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
like always.
Nona Allanson seemed only slightly comforted; she
remained apprehensive and tearful.
Almost as a throwaway question, Tedford asked, "You haven't been
signing any papers, have you, while your husband is in the hospital?"
Tedford couldn't be sure, but he thought her mumbled answer was,
"Yes."
"Oh, my Lord," he breathed.
jean looked up at Tedford with dread.
She
didn't even have to ask her questions.
She could see it in his eyes.
At 3:00 that afternoon, the lab called Gus Thornhill.
"The screening
test on Walter Allanson's urine 's complete," Dr. McGurdy said.
"We
found arsenic .
It would take somewhat longer, the toxicologist said, to test the hair
and nail samples.
But the first results were more than enough for
Thornhill and Tedford.
They grabbed their case file and headed for the
D.A."s office.
Andy Weathers would be taking over this case.
The
assistant D.A. was sharp, combativebut with a humorous edge-and
terribly dangerous to guilty defendants.
Until now, the case file had been only a few pages thick and the
complaint still read, "Overdose."
It was growing thicker.
The charge
would now be "Criminal Attempt to Commit Murder.
And the prime suspect was Patricia Radcliffe Taylor Allanson.
The Georgia Crime Lab had placed Paw Allanson's urine sample in a
container with hydrochloric acid, water, and a piece of copper.
If
certain metals were present -including arsenic-a black deposit would
appear on the copper.
It had.
The urine was further analyzed by a wet
oxidation procedure to reduce the specimen to a small amount of clear
liquid, free of all extraneous materials except metals.
This material
was then subjected to reduction by zinc and acid, producing arsene gas
in a small tube.
A reddish color would indicate the presence of arsenic.
The amount of
arsenic present could then be determined by an electrospectrometer with
a laser probe.
The average person's urine would show no arsenic present.
Certain occupations caused a low percentage of the poison.
Paw
Allanson had, in years past, used arsenic on his farm.
Would that have
accounted for the poison in his urine?
No, the lab technicians said.
Even if he had used arsenic on the farm recently-which he had not-that
would not account for the fact that Paw had ten times the amount of
poison in his system that a working farmer would have!
Arsenic had been carried in his bloodstream and deposited at the base
of his fingernails and at the roots of his hair, an irrevocable process
that left a "calendar" of ingestion.
Paw Allanson's hair had 1.0
milligrams of arsenic per 100 millimeters; his nails had 5.5 milligrams
of arsenic per 100 millimeters.
The East Point detectives swung into action.
They called Dr. Jones
with the results of the crime lab tests.
He agreed that Nona Hanson
should be removed from her granddaughter-in-law's care at once and
hospitalized.
For a long time, Jean Boggs's accusations against Pat
had seemed suspect; it was clear to them she didn't like her nephew's
wife, the woman who had taken her place in her parents' lives.
The
East Point officers and Dr. Jones had initially found Pat Allanson a
rather nice woman who seemed genuinely concerned about her
grandparents-in-law.
just a week before, Nona had suffered from
pneumonia and severe bronchitis, and Pat had obediently followed Dr.
Jones's every direction.
Nona's 103-degree fever had dropped, and she
was doing much better.
Given the fact that Pat was on crutches or a
cane due to her own poor health, Jones had found her especially
dutiful.
Now Jones doubted his own judgment of human nature.
It was beginrfing
to look as if Pat Allanson was not the tender care giver she purported
to be, and that jean Boggs had been right all along.
Bob Tedford sent
word to Jean that he was on his way to see Fulton County District
Attorney Lewis Slaton himself to get a court order to remove Nona
Allanson from her home.
Every hour's delay might count, and someone
should be with the old lady.
"Bob says not to let your mother eat or
drink anything," the police dispatcher advised.
headed immediately for her parents' Jean and her son home.
She was met
at the door by a livid Pat Allanson.
She had had a phone call from Dr.
Jones.
"He said they need her there for some testing, and I think
that's a terrible thing," Pat ranted.
She could see no earthly reason for Nona to go to a hospital.
"Well," Jean stalled.
"If he thinks that's the thing to do, then we'd
better do it."
Pat wouldn't even consider letting Nona go to the hospital.
She had already called an attorney, who advised her that Dr. Jones had
no power to hospitalize Mrs. Allanson.
Pat was suspicious, but her
suspicions were pointed in the wrong direction -at Jean Boggs.
She had
no idea that a police investigation had rolled into high gear.
She
assumed that jean was trying to have Nona declared incompetent so she
could take over her guardianship-and control Paw and Nona's assets.
Pat fussed over Nona's hair, petting her and reassuring her.
"You don't have to go anyplace you don't want to, Ma.
They can't make
you and I won't let them."
jean was frightened.
She wondered what was
taking the ambulance and the police so long.
She was even
more,concerned when Colonel Clifford Radcliffe showed up.
He was such
an imposing man, and Jean was suitably intimidated.
None of them wanted her there-not Pat, nor the colonel, or even the
nurse.
The only chance jean had was to somehow get through to her
mother-make Nona understand that she was there to save her life.
But
how?
Her mother seemed to think that Pat walked on water.
When Pat left the room, Jean whispered to her mother, "Mother, listen
to me very carefully.
Don't tell anyone what I'm saying to you.
Don't
say anything to Pat-but Daddy has been poisoned.
It was, perhaps, an unwise move.
Her mother was very feeble, and they
had not been close for months now.
Nona Allanson just looked at Jean
blankly and mumbled, "What?"
"We just found out about it," Jean whispered.
"We have to get you to
the hospital to see if you're all right.
You have to have some
tests."
Nona clamped her jaw down and announced she wasn't going anywhere."
I
won't go."
Jean begged her mother to trust her, and to speak quietly.
The wait
was becoming a nightmare.
Despite Jean's objections, the nurse brought
Nona a 7Up.
Jean couldn't very well snatch it out of her mother's
hand.
The phone rang.
Jean grabbed it.
She lied to her mother and said it
was her husband-but it was really Bob Tedford.
"How are you
feeling?"
Tedford asked.
"Uncomfortable."
"Hang on.
I'm on my way."
Tedford had laid out the case for D.A. Lewis Slaton, and Slaton had
grasped the need for rapid action.
"You've got whatever permission you
need.
Don't worry about papers.
Get that lady in the hospital now!"
Tedford had called an ambulance and it was speeding toward Washington
Road.
It was 4:00 in the afternoon on Monday, June 28, 1976.
And then
4:30.
The minutes crept by agonizingly.
Then, suddenly, there was a loud
pounding on the front door.
Jean jumped.
She wondered who else Pat
might have called for backup.
She heard footsteps approaching and was
tremendously relieved to see Bob Tedford and another detective walk
into the living room.
Tedford made no attempt to soften his announcement to Pat Allanson.
"Arsenic has been found in Mr. Allanson's system and we need to take
Mrs.
Allanson to the hospital for tests."
Pat looked at him without changing expression, not so much as the
flickering of an eye.
She turned on her heel and headed for Nona's
bedroom.
Tedford was right behind her.
The little house on Washington Road erupted into chaos.
Nona Allanson
was already nearly hysterical, unable to grasp what was going on.
When
Tedford informed Pat that an ambulance was on the way for Mrs.
Allanson, she was incensed.
Her voice rose, whipping the old lady into
a froth of panic.
She bombarded her husband's grandmother with dire
warnings, every word making the paralyzed woman more terrified.
Nona's mouth worked ineffectively as she tried to form questions, and
Pat just kept on shouting at her.
"They're going to take you to the
hospital for some silly tests!
They'll be giving you shots all the
time.
You can't let them.
Your insurance won't pay for it," Pat
ranted.
"You'll be deep in debt, Ma.
I won't be able to come see
you.
They won't let you have any visitors."
Tedford feared the old lady was about to have another stroke.
She
looked utterly panicked and begged to stay in her home.
Pat kept after