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
which a very bad typist and speller had typed what appeared to be a
confession.
Bob Tedford read the contents without speaking, and then
handed the pages to the old man in the bed.
"Did you write this?"
Paw scanned it, beginning to shake his head almost immediately.
Ap?il 19, 1976
My name is Walter Allanson, and I'm telling this to my granddaughter,
Tommy's wife, Pat Allanson, and she's doing it on the type-writer cause
I don't write so good anymore since I had the heart attack.
This is so
if I have a heart attack before Mama dies Tommy zwn't have to stay in
jail for what he didn't do.
If Mama dies first then I'll tell what I
did.
I told all this to pat, Tommy's wife, at the hospital.... I
thought I was going to die, and I knew nobbody would beleive Tommy if
he told em the truth.
Then I got better and Pat didn't say nothing, so
I didn't say nothing ... [but] I told her that ifyean didn't quit
Bothering Mama Id shoot her like I did Walter... Pat started to cry and
said I shoudn't talk like that.... I said it was the truth, but she
didn't beleive me....
The writer of the confession tended to ramble a good deal, hinting that
"Tommy" had known the truth all along but had agreed to protect his
grandfather and to tell no one.
He a so too several swipes at lawyers
in general, and Ed Garland in particular.
I neverfigured they'd be able to keep Tommy locked up.
But, of course, they had.
Little Carolyn and Walter Allanson were castigated on page after
page.
I told him he'd never give Tommy a chance, even when he was
4ittle....
Anyway, Walterjust laughed and said he'd clean up all this mess before
the week-end and then he'd take care of me and Mama.... She told me
Walter had said he'd kill her if he found she was helping Tommy, and he
was going to put us both in old folks home after he took care o
Tommy.... If Idivae of heard Walter when he threatened Mama, then he
wouldn't have even lived until the next tuesday.
Id a shot him tight
there....
The confession was, in its own way, a masterpiece, misspellings and
all.
Every question a sharp detective might have asked was covered.
The writer explained his motive for murder, how he was able to be away
from home without raising suspicions on the day Walter and Big Carolyn
Allanson had died, how frightened Pat and Nona had been, and then he
moved ahead to the actual incident.
I took care ofmama first, and then drove over to where Walter lived
...
went up the driveway.
I cut the phone wire with my pocket knife.
Then
Ijimmied the basement door open, and went upstairs to get waiters shot
gun and some shells.
I didn't know he'd bought that rifle or Id got it
too.
Yakes's Pistol wasn't there, so Ifigured Walter had it.
I went
back down into the basement, and cut the power off and went to
waitingfor Walter.
The writer had heard cars come home, people talking, Walter coming down
the basement stairs, and he realized, too late, that Tommy was there in
the basement too.
I didn't figure on Tommy being there.
He was telling his Daddy that he
just wanted to be left alone ... he said he warm't mad at nobody....
Tommy told his Daddy that Pat was at the Doctor...
The document painted Walter Allanson as a wicked man indeed; Tommy had
tried to leave-he had said what he'd come to say-but Walter wouldn't
let him go.
He told Tommy to wait in the basement while he calmed down
the women upstairs.
I was hoping Tommy would leave right then out the kitchen way, but he
was doing what he always done all his life.
He was waiting for Walter
to come and tell him it was O.K He always did what his daddy said, and
Walter knew he would.... Id already figured out that Walter was not
going to let Tommy leave there alive.
He was going to kill Tommy like
he was going to kill Mama and me.
. .
According to the long, rambling confession, Paw had somehow managed to
hoist himself up into the "hole" in his son's basement and hide there
before his grandson crawled up beside him.
I thought he was going to yell out when he found me in there.
I think
he was too scared.... Tommy said, "Let's get out of here, Paw-Daddy's
going to shoot us both.
. . .
But then they had both heard Walter talk to the policeman and refuse to
let the officer search the house, and it had all gone downhill from
there.
The writer said Walter had come back into the dark basement
again, right up to the hole, and shouted that he was going to kill Tom,
so he might as well come on out.
Then Walter hollered up for Carolyn to bring down the rifle, "I've got
him cornered-he ain't gonna get of here ever.
told you he was a coward.... He walked away from the hole, and that's
when I come up to the opening.
Big Carolyn come down the steps
hollering, "I'm going to kill him," and cut loose with the rifle, right
at where me and Tommy was.
I shot back and hit her and she fell.
I
stepped back to reload, and thats when Walter emptied the pistol in the
hole all around Tiommy.... Then I shot agian and hit Walter, but he
didn't fall right off like Carolyn did.
Tommy sta?fed saying, "oh my
God, oh My God, and I told him to get the hell out and get away, and he
kept falling over stuff and ran out the back door... (I didn't want to
kill big Carolyn or little Carolyn, I didn't want to kill nobody) but
Walter was mean and greedy and hateful ... so I had to get him first,
before he got Mama and me and milled us or put us away....
The writer of the confession seemed to know things that only someone
who had actually been in that basement could have known.
And every so often, he reminded whoever might read it that Tom was
innocent, that Pat was innocent and had tried only to protect Tom, Paw,
and Nona, and that it had been a matter of kill or be killed.
He even tossed in that Tommy had called him from the liquor store after
the shootings to say he was hitchhiking home to Zebulon.
Paw-at least the Paw in the confession-couldn't come forward to get
Tommy off the hook because he couldn't go to prison and leave his
wife.
He repeated this over and over.
MAMA DON'T YNOW WHAT I DID.
She might have a stroke if she did.
This is how it happened and how I did it....
All of his grandson's troubles and the knowledge that Tom was going to
prison for a crime he had not committed had worn the writer down.
That worried me and got my brain tired out, and probably made me have
the heart attack.
I didn't want Tommy to stay in prison, but I aint
going to prison for milling Walter, when I had to do it to keep him
from killing us or putting us away.
If I tell about it now, theyll
still lock me up, but I'm too old, and thatd kill Mama, so I can't do
it right now.
But I"M telling this now so that when I die at least
they'll beleive Tommy when he tells the truth.
After I"M dead Mama
will understand why i did what I did.
IM gonna sign this in front of a witness to put in a envelope to give
to my lawyers.
They can't open it til after I die.... That's all I got
to say.
Underneath that voluminous confession, someone had printed crookedly:
"Sworn to and subscribed before me this 16 day of April 1976.
Joyce
Tichenor, Notary Public."
There was no seal imprint, but there was
Tichenor's official stamp, and she had verified to investigators that
the stamp was indeed hers.
The printing was not.
Paw Allanson's signature was at the bottom.
It was his signature-he
was sure of it.
And the initials at the bottom of each page were his
too.
But he had absolutely no memory of writing or agreeing to any of
the contents.
He seemed dumbfoundedas well he might.
Harris
pressed.
Was there any truth in this confession?
In any part of it?
"No!"
Paw
snorted.
If Paw Allanson hadn't written the confession, who had?
The details
certainly sounded as if the author had been an eyewitness to the deadly
events of July 3, 1974.
But Paw?
He was a sturdy old man, but would
he have been capable of all the actions the confession described?
Tedford figured that was highly unlikely.
Paw was as puzzled as the
detectives were.
Of course, if he had died of an overdose, he would
not have been able to refute the confession.
If the D.A."s office believed that Paw was the real killer of his son
and daughter-in-law, then Tom would get a new trial and would quite
probably be freed.
And who, Tedford asked himself, had the most to
gain if such a thing came to pass?
Tom Allanson certainly.
Tom had
sent frequent letters to his grandparentsright up until May-urging them
to trust Pat.
But as far as any hands-on action, Tom couldn't have
poisoned Paw if he had wanted to; he was locked up tight in Jackson
Prison, and had been for months.
"Do you remember ever signing any papers for Pat?"
Tedford asked Paw
quietly.
"Anything at all?"
Paw scratched his head.
He explained that he and his wife had trusted
Pat; she had been good to them after Tommy went to prison.
"Did you ever go to a bank on Washington Road with Pat?"
Harris asked.
Paw strained to remember.
"Yeah, seems like I did.
Pat wanted me to
sign some papers-in front of a notary lady."
He could not remember