue pickup with a canopy and a
Kentwood Morgan Farm circular seal on the door, he shook his head
slightly.
He knew that seal hadn't been on the truck since Pat's
accident in Stone Mountain two months before.
Pat's reaction was much
more obvious to the jury.
Frowning and grimacing, she wrote a note and shoved it dramatically
across the defense table to Ed Garland.
On cross-examination, Garland got Mrs. Jones to admit she hadn't
recognized the driver of the blue truck, nor had she mentioned seeing
the truck on the day of the ambush.
Her testimony warred with her
first police report.
She had first recalled seeing Tom the day before
the ambush at Lake Lanier.
Garland fought to have Mary Jones's
testimony thrown out, but he lost.
For the second time in two days, he asked for a mistrial, and for the
second time, Judge Wofford denied his request.
There would be many legal tussles between the defense and the
prosecution during the trial, times when the jury would be banished
from the courtroom.
Judge Wofford was an easygoing, folksy jurist.
He
invited the male members of the jury to remove their jackets and even
their shoes if they were pinching.
Ashtrays would be provided for those who cared to smoke.
He apologized
for the delays and explained that "if you're inclined to blame anyone,