Johnny Dale Black Executed In Oklahoma For 1998 Stabbing, Oklahoma on Tuesday executed a 48-year-old man convicted of the 1998 stabbing death of a horse trainer from Ringling.Johnny Dale Black was pronounced dead at 6:08 p.m. Tuesday at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester. He was the second inmate executed by the state in the past two weeks and the sixth put to death in Oklahoma this year.
Black was convicted of first-degree murder for fatally stabbing Bill Pogue, 54, during a roadside attack near the southern Oklahoma town that left Pogue with 11 stab wounds, broken ribs and punctured lungs. Pogue's son-in-law, Rick Lewis, was also attacked. Lewis suffered more than a dozen wounds but later recovered.
At a hearing before the state Pardon and Parole Board last month, Black begged forgiveness for his actions. But he insisted that he was merely trying to defend his brother, Jimmy Black, from Pogue. The brothers had approached Pogue and Lewis after mistaking their car for that of someone else they had been searching for.
"I deserve to be punished for what I did, but not for defending my family," Johnny Black told the board in November.
Pogue's relatives and friends had petitioned the board to carry out the execution instead of commuting Black's death sentence to life in prison without parole.
"What will bring justice in this tragic case? How can atonement be made for this hideous murder?" wrote Pogue's widow, Lonnetta. "No mercy was shown to Bill on that fateful night. He got no second chances at life.
"I ask you, board members, to let justice be done," she wrote.
Lewis related the mental anguish and survivor's guilt he's experienced since 1998.
"Tell me how, as the only surviving victim, that I can explain the feeling of being the one that survived," Lewis said. "Tell me how to explain to my son — who was 18 days old when this happened — how his daddy couldn't save his granddad."
Pogue's son, Charles Pogue, told the board how the family has battled through bouts of depression and "extreme anger" since Pogue was killed.
"Dad got to be a grandfather for 18 days before his life was taken," Charles Pogue said. "Unfortunately, my two daughters never got to meet their pops.
"I also haven't had the heart to tell them what happened that evening. It's hard to figure out how to tell a 12 and 5-year-old about how evil a person can be," he said.
Randy Bauman, Black's attorney, declined last week to comment on the case.
The Oklahoma Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty said it was planning a demonstration and then a silent vigil outside the governor's mansion Tuesday night to protest the execution.