The truth as they knew it’

Joseph Neff, Staff Writer

December 92002

The News and Observer

AULANDER — In the months after Allen Ray Jenkins was mur­dered, 15-year-old Crystal Morris emerged as the star wit­ness, the one who real­ly knew what had hap­pened inside Jenkins’ house, and when.

But her sto­ry kept changing.

A Hertford High School dropout, Crystal was a reg­u­lar vis­i­tor to Jenkins’ house, where she hung out, drank and called him Uncle Allen Ray.”

Jenkins had known the Morris fam­i­ly for decades. When Crystal’s father was court­ing her moth­er, Jenkins drove him from Aulander to Scotland Neck. Crystal’s uncle, Kenny Morris, was the neigh­bor who had found Jenkins’ body on April 14, 1995, the one who said some­thing was bad wrong.”

Police real­ized ear­ly on that Jenkins had been killed by some­one he knew. He kept his house locked tight, even when he was home, and was picky about whom he let in. There were no signs of a break-in.

The Marlboro Lights, the open wine cool­ers, the tam­pon appli­ca­tor and wrap­per in the bath­room came from some­one else; Jenkins did­n’t use them.

And giv­en Jenkins’ sex­u­al habits and his crim­i­nal record, inves­ti­ga­tors turned to young girls who knew him. Taking the lead were SBI agent Dwight Ransome and Aulander Police Chief Gordon Godwin.

Crystal Morris came from a rough fam­i­ly. Her father died when she was 4, and var­i­ous uncles (though not Kenny) have been in and out of jail and prison.

Crystal’s best friend was Shanna Hall, a stu­dent at Ahoskie Christian School. The two were like sis­ters, just six days apart in age. Crystal had lived with the Hall fam­i­ly, almost as a fos­ter child, because of the trou­ble at home.

The girls spent a lot of time with their boyfriends — Crystal with a young man named Gary Scott, and Shanna with Alan Gell, a small-time drug dealer.

Gell’s mobile home in Lewiston, eight miles south of Aulander, was par­ty cen­tral, where the four hung out, drink­ing and doing drugs. Gell, 20, had a rep­u­ta­tion among police and a record: break­ing and enter­ing and bring­ing a weapon to school.

String of versions

In the weeks and months after Jenkins’ mur­der, Crystal Morris gave a string of ver­sions of how it had happened.

APRIL 15 — VERSION ONE: Crystal gave her first account when she talked with police at 12:48 a.m. on April 15. Jenkins’ body had been found 10 hours earlier.

Police Chief Godwin and SBI Agent P.E. Brinkley talked to her at Shanna Hall’s house outside Ahoskie.

She told the offi­cers she thought she had last seen Jenkins on April 3, a Monday. Crystal said she and Shanna were walk­ing down Lombardy Street and Jenkins came to his door and said hel­lo. The two girls stood inside the front door for 10 or 15 min­utes and chat­ted before leav­ing, she said.

MAY 5 — VERSION TWO: Three weeks lat­er, on May 5, Crystal went with her moth­er to the Aulander Police Department to meet with the chief and SBI agent Ransome — and there she pro­vid­ed a revised account.

Once again, Crystal told the offi­cers that she and Shanna stopped by Jenkins’ house for a few min­utes on the after­noon of April 3.

Then, for the first time, police heard Alan Gell’s name in con­nec­tion with the murder.

Crystal told the offi­cers that Gell was Shanna’s boyfriend. Then she described a con­fes­sion­al phone call. Gell, she said, had called her col­lect from the Bertie-Martin Regional Jail sev­er­al days before Jenkins’ body was found. He was going to move to Florida when he got out of jail because he had done some bad things and might go to prison for a long time.

Gell then told her some­thing that she could not tell any­one else. According to Crystal, the con­ver­sa­tion went like this:

I killed some­body,” Gell said.

Who?

Allen Ray Jenkins.”

Why?

Gell would­n’t say.

How?

I shot him twice, I shot him in the chest. … I took some mon­ey, that’s all I took, just the mon­ey. I threw the gun in the woods. … If you ever tell any­body what I did, I’ll do the same to you, or if I can’t, don’t think I won’t have some­body else do it.”

When?

I did it the night that Shanna and I left to go to Maryland,” the night of April 3. It was a shotgun.”

And, Crystal added, Gell smoked Marlboro Lights.

MAY 17 — VERSION THREE: Twelve days lat­er, police taped a phone con­ver­sa­tion in which it became clear that Version Two was a lie.

In this May 17 call, Crystal admit­ted that she was at the mur­der scene. She spoke in a ram­bling, pro­fan­i­ty-laced phone con­ver­sa­tion with her boyfriend, Gary Scott, with Shanna heard in the back­ground. Scott had just returned from being ques­tioned by Ransome and Godwin about the mur­der. He gave Ransome per­mis­sion to tape the con­ver­sa­tion with­out the girls’ knowledge.

Crystal, after being told by Scott that police sus­pect­ed she had been in Jenkins’ house when the mur­der occurred, began rehears­ing her story:

Crystal: They think one of us were there.”

Shanna: They don’t think we were both there?”

Crystal: I don’t know.

In an appar­ent ref­er­ence to Gell’s sup­posed con­fes­sion­al phone call in Version Two, she continued:

Crystal: All right. I told them what Alan told me, right?”

Scott: Yeah.”

Crystal: Alan told me that he shot him twice in the chest, right?”

Scott: Yeah.”

Crystal: Mr. Kenny told me that my uncle told him that [Jenkins] was only shot in the chest one time and that half of his face was blown off. So there. How do you explain that?”

Scott: How do you explain that, Chris?”

Crystal: I don’t know how to explain any god­damn thing. I’m going f – ing crazy.”

At anoth­er point, Crystal yelled at Shanna to stop talk­ing to Gell, who was in jail.

Shut the f– up. … You have said some­thing to Alan about it. Yes, you did, Shanna, because one day I told you to shut up when you were talk­ing to Alan.”

Meanwhile, Scott repeat­ed­ly implored his girl­friend to tell police that he had noth­ing to do with the mur­der. Only she could clear his name, he begged.

Crystal said she need­ed time. I can’t just call and say, Hey, look. Check this out. Me and Alan Gell killed a moth­erf – . Don’t take Gary to jail. Take me for 10 goddamn years.’ ”

JULY 3 — VERSION FOUR: Six weeks lat­er, on July 3, Crystal con­fessed to a role in the mur­der, when she and her moth­er met at the Aulander Police Department with Ransome and Godwin. The chief and the SBI agent knew she had been lying and want­ed her to take a poly­graph. Crystal refused but even­tu­al­ly began talking.

On Monday, April 3, Crystal said, she was in Jenkins’ bed­room, help­ing him fix a video­cas­sette recorder. Jenkins was wear­ing only a tow­el. She went to the kitchen to get a drink. She said she was in the hall­way when she saw Gell shoot Jenkins twice in the chest with a dou­ble-bar­reled shot­gun. Jenkins was stand­ing in his bed­room in front of his waterbed. Gell had told them he planned to rob some­one to get mon­ey to leave North Carolina. And, Crystal added, Shanna Hall was there, too.

JULY 5 — VERSION FIVE: Two days lat­er, Shanna’s par­ents hired a lawyer in Ahoskie to rep­re­sent their daugh­ter and Crystal, whom they regard­ed as part of the fam­i­ly. Crystal pro­vid­ed anoth­er account to the lawyer, Perry Martin, in a long con­ver­sa­tion in which she said they had no idea that Gell was going to kill Jenkins — that it had been a total surprise.

JULY 26 — VERSION SIX: The ele­ment of sur­prise dis­ap­peared when Crystal gave Version Six to the chief and the SBI agent at the SBI office in Greenville on July 26. In its place was a con­spir­a­cy to rob Jenkins, hatched in con­ver­sa­tions on the after­noon of April 3 and car­ried out that night.

I think I’m going to have to hurt your friend,” Gell said, accord­ing to Crystal.

According to Crystal’s nine-page state­ment, the three talked and set­tled on a plan: The girls would dis­tract Jenkins so he would­n’t see Gell sneak into the house. Gell planned to use a long knife to stab Jenkins. There’s a loaded shot­gun in the bed­room, Crystal said. Told that the house next door was only a few feet away, Gell said he would use a pil­low to muf­fle the sound. Gell asked how long would it take some­body to find Jenkins’ body. A few days, Crystal said.

In this account, Crystal rearranged the mur­der scene as well. Jenkins was killed as he stood in the bed­room door­way, not at the foot of the bed as she had said in Version Four.

As Crystal relat­ed Version Six to Ransome and Godwin, anoth­er SBI agent inter­viewed Shanna in a dif­fer­ent room. The stories matched.

The match­ing accounts con­vinced the two inves­ti­ga­tors that they had cracked the case: As Godwin would lat­er say, In their final state­ments, they told the truth as they knew it.”

The next day, July 27, Ransome and Godwin con­front­ed Gell at the Bertie-Martin jail. He had been released April 20 and put under house arrest, but now was back for vio­lat­ing the house-arrest conditions.

The inves­ti­ga­tors had pre­vi­ous­ly inter­viewed Gell on July 1. Now, he repeat­ed what he had said the first time — he did not know Jenkins, he did­n’t know where he lived, he had noth­ing to do with the mur­der. As Ransome asked ques­tions, Gell wrote answers on a note pad, sev­en pages worth, and end­ed with this: Please do not believe two peo­ple who have been togeth­er for­ev­er and also had 3 or four months to talk out a sto­ry to blame me.”

Ransome react­ed angri­ly. He went into bad-cop mode, putting his face inch­es from Gell and yelling at him.

Gell could feel the agen­t’s hot breath, feel the spit­tle as Ransome ques­tioned his manhood.

You were too scared to stab him, you cow­ard! You were too scared, you had to go get a gun, didn’t you?”

Insulted, Gell yelled back.

If I had been there, if I had a knife, I could have done it.”

Godwin thought that Gell was on the verge of con­fes­sion, but holding back.

Re-inter­views

Still, Ransome and Godwin had a prob­lem. In each of Crystal’s ver­sions, the mur­der occurred April 3. But the SBI and the dis­trict attor­ney files had state­ments from 17 peo­ple say­ing they had seen Jenkins alive after April 3.

The next day, July 28, Godwin and Ransome set out to clear up the dis­crep­an­cies. They went to Ahoskie and re-inter­viewed four wit­ness­es who had seen Jenkins buy­ing gas, fish and a meal on April 10.

Ransome and Godwin informed each wit­ness that Jenkins had died April 3. Each one then gave a new state­ment to the effect that they were not sure of the actu­al date, just that it was in early April.

Armed with the revised state­ments, Godwin and Ransome returned to Aulander to look for two key wit­ness­es — Jenkins’ next-door neigh­bors, Bobby and Mary Hunt.

The two offi­cers found Mary Hunt at her job at Farm and Home Gas Co. at the cor­ner of Main and Commerce.

Ransome lat­er dic­tat­ed a report from this inter­view: Hunt was re-inter­viewed because it was learned that Allen Ray Jenkins had been shot and killed on Monday, April 3, 1995. Hunt stat­ed that she last saw Jenkins on Saturday morn­ing, April 11995.”

Mary Hunt did not learn the con­tents of this report until a reporter showed her a copy in October 2002. The Hunts are clear on their sto­ry: She last saw Jenkins on Saturday, April 8, six days before his body was found. She was sit­ting in her office, wait­ing for the clock hands to hit noon so she could go to lunch, when she saw him stop at the traf­fic light out­side her window.

Oh, no,” she thought. He’s get­ting ready for anoth­er party tonight.”

The next day, April 9, Bobby Hunt saw Jenkins cook­ing fish in the back yard with some friends. Bobby Hunt went to bed ear­ly, as he did every Sunday. He need­ed to be at work at the Food Lion in Williamston at 5 a.m.

A grand­son and his friend were play­ing when he went to bed. About 10 p.m., Bobby Hunt was awak­ened by a loud rum­bling sound. He went out and told Mary to qui­et the children down.

She told her hus­band she was the only one there. The chil­dren had left an hour ago.

All that week, the Hunts noticed that Jenkins’ kitchen light was on con­stant­ly, shin­ing into their bedroom.

The Hunts, who still live in the brick ranch house at 301 Lombardy St., are just as cer­tain that the kitchen light was not on for two weeks, and that there were no qui­et week­end evenings before Jenkins’ body was found.

And the grass: Jenkins mowed his lawn twice a week, and the grass had not gone unmowed for two weeks. It would have been much higher.

Shown the SBI file stat­ing she last saw Jenkins on April 1, Mary Hunt shook her head at Ransome’s report.

This is not right,” she said. That’s wrong there. I did­n’t say April first. He must have put that down wrong.”

Mary Hunt’s com­ments came sev­en years too late for Alan Gell.

On Aug. 1, 1995, Ransome and Godwin arrest­ed Alan Gell in the first-degree mur­der of Allen Ray Jenkins.

Staff writer Joseph Neff can be reached at 8294516 or jneff@​newsobserver.​com.