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
blame the court."
Little Carolyn Allanson was probably the biggest gun the prosecution
had.
She was right next door to an eyewitness, and television
mysteries had made eyewitness testimony seem infallible.
Carolyn had
never said she saw Tom that rainy night in July, but in her third
interview with George Zellner, she had recalled that she heard her
ex-mother-in-law scream out, "Tommy!
Tommy!
Tommy!"
She was on the witness stand for much of the third day
of trial, examined and cross-examined.
The Allansons' next-door neighbors, the Ducketts, and Officer McBurnett
were, of course, true eyewitnesses to a tall running man who fled the
crime scene.
All of them pinned Tom Allanson a little tighter to the
wall.
Hampered as he was by Pat's refusal to allow her husband to plead
guilty to lesser charges, Ed Garland could only try to stem the
damage.
He was good.
He elicited an admission from McBurnett that he had
glimpsed Tom in the police station before he identified him in the
lineup.
McBurnett had, like most of the East Point officers, made it a
habit to glance into the identification room to wave to a particularly
attractive female clerk who worked there.
On June 6, Tom had been
sitting in the ID room as McBurnett passed.
Several of the investigating officers had not saved their notes or
reduced their interviews to written reports.
Garland was agile, a
fencer poking tiny holes in the fabric of the state's case with his
rapier.
But only tiny holes.
The state's eyewitnesses included a
police officer and a fire fighter.
The Ducketts both described the
huge man who had run past their house even as the first sirens howled
through the Norman Berry neighborhood.
It would be a herculean task
for any attorney to overcome that kind of testimony.
Ed Garland was
further handicapped by Pat's courtroom behavior and her continued
insistence that she and not her husband's attorney should decide how
his defense would be handled.
When Pat was dissatisfied with the way
things were going, she punched Tom in the ribs.
She seemed to hover
just at the edge of hysteria, watching and listening for some danger to
Tom.
It drove Garland nuts.
On Wednesday morning, October 16, Ed Garland, his jaw tight, asked
Judge Wofford for a conference in chambers out of the jury's hearing.
The opposing attorneys were both present, as was the court
stenographer.
"Judge, I think it's necessary, to protect my reputation and the
integrity of the judicial process," Garland began, "[to note] that I
find substantial disagreements between the defendant's wife and myself
concerning how the case .
. . should be conducted.
. .
. There are certain witnesses that I decline to put on the stand, will
not put on the stand .
. . because of my investigation in the case.
"I also find there's an inability to communicate with my client
effectively because of his desire to have his wife present, and I find
that his wife is unstable.
His wife is affecting his judgment insofar
as my ability to communicate with him."
His exasperation obvious, Garland told the judge that Pat wanted to
select which witnesses would testify, and that she was telling Tom that
he must testify.
Almost always, a competent criminal defense attorney
chooses not to put his client on the stand; once he does that, he opens
the defendant up to crossexamination from the prosecution and
devastating questions often ensue.
Pat apparently felt she could coach
Tom in the proper way to testify.
"I want the record to show," Garland continued, "that I requested that
she remain out of the courtroom during the case.
She has refused, and
the defendant has demanded that she be allowed to be present.
. . . I
feel like the approach I have taken is the best I know how to do.
That's all I wanted to put on the record, Judge."
"Would you like me to bring her in here-have Mrs. Allanson
broughtin?"
"I think it will just get into her crying and gnashing of teeth,
Judge," Garland sighed.
"Colonel Garland, I have watched her-her facial expressions a number of
times," Judge Wofford said.
"Now, she has not made any audible
statements in the courtroom.
. . . She's made no truly noticeable
gestures-unless you were watching her carefully.
. . .
I have felt for the days this has been proceeding that she has been a
detriment to the trial, but she committed no action that was
sufficiently overt .
. . for the court to take action.
I recognize
that her presence is definitely a stumbling block to the harmonious
proceedings that we still have ahead."
Ed Garland, fighting for his client, was truly stymied.
"What has occurred has occurred outside the presence of the jury and
the court," he said.
I asked her to leave yesterday where I could talk
to him alone, to remove him from her suggestive influences.
. . . She
went across the courtroom and faked a heart attackin my opinion-to get
the attention."
Judge Wofford nodded.
Pat Allanson had gasped a'nd fainted the moment
he had walked out of the courtroom, and the sheriff's deputy had
informed him of it.
Ed Garland explained further.
"When I tried to talk with him .
. .
gave him my uninterrupted counsel, and got him to reflect on it, she
pulled a heart attack .
. . and demanded that she be present with him
in all my discussions.
.
. . I find that with her acting the way she acts, that he doesn't think
clearly."
Nobody in Judge Wofford's chambers could argue with that.
But there
didn't seem to be anything they could do about it.
In her
near-hysterical fight to save Tom, Pat continued to disrupt his trial,
but she always managed to stay just within the bounds of courtroom
propriety.
The judge had warned against demonstrations, and her
grimacing and whispering remained on the edge of what he would allow,
barely restrained.
Her visits to Tom left him unsettled and worried.
She wanted him to testify; she warned him Ed Garland wasn't doing right
by him.
Outside the courtroom, Pat often fainted and clutched her
heart.
On one occasion during a break, she pointed out a policeman to
Tom and whispered desperately, "Oh my God, Tom!
That man raped me!"
And then she fainted once again.
"What did she expect me to do?"
Tom later asked futilely.
"Deck a cop
right there in the courthouse hallway?
I couldn't do anything.
Tom Allanson descended further into his own private hell.
The way
things were going, he now figured he would probably be found guilty and
executed.
Who would look after Pat?
He was so in love with his wife
that his biggest worry was not his own bleak future, but hers.
What
would she ever do in this world without him?
Ed Garland trudged on, feeling Pat Allanson around his neck like an
albatross.
He attempted to have her description of what Tom was
wearing on the day of the shootings excluded.
It didn't help his
client's case one bit to have his own wife corroborate the state's
eyewitnesses.
Garland's objections were overruled.
The jury saw dozens of pictures of the blood-drenched basement and
heard Sergeant Callahan describe the scene he had found on the night of
July 3. But had Tom been one of the people in the basement?
If Garland
could convince Pat that he had to keep Tom off the stand, the case
would come down to ballistics.
Ballistics were not nearly as emotional or fraught with danger as Tom's
testimony could be.
Three guns had been present: a .32 revolver, a brand-new Marlin deer
rifle-really an "elephant gun," high-powered as they come-and a
20-gauge shotgun.
Could anyone prove who had fired which guns?
Garland was able to establish on crossexamination that Tom's hands had
been clean of unpowder residue when he was tested, and that no
fingerprints had been found on any of the weapons.
Kelly Rite, a criminalist and microanalyst from the Georgia State Crime
Lab, was called to the stand as an expert witness for the
prosecution.
He testified that the shotgun cartridges, one blue and one yellow,
found in the "hole" itself and on the basement floor just beneath it
had come from the Excel shotgun, the "stolen" gun.
They had once
contained approximately twenty pellets-No.
3 buckshot, the same gauge
as those found in Walter and Carolyn Allanson.
The buckshot itself was
consistent with the type used in the empty cartridges, although lead
pellets, unlike bullets, bear no definitive markings that can identify
the weapon from which they have been fired.
Rite's laboratory tests indicated that the shotgun had been about ten
feet from Carolyn when it was fired.
Whoever shot Walter Allanson had
been over forty feet away, and the angle of the deadly buckshot had
been from left to right.
Some of the pellets had "skipped" as they hit
a flashlight Walter had carried and the overhead light fixture.
The
closer a shotgun is to a target, the smaller the circle of damage it
will leave in the target -or in the victim.
Carolyn Allanson's wounds had been centered in her left chest area;
Walter's wounds were widely scattered from his face to his hand, wrist,
and abdomen.
Rite concluded that only two shots had been fired from the Excel