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
as Paw and Nona signed the documents.
The second codicils came on August 1, 1975.
Jean Boggs was removed
completely as an executor, although she still received certain assets
under terms of her parents' wills.
Reeves and Hamner had been very
careful to see that both Allansons read and understood each section of
the codicils.
If Pat Allanson was in the house at the time, she was
not present at the signing.
On January 20, 1976, after Paw had his heart attack, Pat was given a
sweeping power of attorney.
And finally, on February 4, 1976, when
Nona and Paw were both hospitalized for extended care at South Fulton,
the third codicils changed the distribution of the elderly
Allansons'fortune completely.
Jean was eliminated altogether as an heir.
Paw and Nona Allanson's
current wills dictated that their assets would be distributed thusly:
(1) Fifty percent (50%) of the trust estate; or all real estate, farm
animals, jewelry, clothing, household goods, furniture and furnishings,
pictures, silverware, objects of art and automobiles ... shall be
distributed to my grandson, Tom Allanson, if he be in life.
If my
grandson, Tom Allanson, be not in life and is married to Patricia R.
Allanson at his death [a clause that Hamner and Reeves had insisted on]
then the property named in this subparagraph shall pass and be
distributed to Patricia R. Allanson.
(2) The remaining portion of my trust estate shall be divided equally
between my grandson, Tom Allanson, my grandson, David Byron Boggs, and
my granddaughter Nona Lisa Boggs.
(3) I have specifically excluded my daughter, Jean Elizabeth Boggs,
from any distribution of my estate.
I have done this as my daughter
has adequately provided for herself and I have further decided that
recent changes and events concerning the Allanson family situation
dictate that my estate could best be utilized and would be more
beneficial to the aforenamed individuals.
Tom Allanson was, indeed, "in life," but he was also in for life.
What
the third codicils to his grandparents' wills really meant was that,
should they die, his wife, Pat, would control 662/3 percent of a very
healthy inheritance.
She would have Tom's half of the entire trust,
plus Tom's third of the half that he shared equally with his two
cousins.
She would also be the executor.
Anything the old couple had
beyond the trust assets would also go to Pat.
As long as Tom was in prison.
Tom was cut off from his family; his information was controlled by his
wife.
Her letters and infrequent visits were his only window on the
world outside, and she didn't fill him in on all the boring details of
wills and codicils.
She kept assuring him ce would be that she was
fighting to get him out.
His last chan coming up in November.
Tom had no idea how dicey things were at home.
ALl through the melting-hot July of 1976, Pat and the Radcliffes waited
for the other shoe to drop.
The damnable East Point police were
snooping into every facet of Pat's life, asking questions, testing
everything they carted out of Paw and Nona's ;jll@@ house.
The police
were so rude; they clearly had no breeding at all.
They had been rude
to her mother and the colonel too, and it was unnerving to hear Bob
Tedford tell the newspapers that fourpeople might be arrested.
Tedford talked to one of Nona Allanson's nurses, Juanita Jackson, who
had cared for the elderly woman after Paw was hospitalized.
Juanita
had noticed that Nona seemed inordinately drowsy, and Pat had explained
that she was taking some pills and needed one every twenty-four
hours.
She showed Juanita a bottle of green and gray capsules.
But the old
woman slept so much that the practical nurse had suggested to Pat,
"Let's don't give her any more of this medication."
She didn't know
whether Pat had taken her advice or not.
Mrs. Allanson remained quite
groggy.
The sedative Vistaril came in a green and gray capsule in
twenty-five-milligram doses, usually given three or four times a day.
It had been prescribed for Paw-not Nona-and it was to be given
cautiously as it had a depressive effect, particularly when combined
with other medications.
"Who cooked?"
Tedford asked.
"Pat did some, and sometimes she brought in food.
I did some, and the
night nurse did some."
The only visitor Juanita recalled in the weeks between June 15 and June
28 was a pleasant, heavyset woman named Fanny K. Cash.
But there was
another visitor.
Mrs. Amelia Estes had been Nona and Paw's neighbor
for nineteen years.
She was appalled to find her old friend in a sorry
state when she called on Nona one day after Paw was hospitalized.
"I found her different from what I had ever seen before," she told
Tedford.
"You could tell something was wrong because she looked .
.
.
drugged.
She didn't really know anybody or know what she was doing or
saying.
. . . Pat asked her if she wanted to go out on the porch, and
we rolled her out there.
Pat went to the mailbox and I sat there with
her, but she could not hold her head up for any length of time .
. .
and if she came up, her eyes were rolling and wallowing around.
There
was something desperately wrong someway."
Mrs.
Estes had also been let in on Paw's supposed confession.
"I started to leave and Pat asked me if I had a few minutes.
. . .
She wanted to tell me about Mr. Allanson signing a confession to the
murder of Walter and Carolyn!
Of course it was a terrible shock to me
to think that such had been done.
. . . She said she had a terrible
time getting him to sign it because he thought if he lived through
this, they couldn't pin anything on him.
She said that he had
confessed to her while he was in the hospitaland she was crying-and
said she had to live with this without telling anybody for so long, and
nobody would ever know what she had gone through after getting the
confession and having to keep it to herself."
On July 20, Tedford left a call for Colonel Radcliffe, asking for
another interview.
Radcliffe returned the call and pointedly asked,
"Are you going to be advising me of my rights again?"
"Yes, I will be."
"Well, then I'm not coming in."
"You can ave your attorney present
during any interview I can't afford an attorney.
You'll have to
provide one.
No, I on't believe I will consent to an interview."
On July 26, Colonel Radcliffe changed his mind.
He and his wife came
in with their attorney and gave a formal statement to Tedford and
Investigator Richard Daniell.
As always, the Radcliffes were very
proper, very precise in their speaking patterns, iiijid they maintained
their position of annoyed dignity, as if it were patently ridiculous
for people of their social standing to actually speak with the
police.
Margureitte Radcliffe was the more talkative-as she always was.
Her
husband began most of his answers with "To the best of my knowledge .
and "Not to my knowledge."
Everything everything-they said dovetailed with their daughter's recall
of events at Paw and Nona Allanson's home.
Yes, the old woman had most
assuredly been terrified of "Big Allanson" and had begged them to come
and save her from Paw.
They had done what decent Christian people
would do.
Margureitte recalled that the bad weekend in June had really begun on
Wednesday afternoon, June 9. Nona had called the Radcliffe home on Tell
Road to say she had had nothing to eat, she had wet herself, and needed
help.
"I said I had no transportation at the moment, but whoever got
to the house first would come over," Margureitte said.
"My husband and
I went .
. . and gave her some water.
. . . I cleaned her up.
. .
.
Mr. Allanson said he was feeling not so good, his legs were a little
weak and had been bothering him, and he had not been able to do
anything for her."
Margureitte and Pat had stayed that night with the old couple.
Things
had, of course, been worse on Saturday morning when the colonel had to
break into the house.
Neither of them had actually seen Paw swallow
any pills.
Colonel Radcliffe thought it might have been Tang, and not
orange juice, that Paw had been drinking.
They had both seen the old whiskey bottle.
"I saw a pint bottle," Margureitte explained, "and I haven't the
remotest idea of what it was....... By the freezer, there's a mangle
thing-there was a bottle..... and the doctor had said, 'Get everything
out of his way."
Mrs. Allanson [Pat] said, 'Pour it out,'and before I
could say'beans,' my husband took it in the bathroom and politely
turned it up and poured it out.
I said, 'Maybe you shouldn't have
poured it out-because Dr.
Jones possibly will want to go a i .
Both the Radcliffes stressed that it was Dr. Jones who had planted the
idea of an "overdose" in their minds.
Margureitte a4ded some details,
however, to Paw's bizarrely assaultive behavior.
"She [Nona] .
. .
said at one point he [Paw] held her mouth and said, 'Drink this
coffee!'But it wasn't coffee."
Her voice lowered to a dramatic
whisper.
"Now I said to her, 'Ma, you mean he didn't have anything?"
And she said, 'I mean it wasn't coffee."
.
. . Then she said he had