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
been killed in the basement of a house?
You don't recollect whether or
not you told the police?"
"Was this supposed to be included in my statement of the twenty-sixth
of July?"
Radcliffe asked.
"I'm asking, on that statement you gave the police-did you give this
information?"
Colonel Radcliffe was as calm and as flat as a windless lagoon.
"I
believe I did mention that there had been a confession."
He had fallen into a prosecution trap and never realized it.
He had never mentioned the confession.
. . .
Fanny Kate Cash was the next witness for the defense.
A heavyset,
disheveled woman, she peered at the gallery through thick glasses.
Fanny Kate explained that she had lived all of her sixty-seven years at
4185 Tell Road.
She had not married.
She had once been a secretary
and a bookkeeper, but when her mother passed away, she had to take care
of her father.
Out there, before there were any other houses, Fanny Kate had lived
with her aged father, who lay like a man already dead on the chaise
longue on the veranda.
She had done sewing and babysitting.
And then
she was alone, except for her church circle.
She sold a piece of her acreage to Pat and Gil Taylor.
Seeing them tow
those two houses in and watching the horse ring and the red and white
stables being built must have been a happy thing for Fanny Kate.
With
the advent of Clifford and Margureitte Radcliffe, and all of Pat's
children moving in and out, the neighborhood certainly livened up.
Fanny Kate didn't even mind that Pat had never p aid off the land
contract.
Fanny Kate had become a part of Boppo's, Papa's, and Pat's lives, and
she had lumbered down the road to their house often for lemonade or
watermelon.
They were so gracious to her that she hated to ask about
the land payments.
Their home was so lovely and clean.
Fanny Kate's
life was more basic.
Cooking and he cabin where she lived was
accomplished by a huge heating in t coal stove, belching smoke, and
Fanny Kate's home and person smelled of soot.
She didn't care for
Pat's children, who were terrified of her-their noise and their
rambunctiousness set Fanny on edge-but she adored Pat.
She had always
tried to do her best for that poor, sickly woman.
Fanny Kate had
almost come to the point where she was going to give Pat her bedroom
set, which Pat had long coveted-all carved with cupids and hearts on
the headboard.
Fanny Kate testified that she had become a frequent
companion and confidante to the Radcliffes and eventually spent much
time at the Washington Road home of Paw and Nona A anson.
She
substantiated all the testimony given by Pat and the Radcliffes.
She had seen it herself.
Fanny Kate was off and running, relishing her place on the witness
stand, eager to support her neighbors.
She recalled that she had heard
Paw Allanson talk strangely about his son and 1976.
daughter-in-law's murder way back in March of "Grandma was saying she
had a dream, and he interfered with her about the dream.
It was about
the murder.
And he told her it wasn't right .
. . and so he drew the
basement .
. . on the of the basement, where back of a magazine and
give full details the hole was, where the furnace was, and then the
stairway which came down .
. . and he said the police never did state
the truth about Carolyn and the way she was lying on the steps .
. .
and at that time, I says, 'Well, where was the one that shot Walter
standing?"
He said, 'Right there."
And it was in front of the
hole."
Fanny Kate was full of recollections about what Paw had told her.
"Was that the end of the conversation?"
McAlliste r asked.
"He caught himself and realized that he had talked too much, and he
shut up then.
Shut up like a clam."
Weathers was on his feet.
"Your Honor!
This is the most pure
conjecture I have ever heard-" It did sound as if Fanny Kate was,
perhaps, embellishing her testimony.
But then again, perhaps she was
remembering accurately.
She was not, however, responsive to
questions.
She was away and gone on her own, settled into the witness chair as if
it had been designed for her.
Judge Holt again ordered the jury to disregard her statements.
But
Fanny Kate would be heard.
She was, she announced, a witness to Paw's
confession to Pat.
If not an eyewitness, she was most certainly an
"earwitness."
She said she had been with Pat the very day Paw dictated
his confession.
"Mrs. Allanson got restless and wanted to know what
they were doing out back, and I went to see.
And as I stood at the
jalousie door that goes to the garage, I overheard the conversation.
Pat begging him to slow down-that she couldn't take the notes so
fast.
And he become irritable with her and spoke up.
His voice raised and
says, 'I killed Walter and Carolyn.
I didn't intend to kill Carolyn.
But I did it in self-defense!"
" Fanny Kate said she didn't hang around to listen but had gone back to
Nona Allanson's room.
On cross-examination, Weathers asked Fanny Kate about her allegiance to
the Radcliffes and Pat Allanson.
She allowed she was close" to
Margureitte and Clifford Radcliffe, and "very close" to Pat.
"How long after you heard someone admit to .
. . a double murder case
was it that you called the local law officials?"
"I didn't understand the question."
"How long .
. . from the time you heard this did you contact any law
enforcement official?"
"I didn't contact any law enforcement at all."
"When is the first time since this date in 1976 that you have furnished
this information to any law enforcement?"
"I furnished it to Mr.
McAllister, the lawyer."
"That is not my question.
When was it, please, ma'am, that you have
given this information for a double murder case to anyone in law
enforcement?"
" I didn't give it to any law enforcement at all."
"When is the first time you gave it to anyone in the district
attorney's office?"
"Not at all."
"When is the first time you tried to contact any judge or any superior
court?"
Fanny Kate wasn't catching on yet.
"Not at all."
"Well then, this is the first time that any of these people have had
any opportunity to hear this today, is it not?"
turned it over to Mr.
McAllister."
"That is not my question.
"I haven't told anyone."
"That is my question.
No further questions."
It was clear to the most casual observer that Fanny Kate Cash would do
anything possible to help Pat out of a jam.
She was not nearly as
subtle as the other defense witnesses, and she tended to embroider, but
her loyalty was unquestionable.
Dunham McAllister could see the
roblems inherent in his witness.
He approached her warily for redirect
examination and was rewarded with an incredible story that he would
just as soon not have heard.
She said she and Pat had gone to the house on Washington Road with a
message from Tom "warning Grandma to be careful.
Her life was in
danger.
. . .
"And that night, between eleven-thirty and twelve o'clock, it was a
disguised [my] phone rang and I answered it.
And voice-" "Miss Cash,"
McAllister said quickly, "I don't want to go into that.
I think Mr.
Weathers probably would object to that."
mption of Mr. Weathers
objected to Mr.
McAllister's assu what he might object to.
"Go ahead," McAllister said, a trace of apprehension in his voice.
"I answered the phone and there was a disguised voice, saying, 'What
did you tell Mama?"
The word 'Mama' gave the voice away.
And I coolly
answered, and said, 'What did I tell-what did I tell Mama?"
and the
phone went up.
I recognized that voice, and it was Walter
Allanson's!"
Fanny Kate had a scenario of her own.
If the case on trial had not
been so serious, her testimony would have been hilarious.
But no one laughed.
iss Cash had Andy Weathers caught her again on recross.
If M been so
fearful for Nona Allanson's life, if she had gone there to deliver an
alleged message from Tom warning her that her life eelchair with was in
danger-this pathetic old woman in a wh the use of only one of her
limbs-then when had she called anyone in law enforcement to warn them
of the great danger this invalid lady was in?
Had she told anyone?
"No one, no," Fanny Kate responded.
"Not at all."
McAllister demanded to see all of Tom's letters to his grandparents and
asked for time to analyze them.
Judge Holt would not pause.
He had
warned the attorneys that he had only a week for this trial.
He
suggested that McAllister's wife, Margo-his COcounsel-could go over the
letters.
They moved ahead, the trial staying afloat but getting bulkier and
bulkier, listing to port with its heavy load of objections and legal