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
"Did you have occasion, Mr. Allanson," Garland asked, "to have a
telephone call from Carolyn Allanson?"
"Yeah .
. .
"When did Carolyn Allanson call you?"
"About six weeks ago."
"In that conversation, what did she say to you?"
"She wanted to come out to the house but I had company coming.
I asked
her to wait till Sunday to come.
Then in talking to her, she's telling
me she loved Tom, and I asked her what all went on out at the house at
the killings.
She said, 'Mother Allanson got killed."
That's what she
called her mother-in-law, see, and then [she said], 'But we didn't mean
for Walter to get killed-' " What could she have meant: that there had
been a plot to kill her mother-in-law, and her father-in-law was killed
by mistake?
It was doubtful that young Carolyn had been romantically
involved with her husband's father, as Margureitte had suggested.
Was
this simply the testimony of a very old man who would do anything to
save his grandson?
Quite possibly.
Paw had no further observations or
remembrances to offer on Carolyn, and the jury seemed oblivious to any
spicy connections his testimony might have evoked.
Weller seemed to think that the old man was fabricating.
"Mr.
Allanson," he began on cross-examination.
"You want to do everything
you can to help your grandson, don't you?"
"I want to be fair with the world."
"Yes, sir.
You want to help him and do everything you can to help
him?"
"If it takes anything to help him, the truth is what I'm telling.
"And really," the prosecutor asked, "it's pretty well your philosophy
that the dead are gone and the living are still here, isn't it?"
"Yeah.
Nothing further."
On redirect, Garland elicited Paw's opinion of Tom as far as violence
went.
"I've known him and he's a fair, square boy," he replied.
"Wait a minute.
I'm asking you about his reputation for
peacefulness.
"Good."
Paw did not waste words.
While questioning Paw, Bill Weller had, for the third time in the
trial, managed to get the information on the record that Tom Allanson
was a quick-draw expert.
He had, the prosecution maintained, once shot
himself in the leg while practicing in college.
Paw Allanson agreed
that Tom was a "pretty good quickdraw" shooter.
Nona Allanson, who could barely speak due to a stroke, entered the
courtroom in a wheelchair.
She testified that she had heard her son
Walter threaten to kill her grandson.
"Did you tell your grandson that?"
"Yes, I told him."
Weller had no questions.
Lawyers rarely make points with the jury by
cross-examining such a vulnerable witness.
The long week of testimony was over.
Next would come the summations.
The members of the jury would hear neither Tom nor Pat Allanson
speak.
They had watched their interplay and wondered about them, seeing the
pretty woman whisper passionately to her husband and his attorneys,
seeing the man on trial gaze at her with such longing in his eyes.
The
jury had not seen Tom and Pat kiss and hold each other as they did
during court recesses, but they had picked up on the sexual tension
between them.
They had been curious, and undoubtedly wished they could
have heard Tom and Pat testify.
There seemed to be so much about this
case that remained unexplained.
But both sides had been represented by
extremely able attorneys, and now it was time for final arguments.
Bill Weller contended that Tom Allanson had killed his parents
deliberately.
"Everything points to him.
He has no reasonable
hypothesis.
The only reasonable hypothesis, the only reasonable circumstances-this
man murdered his mother and his daddy in cold blood.
He's the only one
had a motive.
No phantom involved in this."
Weller came as close to naming Pat Allanson as an accomplice as he
dared under the law.
She had not been formally charged with any crime
because the D.A."s office wasn't sure just where she fit in-if at
all.
Weller asked the questions the D.A."s staff had asked one another.
"What's she doing way up from Zebulon fifty or sixty miles away driving
around the Allansons' home-if not to let him off to do his little
deed?
Is she the fly in the ointment?
Is she the rejected woman that the
parents would not accept because they had another daughter-in-law and
two children?
And the constant needling-constant needling-crying .
.
. about somebody exposing himself and here she is a grown woman.
. .
.
Every time you hear some witness, 'Yes, she was with him."
This wife's
everywhere.
She's here waiting for him.
She's there.
She's driving
around the house.
He's walking to Zebulon.
She's next door looking
for him at his grandmother's house thirty minutes before."
Weller reminded the jury that Tom had been seen on Norman Berry
Drive.
"Three eyewitnesses.
. . . That policeman looked him flat in the face
three or four times.
Mr. and Mrs. Duckett saw the police car running
down the road with him.
They described him, jeans, boots, Tarzan hair,
tannish shirt-or brownish green , all the same color scheme."
Weller
ended his summation with a call to the jury to simply add up the
established facts.
It was all there.
Ed Garland contended in his final arguments that the case against Tom
Allanson had not been proven to a moral certainty, and that was what
was needed to convict.
"That is what this case is about.
There is no
moral certainty in it.
There's no firm piece of evidence you can plant
your foot on and say, in fact, in that house that the defendant fired
that weapon and killed those two people.
It does not exist-but there's
this assumption, speculation.
There's positive proof to the contrary
that someone else did the shooting on the twenty-ninth of June.
. .
.
"There's not one piece of evidence that puts this defendant in that
basement-not one-and if you consider a guilty verdict, you have to
speculateyou have to assume.
. . . In this case you're dealing with
circumstantial evidence.
Lots of bits and pieces of circumstances.
The law sets an even higher standard.
It says this, that the
circumstances must exclude every other reasonable theory-must exclude
every other one!"
And it was true.
There was no physical evidence that placed Tom in
that charnel house of a basement.
It's just not there," Garland continued.
"Was there a boot print, a
bloody boot print walking from this basement through that blood where
the man was lying in the trail of blood?
Somebody had to go right
through it.
Was there .
. . one bit of blood on an item of clothing
this defendant had?"
They went there to his home and arrested him.
There was not and there's a reasonable doubt.
. . .
"If you can meet the challenge of the law, then you will stand up and
write a verdict of not guilty in this case because there are hundreds
of reasonable doubts."
Ed Garland's voice dropped as he spoke the final sentences of his
argument.
He would not be allowed to speak again.
Bill Weller would;
the onus of proving a case is always on the state and the prosecutor is
allowed a rebuttal statement after the defense finishes.
"I ask you to
write a verdict of not guilty," Garland pleaded."
In this case-not
proven-to follow your duty as jurors..... and return a verdict that
says this case has not been proven....... I now give the burden of Tom
Allanson's life to you.
Please look after it."
Step by step, in rebuttal, Weller went over the case the state had
built, asserting that the defendant had pried open the door into his
parents' basement and then waited coldly for them to come home so he
could murder them.
It was a good argument, and plausible, and Weller
was persuasive.
"I want to quote one thing from the Scriptures, from
the Book of Proverbs, and I'll leave it with you," Weller concluded."
'He that curseth his father and mother, his lamp shall be put out in
the midst of darkness.
The jury could find Tom guilty of murder, not guilty of murder but
guilty of voluntary manslaughter, or they could find him not guilty,
period.
In a two-count indictment such as this, they had to return a
separate verdict on each count.
The jury retired to deliberate at 6:00 P.m. on Friday, October 18.
At
8:27
P.m. they buzzed the courtroom and asked to come before the court.
Judge Wofford understood that they had a question.
But it was not a
question.
Joseph Thackston, the payroll administrator, had been elected foreman
by his fellow j u rors, and he said, "We have reached a decision, Your
Honor."
"You have?"
"Yes, sir."
Judge Wofford immediately sent the jurors back into the jury room and