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
Dunham McAllister rose to ask for a needed time.
He was sure there
would be leniency in delay.
He .
the sentencing guidelines, but he had to have time to do some
research.
He was not presently prepared to go forward.
judge Holt was not amused.
"You must have anticipated this," he
said.
"I have no excuse.
I do ask your forbearance in granting a delay."
weeks of civil cases.
"I can't do it Monday.
I've got two sentencing
will be on May 16."
McAllister started to ask if his client could be free awaiting even
before he got sentence, but judge Holt was ahead of him, the request
completely out.
"No.
if I did it for one, I'd have to do it for all
of them."won't do it.
It creates red tape for everyone.
If my do it
for you and every other office inoffice, the district attorney's
office, a stand that?"
volved.
The defendant is in custody.
Do you
understand?
Deputies moved toward Pat, handcuffs ready.
She turned
back toward her sobbing family as she woodenly allowed herself to be
cuffed.
She looked so lovely in the dress she had made, s wide and
this one of avocado and cream, her green eye tark white skin.
Her
daughters cried frightened against her s ed, but they did not, of
openly.
The Radcliffes were stunned disappear.
It simply course, break down.
They only watched Pat d' could not be
that their daughter was going to jail, not to stay all nigh t.
jean and Homer Boggs congratulated Andy Weathers and the lawyers began
to gather up their papers.
As Weathers turned to leave, Boppo ran
after him.
"Sir!
Sir!"
she cried.
"You have made a terrible
mistake!"
Weathers acknowledged her with a half shake of his head, but
kept on walking.
The television cameras rolled, catching all the emotion, but Pat's
family didn't know that until they saw their images caught on the
eleven o'clock news I felt like someone had died, " Susan ing to lead
me out of the courtremembered, "and Sonja was try' room."
The bailiff
was turning the Already, at judge Holt's order, lights out.
On May 16, Andy Weathers urged judge Holt to give Pat 'able "She took
from them [the Allanson the stiffest sentence possi Allansons]
everything they had-as well as their mental capacities.
. . . Arsenic poisoning is one of the most painful ways for a human
being to die.
. . . This is a brutal scheme.
She showed not one ounce
of mercy to these two people she tried to kill one day at a time.
And
they would have died if the scheme had not been detected.
I don't
think the defendant is due any points.
It's a cold scheme.
It's a
calculated scheme.
It's carried out where they would die an inch at a
time.
They suffered great pain.
. . .
I'd ask the court to set a sentence that is consistent with this
brutality.
Dunham McAllister reminded the judge that "the evidence only clearly
established at least one poisoning episode for Mrs. Allanson and two
for Mr. Allanson.
There was no evidence other than that."
He asked
that Pat's medical problems be taken into consideration.
"I would ask
the court to consider a lenient sentence, to consider probation, that
Mrs. Allanson is a person who can benefit from a period of
probation."
Judge Holt apparently did not agree.
He sentenced Patricia Vann
Radcliffe Taylor Allanson to two ten-year prison terms, to be served
consecutively.
Under Georgia statute, it was the harshest sentence he
could impose.
Pat stared at her attorney as if she didn't
understand.
Surely this was a mistake.
Surely the judge was only saying what he
could give her; he couldn't mean that he was actually going to send her
to prison.
Grimly, Dunham McAllister gave notice of appeal.
"I can't hear it now," Holt said.
"You can file it.
I'll hear it as
soon as I can."
Only three years had passed since Pat had married into the Allanson
clan, and in that space of time the family had been well nigh
annihilated.
Walter and Carolyn were dead; Tom was locked in prison,
convicted of their murders; and his children had been adopted, lost to
him.
Paw and Nona would have arsenic in their bones until they died.
They would never be the same.
Jean had been forced outside the circle
of her own family.
The few Allansons who were alive and walking free
were full of doubts and recriminations.
Pat had seemed to be a frail,
dependent woman when she insinuated herself into their midst, but she
had fanned each faint spark of disagreement into glowing coals of
hostility and distrust that needed only a faint breeze to burst into
flames.
She had promised Tom love unlike any he had ever known before.
Believing he saw paradise in her transparent green eyes, Tom had taken
her as his wife.
And she had come close to destroying him and
everything he loved.
He might better have flung himself into a
volcano.
Tom's parents had detested Pat, but her own family loved her beyond
reason.
Margureitte's devotion was all-encompassing, Pat had
an-forgiving, blind.
And it wasn't just Margureitte found love and
acceptance wherever she turned from the moSiler and all her aunts
adored her.
moment she was born.
Mama Gil still loved her even though she had
banished him without giving him a reason.
Susan and Debbie and Ronnie
cherished their mother and overlooked her eccentricities and her
demands for more.
Always more.
Pat's family had crumbled at its center, the structure weakening with
each new disaster until it was as friable as a cheap Christmas
ornament.
Everywhere Pat walked she left tears and as a catalyst to
tragedy, dissension and death in her wake.
She was a flawed genius who recognized vulnerability in others.
Unerringly, she fixed on weakness and burrowed and twisted until
something or someone broke.
If she could not be happy, then she would
not have anyone find JOY.
Mama Siler had neglected the other grandchildren so that c 'de, Patty
could have the best of everything.
Kent was a suicide and for more than
a decade.
Boppo and Papa had never really had a life of their own;
they had lost the house on Dodson Drive, and now even the Tell Road
farm.
They were bankrupt.
Ronnie had been kept from Gil when he
needed a father most, and Pat gave him anything he wanted as long as he
was there for her.
Pat had meddled in Debbie's marriage until it was
hopelessly broken.
Seeing the danger, Bill Alford hoped to get Susan and Sean away before
it was too late for them too.
Until this moment, Pat had walked away unscathed from the havoc she
wrought, so self-involved that she never even saw the being forced to
deal with wreckage behind her.
But now she was what she had done.
She
was thirty-nine years old and she was going to prison.
That couldn't be.
it wasn't fair.
It was, as her mother had cried out
to Mr. Weather "a terrible mistake."
s, Pat would serve her sentence
at the Hardwick Correctional Institute n Milledgeville, Georgia, the
site of Georgia's first state capital.
Southeast of Atlanta and sandwiched between the Oconee National Forest
and Lake Sinclair, Hardwick was, indeed, a prison, even though it
looked from the exterior like a fine southern girls' school set in
green rolling countryside.
A huge tree grew in front, rhading picnic
tables and softening the effect of the fence topped with razor wire.
It was new construction, made of beige stucco whose hue was not unlike
the tan uniforms itr inmates wore.
The custodial complex was small-too small, really; many of the inmates
slept in dormr, in mobile homes on the back side of the prison.
There
was no free movement from place to place, and Pat's days were regulated
by rules and other people's time schedules.
The food was heavy and
starchy, the sheets were rough, and the other prisoners were not from
the kind of life she had known.
She hated it.
"Even though the walls are painted pretty and it looks nice outside,"
she told her family, "don't let them fool you.
It's still a prison.
They degrade you."
Margureitte and Clifford Radcliffe made the eighty-mile drive to
Hardwick faithfully each weekend.
They would not dream of missing a
visitors' day.
When the Radcliffes or Pat's children came to visit,
they were searched and anything they brought with them had to be
checked by a matron.
When Pat was ushered down to see them, the
matrons had her step into a small bathroom off the visiting area before
and after for a body search -as if she were a "common criminal," she
said.
She had been &scinated with the indignities Tom suffered in
prison, urging him to tell her details; now she was learning what it
was like to d.
be cage Pat quickly convinced prison authorities that her health
problems made it impossible for her to work in the kitchen.
She
couldn't lift anything heavy and the smells of institutional food
sickened her.
The prison kitchen served a lot of fish from nearby Lake