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
"I can't give you a date on that.
I have to be very truthful.
I have
to be perfectly honest."
Margureitte Radcliffe was fifty-six, only seventeen years older than
the daughter she was trying, as always, to protect.
She was still
beautiful, and she lifted her chin ever so slightly and surveyed the
courtroom with her "crystal gaze."
It was essential that she be
perceived as very truthful, perfectly honest, and always, always
correct.
"Were you aware that they were both full of arsenic?"
Weathers went
on, using phrases that clearly shocked Margureitte.
"Were you aware
that they had such a level of arsenic in their bodies [as] to alter
their human structure, that [it] would have resulted in death if
arsenic ingestion continued?"
"I heard the laboratory said that," Margureitte replied.
"I believe
last week I saw the lab report, but prior to that I had not."
Arsenic
was not something that Margureitte would have chosen to discuss in
detail; it was obviously burdensome for her, but Weathers kept alluding
to the poison.
He estab ished that Margureitte had had "training in
nursing."
"You would generally be familiar with the fact arsenic would cause
death if ingested in sufficient quantities?"
"The only thing I know about arsenic actually is that it is a poison.
I have no personal knowledge."
"I'm not implying for a moment that you do.
I'm just asking you as a
technical question-would you be aware that arsenic is a poison?"
I would think it was very dangerous.
Yes, very."
Margureitte blamed
the myriad typographical errors in the confession @ the occasional
lines that were capitalized, on her own inexperience.
"I'm really not
that good a typist."
point he wanted to make.
Paw s alleged Weathers
had another the murders of Walter confession had too many details about
and Carolyn Allanson to be simply guesswork.
It had to have been
written by someone who had been there, or who had been told what had
happened that terrible night.
Paw had emphatically denied any part in
the murders.
He had repudiated the confession.
Who, then, had written it?
king that question very subtly.
In So Weathers went about as many
places in the confession, there were references to Paw Allanson's
concern for his wife, to his fear that Mama "might have a stroke" if
she knew.
Why on earth would Paw have told anyone that he was a
killer?
It could have cost him what he held most dear.
Nona.
Margureitte Radcliffe agreed that Paw Allanson most definitely kept secret
to spare his wife's health.
wanted the document others asked, "if
the knowledge of the confession "So," Wea would not come from Walter
Allanson.
came to someone .
. . it .
. . It would have come from
some other party?"
"I'm not sure I follow you," Margureitte said slowly.
"I'd like for
you to make that statement again."
"Take the position the third party was there in that basement when it
took place, knew exactly the or right outside that area details, wasn't
concerned about Mrs. Allanson's health.
That third party or whoever
else was in that basement could have put something-or everything-down
on this piece of paper as to the way this happened.
Could they not?"
"I do not follow you at all."
Margureitte flushed as she spoke,
warily.
"I withdraw that," Weathers said.
what we are "I don't know what the
basement has to do with what we're talking about, sir!"
Margureitte's testimony was interrupted by a lunch break that
Thursday in May of 1977.
It was
just as well for the defense.
f another crime haunted Pat's The
scarcely acknowledged ghost o able murder of trial.
It was the crux of
this trial, really.
The doubt Hanson had Walter and Carolyn Allanson
was what old Paw A e event described in detail in supposedly confessed
to; it was this strange document full of typos and x-ed-out
sections.
Tom Allanson was in prison for that crime, but Pat Allanson had said on
the witness stand that she had been "one," "one and a half," "two,"
"more than two" blocks away at the moment the fatal shots were fired.
She had been a suspect in those murders.
She had never been charged,
but that old investigation remained alive and rife with dangerous
questions.
No one on the defense side of this case wished to see those
questions arise in courtroom 808.
Margureitte Radcliffe's afternoon testimony was taken up with her
typing of the confession, the choice of paper, the crossedout portions,
the manner in which she had inserted the paper into her typewriter-all
questions from Andy Weathers.
She couldn't recall why she had made
such choices.
She had no idea whether one would normally start typing
from the very top of a sheet of paper, block out the stationery heading
and go on, or whether one would start in the middle, and then type the
top of the page.
Did the jury see the significance of the different dates, the different
margins, the different paper on Paw's confession?
There was no way of
knowing.
Weathers asked Margureitte about July 26, 1976, the day she and her
husband had come to East Point police headquarters with her attorney to
give a formal statement about their recall of events in the Washington
Road house.
Their statements were taken just two weeks before Pat was arrested and
charged with criminal attempt to commit murder.
"Did you at any time
in this statement tell the police, the district attorney's office-or
anyone in law enforcementthat you had typed a confession of murder
signed by Walter Allanson?"
"No, I did not," Margureitte said.
"I have no further questions."
Colonel Clifford Radcliffe followed his wife onto the witness stand.
In response to a question from McAllister, he recalled finding the
whiskey bottle-a whiskey bottle, although he could not say if the
bottle in evidence was the same bottle.
The color of the cap looked
different to him now.
He attempted to say that his wife had told him
to "dump it out."
Weathers objected on the grounds the statement was hearsay.
The colonel hastened to explain that Dr. Jones had told Mrs. Radcliffe
to tell him to dump out the bottle's contents.
"Your Honor, that's hearsay on hearsay."
After a wrangle between attorneys, Judge Holt allowed the first hearsay
but not the second.
McAllister asked what the witness had done with
the bottle.
"I smelled the contents the colonel replied.
"I smelled the alcohol.
. .
. I dumped the contents down into the toilet and then I gave the bottle
to my daughter to put with the .
. . medication we were accumulating
in the house to give to Dr.
Jones."
He agreed with his wife and stepdaughter that Nona Allanson had called
them for rescue on June 12.
"Did she state anything to you in person when you arrived?"
McAllister
asked.
"Yes, sir.
. . . If I may-not only to me, but several times thereafter
to other people who came to the house."
"What did she state?"
"That her husband had tried to kill her."
"Thank you, sir."
During cross-examination, Weathers deliberately allowed the jury to
once again hear the story of the terrified old woman, the assaultive
husband who was drinking and gulping down pills, the trio of rescuers
who left Tell Road and rushed to Nona Allanson's aid.
Colonel
Radcliffe explained easily that he had never actually seen Paw taking
pills-he might have told detectives that, but he had corrected
himself.
"I did not actually see him, but there were open pill containers on the
counter."
"I am asking," Weathers suddenly took the offensive, "did you tell the
detectives when they came out there that he was gulping down handfuls
of pills?"
"That was my assumption at the time I first saw him."
Colonel Radcliffe had accused Bob Tedford of lying, of being confused
about who said what about the pills.
And now, once again, he had
reversed himself.
Weathers brought the colonel back to July 26-the day of his formal
statement.
"Had your wife communicated to you at this time that she
had typed a document .
. . signed by Walter Allanson admitting the
murder of his son and daughter-in-law?"
"At that time, I believe that she had indicated that she was typing a
document."
"Did you see the document?"
" I had seen it, but I had never read it."
"You were aware that your wife was typing this document purported to be
a confession of murder and you never read it?"
"That's correct, sir."
"You never mentioned that to the police at that time?"
"What, sir?"
"The fact that there was a purported murder confession?"
I don't recall that I did."
Weathers was astonished.
He walked a bit closer to the
distinguished-looking colonel.
"Well now, certainly, sir-I ask you to
search your memory.
Would you not recall telling the police whether or
not you had information to a double murder where a man and his wife had