Delbert Teague was executed by the State of Texas for the murder of Kevin Allen
According to court documents Delbert Teague would fatally shoot Kevin Allen and shot and injured two other men before kidnapping a woman who was driven hundreds of miles where she would be sexually assaulted
Delbert Teague would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death
Delbert Teague would be executed by lethal injection on September 9 1998
Delbert Teague Photos
Delbert Teague Case
Delbert Boyd Teague Jr., 37, described by prosecutors at his murder trial as a “1-man slaughterhouse” killed Kevin Allen in 1985. Allen, 21, was 1 of 3 men shot in the head with a .22-caliber pistol at Inspiration Point, a scenic turnout.
As part of the same incident, a woman was abducted and driven hundreds of miles from Texas to Louisiana. She was repeatedly raped. The 2 other men shot in the head survived.
Asked if he had any final statement, Teague said, “No.”
In a prepared statement released after the execution, Teague said, “I have come here today to die, not make speeches. Today is a good day for dying.”
He concluded with the Latin Phrase, “Est sulares oth mithas,” which prison officials translated as, “My honor is my life.”
Teague was pronounced dead at 6:24 p.m., 7 minutes after a dose of lethal drugs was released into his arms.
1 of the 2 needles in the execution procedure entered near a tatoo of the Grim Reaper on Teague’s right arm.
The U.S. Supreme Court last week rejected an appeal in his case, and there were no last-minute attempts to halt the execution.
“It’s not one of the things you take great joy in,” Wes Ball, 1 of the prosecutors who tried Teague, said of the punishment. “But there wasn’t anything about his case that I thought I would ever have any regrets about the outcome. It was appropriate.
Teague, who was from the Houston area, had an extensive criminal record.
In May 1982, he pleaded no contest in the shooting death of a Houston man and was sentenced to 2 years in prison for involuntary manslaughter.
He also got 5 years for forgery and weapons possession convictions but was paroled 13 months later. As a juvenile, he was imprisoned for coaxing a homeless person into his car, then pushing the man out while driving on a Houston freeway. He also had an arrest for aggravated robbery.
Court records show Teague and an accomplice, Robin Partine, of Arlington, were fleeing the Tarrant County park after abducting the 19-year-old woman and pistol whipping, robbing and tying up her 23-year-old boyfriend, Thomas Cox. As Teague and Partine were driving away in a stolen truck, Allen and 2 friends were driving into the area.
Cox had managed to free himself and ran to Allen for help. Teague suddenly reappeared and opened fire, hitting the 3 men in the truck. Allen died of his wounds. 1 of the other 2 suffered permanent brain damage. The 3rd wounded man recovered and testified at Teague’s trial.
“These young men happened to be at the wrong place at the terribly wrong time,” Scott Wisch, a former Tarrant County assistant district attorney who also prosecuted Teague, said. “Teague perceived them as interfering with the abduction.”
The woman was driven to Houston, then Beaumont and into Louisiana, where at a truck stop she managed to leave a note in a rest room appealing for help. An employee there found the message and notified sheriff’s deputies, who arrested Teague and Partine in Iberville Parish after a 100-mph chase. The abducted woman also testified at Teague’s trial.
2 months before the Allen slaying, Teague and Partine, also an ex- convict, were arrested in Oklahoma for burglary of a bowling alley. They were using false identities, however, and were allowed to post bond.
Partine, now 41, is serving a life term for aggravated sexual assault. He had 2 previous convictions in Indiana where he was released from parole supervision in 1982 after serving less than 3 years of a 14-year sentence.