A mental health evaluator for Wyoming doesnât support a Gillette manâs claim that when he allegedly tried to kill his wife by stabbing her eight times, he was not sane enough to rationalize his actions.
John Stetson Angus Bosh, 31, withdrew his ânot guilty by reason of mental illnessâ plea Friday.
Heâs accused of stabbing his wife in the arms, chest and cheek after a drunken argument at his grandmotherâs house in the early morning hours of Oct. 4.
âIâll always love you,â Bosh told his wife before fleeing the scene, according to the case affidavit.
Authorities took custody of Bosh about two days later.
âDefendant has had an evaluation by the (Wyoming) State Hospital that is not in support of an NGMI defenseâ wrote Boshâs attorney, Campbell County Public Defender Field Office Supervisor Dallas Lamb, in a Friday motion to withdraw the insanity plea.
The contents of the state hospitalâs evaluation, filed Jan. 30, are not publicly available.
Lamb urged Campbell County District Court Judge Stuart Healy III to let Bosh withdraw the plea, saying it would be âin the best interest of justice.â
Healy granted Boshâs request that same day.
But at his Oct. 24 arraignment, Bosh had also pleaded not guilty.
In Wyoming, a person can give both of those pleas simultaneously.
Boshâs case now may proceed to his June 9 jury trial on the ânot guiltyâ plea.
He faces one count of attempted second-degree murder, which is punishable by between 20 years and life in prison, and another of aggravated assault, which is punishable by up to 10 years in prison.
âYou Stabbed Meâ
The case affidavit alleges that Bosh stabbed his wife China Bosh in the chest, arms and cheek on Oct. 4, after drinking heavily at his grandmotherâs house and arguing with his wife.
When Boshâs grandmother left the room, Bosh went into the kitchen and retrieved a knife, the document says.
The affidavit says Boshâs wife tried to leave, but he pushed her back onto the couch, where she curled up in a fetal position.
That was when she felt a hit to the chest, China Bosh told Cowboy State Daily in October.
âI didnât really feel any (stabbing sensation) at first â more of a shock after it got done,â China said at the time. âAll I could say was, âYou stabbed me.ââ
She didnât even realize sheâd been stabbed until she looked down at her shirt and noticed blood soaking through it. He kept stabbing downward at her in an overhand motion, the affidavit says.
The document says Bosh stopped stabbed her and asked if she was going to listen to him. Afraid of being stabbed again, she said yes.
He gave her a kiss and told her he was going to crash his motorcycle and kill himself, the affidavit adds.
âIâll always love you,â he said, according to the document. âIâm sorry I stabbed you.â
Then he left the house.
It wasnât until the adrenaline started to wear off that the pain set in, China Bosh said in October.
Later at the hospital, she told an investigator the pain was a â20â on a 1-10 scale.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





