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
They had scarcely seen each other for months and then she lost him at
Christmas time, 1988.
It had always been such a special time, with
jimmy's birthday the day after Christmas.
James Crist died of acute
renal failure in Piedmont Hospital two days after his eighty-eighth
birthday.
His memorial service was held on December 30 at the
Cathedral of Saint Philip, and his body was cremated.
On a Tuesday morning in March 1991, soon after
their conversation with the Crists, Don Stoop and Michelle Berry drove
south of Atlanta to the little village of McDonough to talk with Susan
and Bill Alford.
Although Susan had not left her name the first time
she called the D.A."s office, Bill had convinced her that they had to
come forward and they had called back.
The investigators hoped to
learn more about Pat Taylor and her daughter, Debbie.
They didn't know
what to expect.
Ex-spouses often called the authorities about each
other; daughters rarely reported their mothers.
Susan Alford was a pretty woman, Stoop noted, with thick dark hair and
intense brown eyes.
She was shy, but she seemed resolute, although it
was obviously painful for her to review her mother's and sister's
histories.
Bill Alford was more voluble, a natural salesman, a man who
laughed easily.
"As we got into the case, and as the facts emerged," Michelle Berry
recalled, "I had to remind Don that, no matter how outrageous Pat
Taylor's behavior had been, this was Susan's mother, and there had to
be feelings there that still hurt."
"Susan Alford laid it out-this incredible story," Stoop said.
"At first, I couldn't believe it.
But Susan obviously needed to tell
what she knew.
And she knew a lot.
At that time, however, even Susan
wasn't aware of all we had found out.
There had been so much secrecy
in that family."
The Alfords said that they had never doubted Pat and Debbie's
explanation for being let go by the Crists-not until Debbie's
vituperative phone call just before Christmas, 199O.."She was accusing
Susan of making them lose their jobs, and it didn't make sense," Bill
said.
"That's why I called the Crists.
And Mrs. Crist told me that
Debbie and Pat were fired because she had been drugged-and because they
stole her blind!"
Bill said that Mrs. Crist had been "very vivid"
about what should be done to Pat and Debbie.
"What did she say?"
Stoop asked.
"She said that they should be put in jail."
The Alfords were frank with Don and Michelle about the terrible summer
of 1990, the reasons behind their moving in with "Boppo and Papa," and
the Thanksgiving Day blowup.
The investigators exchanged looks as Bill
described the episode of the dolls' hair.
Pat Taylor was not going to
be your everyday suspect.
Asked to go back to the time Pat and Debbie were working for the
Crists, Susan described her grandmother's concern about their sudden
affluence.
Debbie had bought a new yellow truck for cash, and her
mother had bought Persian rugs, jewelry, and things for her dolls.
"My
grandmother worried; she didn't think my mom and Debbie could make that
much money as sitters.
"Your mother and sister are registered nurses?"
Michelle asked.
Susan shook her head.
"My mother and sister haven't even graduated
from high school.
My mother was trained to be kind of a nursing
assistant-more like a sitter-when she was in the halfway house.
. .
.
They came to visit us in Florence in 1985, and Debbie was flashing
money around.
I said, 'How much money do you and Mom make?
Boppo has
been asking me about it.
Is everything up-front?"
And Debbie said, 'Well, I don't know.
I'm kind of worried about it
myself."
"A doctor had asked her about her credentials," Susan went on.
"Mom
told Debbie to say she went to the University of Munich.
I asked
Debbie, 'Don't you think that's a little strange?"
and she said, 'I
don't know."
" It would have been strange.
When Debbie lived in Munich she was four
years old.
Susan handed Stoop and Berry a handwritten resume Debbie
had given her.
Her "accomplishments" certainly looked impressive.
Teacher-Elem.
Sc.-Riding Instructor-Equitation Nurse, Surgical Assist
Private Duty-(Geriatrics) Manager of Medical Office with Following
Duties: - Personal & office corresp.
- depositories ù records - bookkeeping ù collection Debbie described
herself as dependable, efficient, amiable, adabtable [sic], competant
[sic].
Traveled abroad extensively as a child with parents and exposed to many
cultures and ethnic groups.
Education: Universite of Munich, Germany (Bad Toltz), Degree in Nursing
Continuing Education-Refresher courses in French and Spanish Susan said
that Debbie was currently working in a doctor's office and seemed to be
doing well.
She and Pat had given diabetes shots in their
"sitters'jobs," and Debbie still gave vitamin shots to their
grandfather, Colonel Radcliffe.
Susan felt that her sister would not have planned any complicated
subterfuge, but that Debbie always went along with their mother.
She
explained that her sister had had a sad, hard life, that Debbie had
always yearned for something beyond the teenage marriage she felt
trapped in.
"Was your mother ever in the armed forces?"
Stoop asked.
Susan shook her head.
"Only as a dependent.
My grandfather is a
lieutenant colonel-retired-and my father was a sergeant."
"Do you know," Stoop asked suddenly, "if they targeted these people?
How did they come across these people who were dying or elderly?"
- payroll - billing - hired, trained, supervised a staff of S "They had
a good reputation-like Mrs. Mansfield's son, Lawrence, heard about
them from Sue and Hudden Jones.... Everyone just loved them."
Susan said that Debbie had been concerned early on that their mother
was simply taking what she wanted from her patients' rooms or homes.
"Debbie would deliberately set something in a certain position, and
lots of times it would disappear."
Later, Susan feared Debbie got into
the spirit of things with her mother.
"My grandmother said I was a
fool to think Debbie wasn't involved.
She said, 'Honey, you can bet that Debbie knows exactly what she's
doing."
" "What about jewelry?"
Stoop asked.
"Mrs. Crist said there was a
large quantity of jewelry missing."
"I know that Debbie and Mom felt justified taking some things.
Sometimes, they would say that they were given to them."
"What type of things are we talking about?"
"Small items.
jewelry.
Sterling.
Knickknacks.
My mother liked
antiquelooking things.
. . . Hatpins.
She gave me a pearl
necklace-more of a choker, and I believe it has two strands.
Then
there is a bracelet.
It has a big gold clasp on the pearls, and
they're gorgeous."
Stoop's ears perked up at that, but he didn't change his expression.
The pearl set sounded like the one Betty Crist had reported missing.
Susan said she had the set in her room and she could show them.
In
fact, her mother had given the family a number of beautiful pieces of
jewelry.
A gaudy 'made ring for Boppo.
A solid eighteen-karat gold
man's ring with a lapis stone to Papa for his seventy-fifth birthday.
Her mother kept a cedar chest full of miniature sterling pieces and
antique pillboxes for herself.
Stoop knew a lapis stone ring had disappeared from the Crists'.
"You
know anything about a Rolex watch?"
he asked.
"No.
My sister would have gotten that if there was one."
"Why do you say that Debbie would have gotten that?"
Stoop was
fascinated.
He knew that a Rolex was missing from the Crists', but Susan didn't.
He also knew that Debbie was the one who had signed for it at the
jewelers.
"My mother would have had no interest in a Rolex.
. . .
Debbie would have gotten a Rolex in a minute.
. . . Debbie had a
shoplifting problem in the past.
She justified what she did by the
stores' high prices.
She's a store detective's nightmare."
Susan had not seen a Rolex watch, however.
"The lapis ring?"
Michelle Berry asked carefully.
"Does your
grandfather still wear that?"
Susan nodded.
"And I think I have some video from his birthday party
where he's wearing it.
@y?"
It was apparent that Susan was vacillating between a certain sense of
relief that her suspicions could be validated and a wrenching awareness
of what her mother had done.
Her eyes often filled with tears, and she
cleared her throat frequently.
"Let's get back to the idea that Debbie and Pat-your mother were
registered nurses," Stoop said.
"Did they ever tell you that they
prescribed medicine or called in medications and picked them up?"
Susan shook her head.
"What they did tell me was that Mrs. Crist had
her medicine delivered to her home .
. . Debbie took one of Mrs.