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
shotgun in the Allanson basement, one hitting Carolyn and one striking
Walter.
He had test-fired the gun and found that a cartridge would
eject directly back about six to eight inches and fall at the feet of
the shooter.
Reconstructing from the physical evidence, he could
speculate with accuracy what had happened.
Someone had fired the
shotgun from the hole or just in front of the hole.
Someone had fired
a pistol into the hole, not once but six or seven times.
Someone had
fired the Marlin oncefrom an area near the stairs.
Rite had determined
that the empty casing found near Walter and Carolyn was from the Marlin
.45/70the "elephant gun"-but the slug itself had never been found.
It appeared that there had been at least two shooters in the basement
that night.
There could have been three.
But if Tom was that third
shooter, would he be capable of murdering his own parents?
To establish a pattern of vindictive behavior, Prosecutor Weller
continued to focus on the harassment of Walter Allanson principally the
Lake Lanier ambush-before the fatal night, and Ed Garland fought like a
tiger to keep it out.
Connecting Tom to all those bullet holes in his
parents'station wagon would only bury him deeper.
Weller, of course,
insisted that the ambush shooting was only part of a "total continuous
transaction" from June 29 to July 3. And countless hours would be spent
arguing over when the Morgan Kentwood seal had been removed from Tom
Allanson's pickup truck.
In fact, it had not been there since May, but
witnesses from Jones's store still claimed to have seen Tom driving a
truck with that seal on the morning of the ambush.
Garland wanted that
false identification excluded from the jury's consideration, but Judge
Wofford ruled against him.
And he lost again when he attempted to keep word of Walter and
Carolyn's rancorous wills from the ury's ears.
The jury heard of them
in Mary McBride's testimony as Walter Allanson's secretary.
"They have accomplished their motive," Garland complained to Judge
Wofford.
"They wanted to hit the jury over the head with a
sledgehammer and then tell them, 'Now you ignore the headache."
That's what we have here.
We have thrown horse manure in the jury box
and want to ask them not to smell it.
We have flashed wills here and said, 'Oh, there were wills.
There must be motive.
He must have killed for financial gain."
Perhaps the biggest defense loss of all was Ed Garland's attempt to
have a mistrial declared over Carolyn Allanson's altered recollections
of what she had heard the night of the murders.
Her firm voice
testifying that she remembered hearing screams of "Tommy!
Tommy!
Tommy!"
before the fatal shots might well be a death knell for his
client.
The state rested, and Ed Garland rose to present the case for the
defense.
It would be an arduous uphill climb and he knew it, but he
gave no sign of that as he questioned his first witness.
Garland and his investigators had located a number of people who knew
Tom Allanson well, and who had seen him on Saturday, June 29.
The
shots had hit his parents' car a little after I 1:00 A.m. as it headed
up Truman Mountain Road.
If Garland could show that Tom was someplace
else at that time, it would neutralize the continual testimony about
the man in the blue pickup with a canopy attached and with the Kentwood
seal on the door.
In the best of all possible worlds, he might even
produce someone who had seen Tom on the night of July 3, far, far away
from his parents'home.
Garland began with the Saturday before.
James Strickland, a Kayo Oil gas station attendant, saw Tom and Pat
Allanson in his station in Barnesville-some ninety miles south of Lake
Lanier-on the twenty-ninth between 10: 15 and 10:30
A.m. They were driving a blue truck with a green horseshoeing trailer
on the back.
Strickland remembered no emblem on the truck's door.
Bobby Jackson, a man who had been "rodeoing" with Tom for a dozen
years, saw him on June 29.
Jackson was on his way to a "jackpot steer
roping" in Madison, and heading east on 1-20, just east of Atlanta,
when he recognized Tom's shoeing rig pass him.
He testified it was between noon and 12:30, and Tom had exited at the
Lithonia off ramp.
Edgar Milton Smith, president of Voice Communications, Inc of Atlanta,
had horses pastured in Lithonia, and Tom had arrived shortly after
12:30 the afternoon of June 29 to shoe them.
He had stayed until
approximately 6:00 that evening.
Robert Wait, Tom and Pat's next-door neighbor in Zebulon, had seen them
come home at eleven o'clock on the night of June 29, driving the blue
pickup with the green horseshoeing rig on the back.
Donald Cooper, a potential horse buyer, had been to Kentwood on June 29
and found Tom and Pat gone.
He had seen the canopy of the blue truck
on blocks in the yard.
Liz Price, Pat and Tom's neighbor and friend, verified that the
Kentwood Morgan emblem had not been on their blue pickup since Pat's
accident just after their wedding.
Garland was doing the best he could with what he had, and yet he hadn't
even touched on Tom's whereabouts on the murder night.
Pat had brought Garland the next witness, and the defense attorney
approached him warily.
The witness's name was Bill Jones, and he was employed at a liquor
store located on Cleveland Avenue at the 1-75 freeway.
He recalled
that, yes indeed, he had met up with Tom Allanson at twelve minutes to
eight on the evening of July 3 when Tom came in to ask for change to
make a phone call.
"Some people want change for the telephone-which is outside on the
parking lot against the post," Jones testified, "but ever since I have
been there, no one has asked me for change to make a long-distance
call.
. . . He even added Zebulon, Georgia.
. . .
The only reason why I would have remembered thathis wife came in the
next night after and asked me was there a man in there that evening,
and I told her what had happened.
. . . See, when he said 'telephone,'
the light bulb went on in my mind because my wife goes to sleep on the
sofa at night roughly at eight o'clock.
I have to call her by eight.
. . .
When he said 'telephone,' I looked at my watch."
The voluble Mr. Jones estimated that his store was located about two
miles from Norman Berry Drive in East Point.
The state demolished Mr.
Jones as Weller took'over crossexamination.
Jones admitted that, while he had told Sergeant Callahan that Tom had
been in the store at 4:30
P.m he had later told a private investigator that he didn't know if Tom
had been in at seven or eight-or nine, for that matter.
Jones
recalled, after being prodded, that Pat Allanson had been in the liquor
store to see him at least three times, and after that he had been
visited by defense investigators on several occasions.
He denied
vigorously that he had seen a reward for information posted in the
Atlanta Yournal.
He was not a credible witness-undoubtedly one of "Pat's witnesses" that
Ed Garland had told Judge Wofford he did not want to put on the
stand.
But he was the only witness who placed Tom away from the slaying
scene.
And he was far from impressive.
Mrs. Clifford B. Radcliffe was.
Dressed impeccably, her beautiful
gray hair perfectly coiffed, she made her way gracefully to the
stand.
Ed Garland approached her, smiling.
"And what is your husband's
occupation?"
"My husband is with the federal government with-in a security support
branch.
He's a retired lieutenant colonel."
"He's here today, is he not?"
"Yes, he is."
She smiled serenely.
'Right there?"
"Yes."
"The man who just took his glasses off?"
"The most distinguished man in the courtroom," Margureitte replied
proudly.
Garland had let her go a bit too far.
He wanted the jury to see what
fine people the Radcliffes were, but he didn't want to leave them with
the impression that they were holier-than-thou.
He quickly changed the
subject.
"Now, Mrs. Radcliffe, is your daughter present in the
courtroom?"
"Yes, she is."
"She's the defendant's wife?"
"That is correct.
That is our daughter."
Garland hurried on before the witness could point out that Pat was the
"most beautiful woman in the courtroom."
Margureitte disputed the ridiculous idea that the Allansons' truck had
ever had an emblem like the one the Lake Lanier witnesses described.
Next, she verified that Pat and Tom had come for dinner on June 29, and
had been summoned from there to Nona and Paw's.
Garland leapt ahead to the evening of July 3. Margureitte testified
that Pat had called them, worried sick, around 7:30.
"I told her that
me and her father would meet her, to stay exactly where she was.
. .
.
I told her to stay at the King Professional Building at the parking
lot, to park away from the building.
. . .
We'd be there and we were there."
Garland moved into Margureitte's two strange and frighteninly
encounters with the late Walter Allanson.
Bill Weller objected.