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
of state and it was sleeting outside and rainy."
She said she thought
Pat was safely tucked in bed.
"I went back and she was gone.".
Margureitte said she had tracked her daughter "like an animal" out
there behind the house on Tell Road.
"She wouldn't let me come near
her .
. . she said .
. . she would take the same instrument that she
had used on her right hip and she would plunge it into her heart."
Margureitte sat straight and unflinching as she unveiled one histrionic
scene after another, her crystal gaze fixed, daring anyone to think
less of her and her daughter.
Sonja Salo maintained that Margureitte's testimony was newly discovered
evidence that Dunham McAllister had not known about during Pat's
trial.
"I think under the law that if she was, in fact, legally insane at the
time, she could not be held criminally responsible for a crime."
Judge Hicks seemed a little puzzled.
"Doesn't that take some
adjudication, to declare one legally insane?
She has not ever, I
assume .
. . been declared legally insane, has she?"
Sonja said that that could be decided prior to any new trial Pat would
have, but she certainly felt the question of Pat's insanity made a new
trial necessary.
"Of course," the judge pointed out, "all of the information you had
Mrs. Radcliffe testify to so far today was known by Mrs. Radcliffe
way back in 1975 and '76 and she was in touch with the attorney, Mr.
McAllister, and testified as a witness in the trial.
. . . None of that information is anything new, is it?"
Sonja explained that this was all new, not only to Dunham McAllister,
but to everyone else.
Margureitte Radcliffe had not known what to do
with her knowledge that her daughter was insane," so she told no one.
"Mrs. Radcliffe is under no legal obligation, if she has problems with
her child, to be telling an attorney or anyone else that problem."
Judge Hicks was baffled and a little annoyed.
"Well, who is the moving
party in this case today?
Is it the same Patricia Allanson?
Is it her
guardian?
Is it a legal fiction-or who is the court reviewing.
Sonja Salo believed so much in her cause that she may not have seen how
specious her arguments were.
She had had no psychiatric tests done on
Pat, who was the "movant," because "I do not believe Patricia Allanson
today is legally insane.
This is a very strange situation."
It was indeed.
Andy Weathers cross-examined Margureitte Radcliffe.
He quickly
elicited the information that she had known that Dunham McAllister was
her daughter's attorney for ten months before her trial, but she said
she had been so unsure of her legal rights that she had never mentioned
to him that she felt Pat was insane.
Nor had either she or her husband felt they should bring that out in
trial.
To date, Margureitte and Clifford Radcliffe had presented many faces to
the world.
But, never, ever had they appeared timid and unsure.
Weathers's voice was thinly edged with sarcasm as he questioned the
witness and drew forth only repetitions of how awed she had been by the
Georgia judicial system.
Margureitte said she had had no idea in the
whole wide world that she should have mentioned her daughter's
craziness to anyone, or even that she had the legal right to do that.
Sonja Salo introduced an affidavit from Dr. Ray Loring Johnson, a
psychiatrist who had treated Pat at the Metropolitan Psyer in April of
1975, but who had lost track of her chiatric Cent between June and
December.
He had not seen her again until the next October.
He'd seen
Pat twice in December 1976, and seven times in early 1977, as she
awaited trial.
He had diagnosed her initially as having "severe
personality disorientation" when she slashed her wrists after being
struck by Colonel Radcliffe.
She had- been obsessed with getting Tom
out of Jail and felt she and her husband were being mistreated.
At
that time, Johnson saw agitation, disorganization, and "much paranoid
ideation.
Essentially, Dr. Johnson could not diagnose what Pat's mental state
might have been at the time of the arsenic poisonings.
He hadn't seen
her at all during that phase of her life.
"It is impossible for me to
make definite statements about her sanity at the time of the offense,
since this was three or four months after I saw her in December 197S,
and six to seven months before I saw her again in October 1976.
I can
say that she was disorganized, suspicious, mistrustful, and, on several
occasions, had seemed out of touch with reality during my earlier work
with her.
. . . I believe that it was quite probable that she was out
of touch with reality at the time of the offense."
Dr. Johnson did,
however, say that he felt Pat had been "unable to collaborate
effectively with her attorney in the preparation of her defense.
At no
time did she question her own sanity, or entertain the idea of making
it an issue at her trial."
Next came an affidavit from Dunham McAllister to,the effect that he had
not been aware that Patricia Allanson was "harboring any legal mental
defect."
Andy Weathers bought none of it.
He argued that it was
ridiculous to think that McAllister could have spent almost a year with
Pat preparing for trial and failed to notice that she was insane.
It
was even more ridiculous that she could testify at length at her own
trial and that no one from Judge Holt, to Weathers himself, to the 'ury
had found her even marginally mentally incompetent.
"No I w, the other
sort of a shotgun defense that is being raised here is that she didn't
know what she was doing at the time she did the act," Weathers
argued.
"The defense in this case was that she did not do it, and she very
clearly took part in that defense and testified to that effect.
Pat Taylor's current appeal was based on one of the most familiar
defense postures ever used: I didn't do it-but if I did do it, I was
crazy at the time.
And now I'm not crazy anymore.
It seldom worked.
Weathers would allow only that Pat "might not have been operating
mentally at peak capacity."
That didn't make her crazy.
The family hoped and prayed that Pat would be home with them by
Christmas.
It was not to be.
On December 9, 1980, Judge Ralph Hicks
rendered his decision.
"It is hereby ADJUDGED, ORDERED and DECREED
that said Motion be and the same is DENIED."
Hicks did not find that
the evidence was "newly discovered."
He was not convinced that Pat
Allanson had suddenly come to her senses and discovered that she had
been insane from 197S to 1977.
Sonja Salo was a very nice young woman.
She had done the best she
could for Pat and the Radcliffes, and they had lost.
Years later, she acknowledged how gullible she had been to believe
Pat's stories; she had even believed in the sociopathic sister hidden
away in North Carolina.
"I can say now," she concluded wryly, "that
Pat Taylor is the most manipulative human being I ever met in my
life."
. . .
Pat's story seemed to be over.
She was a middle-aged woman, confined
to prison for many, many years, her beauty blurred by too much fasting
and gorging and by the passing of those years.
She found her pleasure
in the pages of a craft store catalog and in bombarding her
grandchildren-except for Ashlynne-with handmade presents.
She sent
Sean dainty, hand-painted handkerchiefs to carry to school.
He thanked
her dutifully, and put promised him she would buy him a pony them in a
drawer.
She as soon as she was free.
(She never did.) Pat had never
gone into any phase of her life halfway.
She became completely
obsessed with Victorian needlework.
Her letters could still prickle at
the consciences of those who loved her.
She moved in their minds a
ways, a pi re who lived a desperate existence while they went about
enjoying their lives.
"Please remember," Pat I wrote to apologize for
slow progress on a petit point picture in April of 1982, "my day starts
at 4 AM & I work from 7AM-8 or 9 Pm.
Then when I do get in at night, I do have to shower, hand wash & iron
my clothes for next day.
(I only have 2 uniforms.) Then usually I have
a little dress to smock or hem, etc. But I usually spend every
available moment (that I have any light) on it."
Pat was horrified to
hear that Susan and Bill were moving away from Georgia again.
She
worried about how it would affect her grandchildren.
"I realize that I
have no right to voice an or offer advice; for who am I?
I'm a
prisoner but I'm opinion also your mother.
. . . Yes, I've made a lot
of mistakes.
Let me say one thing-if I lived to be a 100, I am
paying.
I'm paying for anything I ever did, or thought of doing or
would ever do.
It's Hell enough to not know if I did or did not
attempt to harm those two people.
But that's something I have to live
with & get straight with God.
I know I'll never take another pill
(narcotic) for you can be turned into a monster & not even know it &
then everyone & everything that comes into contact with you is harmed
in some form or another.
That's a form of Hell in itself, to know
that you've done this (& to people whom you love & who love you) & yet
you have no real memory of it.
. . . If anyone ever has any doubt that
I'm not suffering sufficiently, I assure them I am & will continue to
do so until the day I die.
And the worst suffering is not the
incarceration, but the knowledge that I'm responsible for destroying