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
Jean could not understand Pat's vitriolic attack on her father; he had
always been so good to her.
Why was she savaging him I with her words
while he might be dying?
Pat complained about having to get up with him the night re he had
taken sick.
"It was two-thirty in the mornin and ,@: before 9
@iw wanted some ginger ale.
I took it to him, and damn him, he drink
it!
He decided he wanted half-and-half and I took him that."
Pat suddenly changed the direction of her conversation.
"I tollked with him about death-you know, about funeral arrangements
and all.
He said he wanted to be put away in a casket with a pink
satin sheet to lie on.
I've got his clothes all picked out.
Your boy
will be one of the pallbearers."
None of that sounded a bit like Paw, jean thought.
Pink satin
'indeed.
As Jean and Sherry walked down the front steps, Pat suddenly appeared
on the porch.
She leaned across the railing and said -flatly, "I hope
he dies."
"What did you say?"
jean breathed softly.
"I said I hope he dies."
Jean walked to her car, stunned.
On Tuesday, Paw Allanson's blood pressure dropped so low it barely
registered, but medication slowly boosted it back up.
He was a very
old man, but he was made of tough Georgia stock.
He remained in a deep
coma for a week, caught somewhere between living and dying.
jean was sitting by his bedside as he slowly regained consciousness on
Saturday.
"Do you recognize me?"
she asked, truly believing that he
would not.
"Sure," he grumbled.
"Who am I?"
"Jean," he said, as if she had taken leave of her senses.
Of course he
recognized her.
"How do you feel, Daddy?"
He looked at her.
"I think I'll be all right when I get over this
stroke.
"Is that what you think you had, Daddy?"
"Yes-I feel like I'm taking the flu too.
My legs ache me so bad.
Pat maintained her position that Paw Allanson was a dangerous man,
octogenarian or not.
She insisted that he had tried to kill his wife,
and that she had no idea what he might do next.
She had retained a new
attorney, Dunham McAllister, to work on Tom's latest appeal.
She had
also asked Paw's attorneys, Fred Reeves and Bill Hamner, to fight any
attempt Jean Boggs might make to become her parents'guardian.
Pat told McAllister that she feared for her life; she had in her
possession a document that made her very vulnerable.
McAllister
contacted the East Point police and informed the investigators that Pat
had overheard Paw give his attorneys a confession to the murders of his
son and daughter-in-law.
At the time, Pat had explained, Paw had
believed that he would not survive his heart attack.
McAllister was concerned about Pat.
If Paw remembered how much Pat
knew, and if he survived his current illness, her life was most
certainly in danger.
McAllister was very worried about Nona Allanson's
safety too, citing the alleged smothering attempt only a day or so
before Paw overdosed.
Pat had confided to the lawyer-just as she had
to Tedford-that Paw had treated her coldly ever since he had come home
from the hospital in February.
She could deal with that-he was an old
man and cantankerous-but it was far more than that.
When Paw tried to
run Pat off the road, she had been hampered by her weak leg and hip.
It was all she could do to keep from crashing into a tree or slipping
over a gully.
She told McAllister that she had received harassing phone calls asking
her where she had been, what she was doing, whom she had talked to.
She hinted that the old man had watched her constantly to see if she
would tell anybody about his confession.
If he thought she might, he
would kill her without warning.
McAllister's next meeting was with Bill Weller, the assistant D.A. who
had successfully prosecuted Tom Allanson.
If Paw's confession was
true, then Tom had been wrongly convicted.
Dunham McAllister handed
over what Pat had told him were her roughly typed recollections of "the
confession."
The actual confession was alleged to be in the possession
of Paw Allanson's attorneys.
Although such scenarios are common to TV courtrooms, they rarely happen
in real life: a convicted killer proved to be innocent after all,
exonerated when someone else confesses to the crime .
But it could
happen.
Maybe Tom Allanson was doing hard time for crimes he had not
committed.
But Paw Allanson a killer?
If the old man was guilty, he would certainly be one of the most
unlikely murderers ever to surface in Georgia.
On June 21, Investigator R. A. Harris of the Fulton County District
Attorney's Office went to the First Palmetto Bank in East Point.
According to Pat, officers of this bank had witnessed an notarize aw s
signature on a typed reduction of her own notes on the old man's
admission of murder.
An assistant vice-president of the bank, A. V. "Gus" Yosue, remembered
a rather odd incident.
A woman had come into his bank around six in
the evening on a Friday a few months back, asking if she could get some
papers notarized.
She had explained that all the other banks were
closed and that "Daddy"-her grandfatherdidn't want everyone knowing his
business anyway.
Yosue had never seen her before-or since, for that
matter.
"Daddy" was out in the car when the woman first came in, and
Yosue had explained that the old gentleman would have to come inside to
have his documents notarized.
Joyce Tichenor, the head teller of the First Palmetto Bank, told
Investigator Harris that Mr. Yosue had helped an elderly man to her
window.
He and his granddaughter had a stack of papers, and Tichenor's
cursory glance had told her they seemed to be some type of real estate
documents-warranty deeds and the likemost of them apparently standard
forms.
The woman, in her thirties and very attractive, had seemed most
solicitous of the old man.
She had pointed her finger at the bottom of
several pages, saying, "Sign this paper, Daddy," or "Daddy, sign here
on this line."
Tichenor had notarized the signatures.
She had no idea what the
documents really were; it was not, she explained, her busis to read
documents brought to her.
Neither she nor Yosue nes had read the
papers.
The elderly man had simply followed the directions of his
granddaughter, signing without question.
Pat had told Bob Tedford that Paw's attorneys held a white envelope
that contained vital information, but she had been tearfully hesitant
to say more.
Tedford wanted to see what was in that envelope.
The
East Point detective called Hamner and Reeves and asked if they had
such a document.
They did, and promised to meet Tedford with the
envelope in Paw A anson hospital room.
Bill Hamner had wrestled with the question of legal ethics and the
plain white envelope he had held, he thought, for old Mr.
Allanson.
Should he have come forward earlier?
Should he have waited longer?
Hamner explained that it was Pat Allanson who had brought the envelope
to his firm.
The envelope bore only a few words, scribbled in a shaky
hand: Mr. Walter Allanson plese don't open untill I pass out "I
thought it was sort of strange," Homner said, "but the envelope was
sealed.
I just stuck it in the file.
. . . I probably had the
confession six .
. . maybe eight weeks total.
. .
. Pat came up to the office one day.
. . . She said she had been
riding with 'Daddy' and he had tried to run the car into a tree.
He was driving and she was in the passenger seat, and he had tried to
hit the tree on the passenger side.
. . . [S]he grabbed the steering
wheel to keep him from hitting the tree, and she thought .
. . he was
trying to kill her, maybe.
She said this would tie in with the
envelope."
Hamner was a civil, not a criminal, attorney and he had urged her to
give that information to Dunham McAllister, who would better know what
to do about it.
Bill Hamner and Fred Reeves had reason to expect some
startling revelation in the envelope, but they had adhered to the
instructions on the front and hadn't opened it until old Walter
Allanson had truly "passed out" and slipped into his mysterious coma.
On June 24, Investigator Harris, Sergeant Bob Tedford, and George
Boggs, Jean's husband, went to Paw Allanson's hospital room to ask him
about his "confession."
Apparently Paw hadn't seen any version of his
so-called confession.
He was only ten days past a critical coma, but
he would have to read the confession before he could confirm or refute
it.
Paw was rapidly returning to his old self and was absolutely lucid now,
with a keen memory.
With his permission, Hamner gave Sergeant Tedford
the opened white envelope.
He showed it to Paw and asked him if he
remembered writing on it.
He nodded.
"Yeah.
I was cooking supper one night, and Pat came into the kitchen and told
me that my lawyers wanted me to write that on the envelope."
"Was there anything in it?"
Nope.
There was something in it now.
Five legal-sized sheets of paper on