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According to Texas Monthly, her non-hypnosis account sometimes clashed with her hypnosis account, after which her lawyer, Don Crowder, worked to straighten out the facts. What amounted from her hypnosis was a confession, which led to her self-defense plea. They argued for a few minutes, and Montgomery apologized. Her expression of remorse may have set off Gore, because she then pushed Montgomery into the utility room of her home. She held her ax threateningly in the air, warning Montgomery to stay away from her husband.
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She had walked out onto the driveway with Bethany in her arms. As Allan pulled away, she raised Bethany’s little hand and waved it at him, and for the first time that day Betty had smiled, really smiled. It had to be some emergency; perhaps the baby was sick. He called the Plano hospital and the Wylie police.
Where is Betty Gore's ax murder house? Dallas Property recently listed for $344900 - Sportskeeda
Where is Betty Gore's ax murder house? Dallas Property recently listed for $344900.
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She dried her hair with a towel and then went to get another Band-Aid. But the springy hair around the wound kept the bandage from sticking. Finally she gave up, wrung out her blouse, put on the new blue jeans, threw the old ones in the washer, and waited while the dryer dried her blouse. She ran upstairs, stripping off her blouse and blue jeans as she entered the bedroom. She wiped the blood from her third toe and wrapped a Band-Aid tightly around it, flinching as she felt how deep the cut was.
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The Murder of Betty Gore: Can 41 Axe Blows Be Made in Self-Defense?.
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But she felt herself becoming frightened now that she realized that whatever they did today would be irrevocable. Everything she had done before, no matter how brazen, had been harmless flirtation compared with this. In court, Montgomery cried while retelling the incident and didn't deny killing her former friend.
And it’s really fascinating and thrilling and deep and looks at a lot of different sides of issues, so it’s super exciting. I never want to be doing the same thing twice, so this one is very different. The idea to hold it back until the courtroom scene is because then you are seeing literally the whole murder from Candy’s point of view, and you’re hearing her tell it. And I think the power in that is a profound one.
A Dance of Death
Forty of them occurred while Betty Gore’s heart was still beating. The blow resounded with a hollow pop, like a cork coming out of a wine bottle, and then blood gushed across the back of Betty’s neck. Candy dropped the ax, jumped away from Betty, and felt time shift into slow motion.
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Crowder picked up the ax and placed it on his right hip. “But you did kill her with the ax, didn’t you? ” he said as he walked back toward the witness box. She rose abruptly from her chair and walked through the open door of the utility room and out of sight. Candy wondered how recently Betty had found out. Candy also realized, with a quiet panic, that she had nothing to say to her.

Real estate appraisers can be challenged to determine the impact of the stigmatized properties and the amount of impact will vary based on the event that occurred as well as the time that has passed. The murder happened in the home of Allan and Betty Gore in a typical ranch-style 3 bedroom, 2 bath house with a 2 car garage. The home was built in 1974 and according to the appraisal district is 1,697 sq ft. It is still there and has sold six times since the murder. She was telling the truth when she said she didn’t know how she would deal with the loss of Allan. She had grown comfortable with the idea of loving two people.
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The ending title cards that give updates on the people in the story are tragic for so many of the characters. I walked away thinking Candy turned her life around the most. The update says she works in family therapy alongside her daughter, working on depression, which tells me she mended that relationship, given everything that happened. This whole cast is like a dream; I feel like the luckiest director. I think Candy was tried for the wrong crime. I feel like manslaughter, second-degree murder.
In the courtroom Candy looked sober and matronly; Crowder had been explicit about what she was to wear. She wore earrings and a loose-fitting blue dress, dark and subdued, with a hemline well below her knees. Over her shoulders she draped a white woolen sweater.
The good news was that he was a quick learner. For his part, Allan was positively transported. Candy was so responsive and energetic—she moved so much—that Allan found it more exciting than any sexual experience he had ever had. It was good for him because it seemed so good for her. He couldn’t keep going very long, but he remembered the feeling for days. As soon as Allan walked into the Montgomery house that day, he broke into laughter, for the first thing he saw, hanging above the room, was a huge piece of butcher paper.

So it was about being in her shoes, walking in her shoes. Having to pretend, but pretend because she couldn’t face her own horror. The intention was for the audience to walk in those shoes. How much does a murder impact the value of a property? Like most things in real estate, the answer is “it depends”.
Then two Dallas journalists, John Bloom and Jim Atkinson, wrote a book about the murder called Evidence of Love, upon which a movie was made called Killing in a Small Town, starring Barbara Hershey. According to The Dallas Morning News on Oct. 30, 1980, Montgomery testified that the two struggled. Somehow, she wrestled control of the ax, and struck Gore on the head, she said.
He thought about calling her but then felt silly and awkward. He also thought, a little guiltily, of how different Candy was from his wife. Betty was as dour as ever; Candy was always up, always busy, self-confident, easygoing, warm. All she wanted was a little fun with another man.
She sounded like a stuffy schoolmarm, overenunciating her sentences and banishing all emotion from her voice. By October 1980 Crowder was ready for the trial. When it started, he stunned everyone with the declaration that his client would plead self-defense. And when Candy was called to the stand as a witness, seats for the day’s proceedings were hotter than season passes to Dallas Cowboys games.
Then she heard several more in quick succession; they were low-pitched, like moans, or like the noises people make when they’re having nightmares. She couldn’t tell whether they came from Candy or someone else. District attorney Tom O’Connell argued that Montgomery could have fled the scene instead of attacking Gore so violently. He also argued that Candy striking Betty 41 times with a wooden axe was a disproportionate action. In turn, Candy’s attorneys argued childhood trauma, revealed by a hypnotist, was to blame. Jeffrey Weiss wrote a wonderful piece about the crime in the Dallas Morning News on the murder’s 30th anniversary in 2010.