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
Grove, Florida, he loved it; it was what he had always wanted to do.
A
few years later, in 1980, he moved up to Georgia and "started policing
for the city of Atlanta."
He was still as blond as a Scandinavian,
looked about eighteen, and worked a car in the most thickly populated
black ghetto areas of the city.
The people who lived on Atlanta's
meanest streets liked him.
He was a no-bullshit kind of guy.
He
stayed with the Atlanta Police Department for five and a half years.
While he was working in Atlanta, Stoop met his future wife, Theresa
Hempfling, when they worked undercover stakeouts together.
A lovely,
darkhaired woman, Theresa was a federal agent for the Alcohol, Tobacco,
and Firearms branch of federal law enforcement.
She was in charge of
the Zone 6
Pro'ect in Atlanta, seeking out "armed career criminals."
She was as
good at her job as Stoop was at his, and could trade quips with him toe
to toe.
Stoop was making 92 percent of the arrests in the Zone 6
campaign, and Theresa was seeing the cases through to conviction.
But what Stoop really wanted-what he had always wantedwas to be a
detective like his uncle Fritz.
The Fulton County D.A."s investigative
unit gave him plenty of opportunity to do just that.
He had occasion
more than once to 'rethink" dispositions of cases marked closed by
local police departments.
One was the bloody death of a fifty-year-old man whose case had been
closed as a suicide by the investigating agency.
But there were
aspects of the case that disturbed the dead man's family and they asked
for an investigation by the D.A."s office Reading over the autopsy
report, Stoop saw that the victim had succumbed to several bullets in
the chest, fired by an old .445
Webley cavalry pistol.
The city detective investigating the case had
surmised that the dead man
had shot himself many times in the chest, walked around the living
room, and then gone out into the hallway, where he shot himself a final
time.
That, the report read, would account for the proliferation of
blood all over the floor.
Stoop recalled asking if a man with his chest full of bullets were
capable of walking od in the the
That it would, Stoop agreed,
around.
detective, "Would it surprise you that all that blood in the living room isn't
his blood?"
The city detective didn't believe the D.A."s investigator.
"Look at his shoes, then," Stoop suzlested The victim's shoes didn't
have a speck of blood on them.
"I think he died right here in the
hallway , Stoop said.
"And I think somebody else shot him."
Stoop's investigation unearthed the fact that the dead man's girlfriend
had been stopped by a patrol unit for erratic driving late on the night
of the shooting.
She had bandages on both wrists.
"She told them
she'd cut herself accidentally," Stoop recalled later with a grim
smile.
"And they let her go.
She had tried to commit suicide by slitting her wrists after she shot
him.
That was her blood that was all over his living room; the lab
identified two different types of blood left in his hallway and living
room.
Evidently, the girlfriend changed her mind about wanting to
die-and went to Grady Hospital and got sewed up.
We thought we had a
case.
But they acquitted her.
The jury felt if it was murder, then
the first investigators should have known it.
It didn't make sense,
but you can't second-guess a jury S reasoning.
Stoop was a busy man.
Not only was he working for the Fulton County
D.A."s Office, but he was available to other agencies that didn't have
investigators.
On top of that, he still worked with two federal task
forces: the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, and the FBI's
Drug Task Force.
But he was never too busy to take on another oddball
case.
When Susan Alford called the Fulton County District Attorney's Office,
she had asked to talk to anyone who might know about a current case
charging Patricia Taylor Allanson with crimes involving the James Crist
family.
She was still hoping that maybe Mrs.
Crist had exaggerated.
Her call was taken by Chief Investigator Ron Harris, who remembered Pat
only too well from her 1976 conviction.
He had worked on the case.
The bizarre situation of a husband and a wife going to trial separately
for murder and attempted murder within the space of a few years was
hard to forget.
No one in the D.A."s office had ever settled the
question of Pat Taylor Allanson's actual involvement in the murder of
her in-laws.
"You aren't Pat Taylor's sister, are you?"
Harris asked Susan.
"No," she said, wondering if her mother was still talking about her
"wicked, sociopathic sister"-the imaginary sister who lived in North
Carolina.
Susan did not tell Harris who she was in that first call, but he was
intrigued.
Why would someone be asking about Pat Taylor?
The woman would be-what?-in her fifties by now, and she probably was
out of prison.
Harris checked the computers and found there was an
open case, with a complaint filed by a Mrs.
James F. Crist.
But there wasn't much to go on.
The only thing that the case file
consisted of was a manila folder with one yellow sheet from a legal
tablet in it.
Harris called Don Stoop into his office.
Stoop had never heard of Pat
Taylor, but the single sheet of paper led him to the Atlanta Police
Department's Larceny Unit, which had filed away the Crists' complaint
in 1988, marked "all leads exhausted."
The city dicks had never gotten
enough evidence together to charge anyone.
That made it Stoop's kind of case.
. . .
It was February 5, 1991, when Don Stoop was officially assigned the
Cr'st case.
He was t I o look into the "possible homicide of an
elderly gentleman under the home care of two females who were,
allegedly, Registered Nurses."
James Crist had been dead for a little
over two years.
His death had been considered natural; he had suffered
from Parkinson's disease and he was eighty-eight years old when he
died.
The question now was: Had someone hurried him along?
Stoop asked for Michelle Berry as his co-investigator.
She had no experience
as a homicide investigator; the Crist case might give her some.
Michelle resembled a college girl more than a working detective.
She
was in her twenties, but she could easily Dass for seventeens an
attribute that made her extremely valuable When she graduated on her
first law enforcement assignments .
in criminal justice, she from
North Georgia College with a B.A was hired by the Georgia Bureau of
Investigation as an undercover narcotics investigator and was sent out
to buy drugs from some of the seamiest characters in Georgia's
narcotics underworld.
She could look like a schoolgirl or a hippie or
a confirmed addict.
"At the time," she remembered, "it didn't even strike me us.
I was a
detective on a detail, and that's what I as dangero wanted to be."
Michelle's career as a narc went along swimmingly until she fell in
love.
"My job didn't sit too well with Jonathan," she said.
doing what "He told me, 'Either quit and marry me, or keep you're doing
and leave me alone."
" She loved him too much to leave him- alone, so, reluctantly, she
resigned her job with the GBI and they were married in December 1989.
Six months later, Michelle knew she couldn't give up law enforcement
completely; that was what she had studied for.
Much like Stoop,
helping to keep the law was her life's ambition.
Her husband
understood, but he didn't want her back on the streets.
They compromised.
"I got a desk job."
Michelle's desk-and office-were neater than Stoop's, and her objets
dart were not nearly as eccentric as his, some of which were
unmentionable.
They made an interesting team.
Don and
Michelle read Pat's and Debbie's rap sheets, and then did a little background
checking on the Crist family.
They learned that James F. "Jimmy" Crist
had earned the huge house on Nancy Creek Road.
If one single man could
be said to epitomize the emergence of electric power in the South in
the twentieth century, it was James Crist.
Jimmy Crist had started out climbing poles, his spurred boots digging
into swaying shafts of tarred wood in winter storms and in the burning
southern sun.
In 1927, he worked as an apprentice lineman for the
Alabama Power Company.
He later became a sales representative, and
then moved on to the South Carolina Power Company and stayed nineteen
years.
In 1946-47, Crist helped form the Southern Company, which was
incorporated to operate four southern electric companies-Alabama Power
Company, Georgia Power Company, Gulf Power Company, and the Mississippi
Power Company.
Crist was listed in U%o's R%o in America and wrote a book, They
Electrified the South, about the emergence of electrical power in the
first half of the century.
James Crist and his pretty wife, Elizabeth Courtney Boykin Crist, had
belonged to the most exclusive inner circles of Atlanta and Charleston
society.
When Crist retired as the executive vice president and
director of the Southern Company on January 1, 1966, he was lauded as a
true pioneer of his industry and given credit for much of the
prosperity of the New South.
The thirty thousand employees of the
Southern electric system saluted Jimmy Crist.