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Cowboy State Daily Video News: Wednesday, May 20, 2026

9 min · 20 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Cowboy State Daily Video News: Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Descripción

It's time to take a look at what's happening around Wyoming for Wednesday, May 20th. I'm Mac Watson. – Fremont County ranchers say roaming Great Pyrenees have killed livestock and terrorized neighbors for years in a rural feud that's now spiraled into criminal charges. Cowboy State Daily's Kolby Fedore reports that court records show Kerri Johnson was charged with property destruction last week in the latest development of an escalating feud. "Two ranch families in Kinnear, Wyoming, have been telling authorities for years that a neighbor's dogs have been coming onto their property and killing their calves. Over the last several years, Kerri Johnson has been charged with an animal at large. Last week, she was charged with property destruction over $1,000 that is a felony, which carries a potential sentence up to 10 years in prison. Rancher Chris Eberline says that her husband was confronted by Johnson when he was fixing fences. Eberlyne said things escalated at a court hearing in December when she told the judge, 'Somebody's gonna get hurt.'" Ranchers living near the Johnson property tell Cowboy State Daily that the legal fight barely scratches the surface of the last several years' struggle. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/05/19/you-shoot-my-dogs-ill-shoot-you-wyoming-feud-over-ranch-dogs-explodes/] – It took about 36 hours, but most of Rawlins had power restored Tuesday as a fast and furious spring snowstorm wreaked havoc in southcentral Wyoming. Cowboy State Daily's Andrew Rossi reports that the Carbon County Sheriff's Office spent the day rescuing residents and helping snow-stranded drivers. "Rawlins just had a rough time of it on Monday. They had a power outage that lasted nearly 36 hours. They were still trying to get power back to some places in Rawlins on Tuesday afternoon. So the Carbon County Sheriff's Office and the Medical Center down there, they had the deal not only with the calls of residents, but dozens of people who were stranded on I 80 because I 80 was closed for most of the day, and they were having problems with their cell phones throughout this whole period, too." Carbon County Sheriff Alex Bakken tells Cowboy State Daily that he knew he was in for a tough day when he set out to start coordinating the response to the power outage, his truck got stuck in the snow. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/05/19/rawlins-slowly-reopens-after-36-hours-with-no-power-stranded-motorists-on-i-80/] – A man found dead in a car in the parking lot of the Cody airport after being missing for two weeks died of blunt force injuries and exposure to the elements. Cowboy State Daily's Jen Kocher reports that the family still wants answers as to how their relative ended up in that car. "Sean Ezekiel Hughes was found in a car that was not his at the Cody Airport. He disappeared on April 5, and he had been missing for 11 days when he was ultimately discovered in that vehicle by police. Autopsy reports show he died of a shoulder blunt force shoulder injury, likely from a fall, and also that combined with the elements, and the coroner said that the fall would have caused internal bleeding that combined with cold temperatures ultimately what killed him." Park County Coroner Cody Gortmaker tells Cowboy State Daily that the timeline of the man's death is unclear as to when exactly he got into the vehicle and ultimately died. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/05/19/missing-man-found-dead-in-car-at-cody-airport-died-of-injury-and-exposure/] – Cheyenne's Public Service Committee didn't endorse or reject a 12-month moratorium on new data centers after hours of emotional testimony Monday. Cowboy State Daily's Renee Jean reports that state legislators say the clash exposes issues the Wyoming Legislature may need to address. "It really exposed a lot of issues that are at the state level, so you know, more guard rails around water use, more transparency. Should these things be going through the industrial siting commission right now? They have a different process that's kind of governing how they function, different people who are kind of going over whether they fit in a community, maybe the industrial siting commission needs to be part of that layer, that's, you know, some of the questions that lawmakers were asking after listening to all the testimony in Cheyenne." The committee's Monday decision highlights deep divisions over the rapid growth of data centers in Cheyenne, as nearby residents worry about water use, noise, rising electricity demand and the pace of development. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/05/19/cheyenne-city-committee-wont-support-or-reject-data-center-moratorium/] – I'll be back with more news from Cowboy State Daily right after this. Cowboy State Daily news continues now… – Wyoming groups that host hunts for disabled veterans fear a proposal to change Game and Fish regulations on what counts as a disability could freeze out some vets. Outdoors Reporter Mark Heinz reports that the change could disqualify vets with PTSD or disabilities that aren't apparent. "Nothing has been decided yet, but there's a proposal to, well, the big one is to change what would qualify someone as disabled to get special disabled hunting access. Currently on the books, if you have a qualifying letter, if you have a letter from the VA stating that you are 100% disabled, you are allowed to do that, but what they're talking about getting rid of that and having it just be straight up, you have to have a blindness or some sort of full physical disability. These veteran groups that host these hunts for disabled veterans are a little bit concerned about that, because they're saying if you cut that out, a lot of the people we host might not qualify for special disabled hunts." The Wyoming Game and Fish Commission is considering several changes [https://wgfd.wyo.gov/media/33644/download?inline] to hunting regulations, including removing a provision for counting a "100% service-related disability," based on a letter from the Department of Veterans Affairs. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/05/19/wyoming-veterans-fear-changing-disability-hunting-regs-could-freeze-them-out/] – The federal government looks likely to reject Wyoming's plan to invest roughly $1 billion in projected Trump-backed grants for rural medical services. Cowboy State Daily's Clair McFarland reports that Wyoming has to spend the money quickly instead. "Wyoming wanted to invest the money and live off the interest to support these structures over like a three decade or more timeline, and the Fed said, 'No, you got to spend it within a year.' Governor Gordon did go ahead and announce that the feds approved the grant for the first year in that tighter deployment timeline that doesn't involve a long-term investment." Wyoming had planned to invest the majority of a roughly $1 billion projected federal grant for rural hospitals, ambulances, baby delivery and other health care so the state could benefit from gains beyond the five-year grant cycle. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/05/19/looks-like-feds-wont-let-wyoming-invest-trump-backed-health-care-grants/] – Yoder breakaway roper Hadley Thompson could make history this weekend as the first to earn $2 million with one throw of a rope. Cowboy State Daily's Julie Mankin reports that the 18-year-old could get a huge payout for beating the best in the world. "Hadley Thompson is only 18 years old, still in high school, and she's got experience winning first over the best in the world at breakaway roping. She's a phenom. This is not your typical rodeo. This thing is in Globe Life Field, Arlington, Texas, home of the Texas Rangers. She's the only breakaway roper from Wyoming in contention. There are also a couple of team rompers and a saddle bronc rider from Wyoming that have a chance for the big money." What could an 18-year-old do with $2 million? Thompson tells Cowboy State Daily that it's been hard for her not to think about that. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/05/19/torrington-18-year-old-breakaway-roper-to-compete-for-historic-2-million-payout/] – After a mama duck panicked when her ducklings fell into a Sheridan storm drain this past weekend, a big bearded hero climbed in to get them. Cowboy State Daily's Kolby Fedore reports that one woman who watched the rescue says it restored a little of her faith in humanity. "A Sheridan mother named Franny Blackwell was on her way home from Home Depot on Saturday when she saw a large gathering by a drainage off to the side of the road. She flipped a U-turn, and when she pulled over, she saw a large bearded man going into the sewer to rescue baby ducks. There were about six ducks in total that he pulled out. At first, Mama Duck seemed very suspicious, but by the end it was as if she knew that her babies had been rescued by this mystery man. We never learned the identity of the hero in this story, although several people said that their faith in humanity has been restored again." Blackwell tells Cowboy State Daily that she never learned the names of the people who stopped to rescue the ducklings. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/05/19/stranger-with-big-beard-climbs-into-sheridan-storm-drain-to-save-ducklings/] And that's today's news. Get your free digital subscription to Wyoming's only statewide newspaper by hitting the Daily Newsletter button on Cowboy State Daily Dot Com [https://cowboystatedaily.com/] - and you can watch this newscast every day by clicking Subscribe on our YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMZ6-7-Nv-0ycvqgTIttIFQ] channel, or listen to us on your favorite podcast app. Thanks for watching - I'm Mac Watson, for Cowboy State Daily.

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Portada del episodio Cowboy State Daily Radio News: Monday, June 22, 2026

Cowboy State Daily Radio News: Monday, June 22, 2026

It's time to take a look at what's happening around Wyoming for Monday, June 22nd. I'm Mac Watson – Wyoming needs tens of thousands of new homes, but only a fraction of the need is under construction because builders say the math doesn't work. Cowboy State Daily's Renee Jean reports that even middle-class wages aren't high enough to afford to buy houses while home-building costs just continue to rise. "They're building homes that are 400,000 and up, and so why not any affordable units for regular working class people who have a median income of 75,500. When I went to developers about why aren't people building homes in this range, that would be the affordable range for Americans, and they basically can't pencil out below $400,000. So we have this huge gap, between $300,000 and $400,000. They can't make the numbers work." Scott Hoversland, who heads up the Wyoming Community Development Authority, puts the number of homes the state needs somewhere between 28,000 to 38,000 by 2030 — roughly 2,070 to 3,680 homes annually to keep up with population growth and aging infrastructure. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/21/why-a-shortfall-of-more-than-20-000-homes-isnt-enough-to-get-wyoming-building/]. – A Cheyenne judge Friday ordered the Wyoming Board of Equalization to apply a law capping residential property tax increases at 4% annually, for now, despite the board's claim the cap violates the Wyoming Constitution. Cowboy State Daily's Clair McFarland reports that Gov. Gordon sued the board last week. "Gordon's office, through the Attorney General's personnel, asked Judge Hibben, 'Hey, make the tax board follow the law real quick while we sort through these tax values.' And Judge Hibben granted that request. The judge basically said, 'Look, we're going to sift through the constitutional issues. The court's going to look at those and decide, but for now you just follow the law.' So, this is what we call a temporary restraining order. It's generally a very quick court order telling people what they're supposed to do while the controversy is going on in court." The Wyoming Constitution calls for equal and uniform property taxes within each tax category, and this tax cap creates stark disparities in how some homes, despite being nearly identical, are taxed in different regions, the report says. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/19/judge-orders-wyoming-board-of-equalization-to-enforce-4-property-tax-cap-for-now/] – A tornado made a rare appearance in Sublette County on Saturday, bringing with it more than 700 power outages. Cowboy State Daily's Andrew Rossi reports that Meteorologist Don Day calls it a "landspout" tornado. "It's not a true tornado in the sense that it comes down from the clouds, rather it's a spinning closer to the surface that winds its way up to the clouds, and it lasted probably no more than 30 minutes, and even that's really long. They tend not to be long-lived, and they're not as destructive as tornadoes. So it was literally just a perfect storm of circumstances as thunderstorms and a cluster of thunderstorms was moving through Wyoming on Saturday that brought rain to some places and thunderstorms to others." Meteorologist Don Day tells Cowboy State Daily that landspouts tend to be more common in the spring and summer, especially when Wyoming's area gets humid. When summer thunderstorms carry moisture into Wyoming, the likelihood of landspouts increases. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/18/john-bear-one-of-the-freedom-caucus-most-powerful-members-has-a-challenger/] – A Casper man says his wife is making him sell his beloved Bigfoot-hunting rig. Cowboy State Daily's Kolby Fedore reports that the car is a lifted, 1984 AMC Eagle wagon with 150,000 miles that owner Austin Griess says attracts too much female attention. "Griess posted the car online last week, and it got a lot of attention, especially from males who commented that maybe he should keep the car and get rid of something else. According to gearhead Ron Gordon in Sublette County, who spent a lifetime admiring station wagons, this AMC Eagle would have been the perfect family car. It is all-wheel drive, so it was made to go camping, especially lifted." Griess found the 1984 AMC Eagle 4X4 Wagon on Facebook Marketplace during the dead of winter. During the cold months he worked on it, installing a lift kit, tuning it up and making it reliable enough to serve as a daily driver. Then he said he turned it into a true "chick magnet" by adding a modern stereo. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/20/casper-man-selling-his-1984-amc-eagle-chick-magnet-because-wife-wants-it-gone/] – I'll have more news from Cowboy State Daily right after this. Cowboy State Daily News continues now…. – Laramie's Erika Babbitt-Rogers considers herself to be a professional "worm wrangler." Cowboy State Daily's Mark Heinz reports that she says anglers and pet owners are regular customers, but the real demand is for worm poop. "She has discovered that really worm castings, which is just a fancy way of saying worm poop, is a huge seller, and the reason is that it makes really good, highly nutritious, slow release fertilizer for plants or lawns and whatnot. She says sells mass amounts of worm poop to people, and she said some people turn it into tea, and don't get the wrong idea, it's not tea you drink. What they do is they make like a tea mixture that they can spray on their plants or spray on their lawn, so it's tea for plants, not for people." Erika Babbitt-Rogers grew up in agriculture and always figured livestock would be part of her life, but she didn't expect that "livestock" would be worms. Around 2009, she got the idea to raise worms on a larger scale and sell them for fishing bait and food for people's pet reptiles and, of course, worm poop for gardening. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/21/wyomings-worm-wrangler-sells-nightcrawlers-for-bait-worm-poop-for-fertilizer/]. – The American Dream in Powell is Wyoming's last operating drive-in theater and has survived since 1949 as a retro experience for movie-goers. Cowboy State Daily's Renee Jean reports that the current owner, Kathleen Heny, bought it in 2004 just to save it. "One day her husband came home from the hardware store, and, 'Oh, honey, our drive-in theater is for sale.' They kind of had a soft spot for this theater, and they just decided that they were afraid that somebody's going to buy this and, you know, knock it down and build something else, and they didn't want that, and so they bought it themselves. They operated themselves.There are 370 drive-in theaters left in America. These guys are the Iron Man of an era that is long gone, the 1950s and 60s. These were fueled by the post-war boom. Everybody had their automobiles with their flashy chrome fenders. They needed places to show it off. The drive-in theater was perfect." Some of the locals go so far as to bring full-size couches in their pickup beds and camp stoves to make s'mores and other snacks as the overhead sky darkens and a sweep of stars begins to shine. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/20/wyomings-last-drive-in-theater-powells-american-dream-open-for-78th-season/]. – Wyoming's prisons have 109 vacant positions, despite years of recruiting. Cowboy State Daily's Kolby Fedore reports that now, the Wyoming Department of Corrections is turning to a certain group of people because of their training. "Former retired director of the WDOC, Bob Lambert, said that these positions are incredibly hard to fill. It's a demanding job. There are a lot of safety concerns. Inmates, as he puts it, are not usually there for singing too loud in church. Prison officials are currently recruiting active duty military members to serve as correctional officers in these prisons, so it's a pipeline that would help members who are nearing the end of their contract with the military to quickly start a new career with the Wyoming Department of Corrections." Through a new partnership with the U.S. Department of Defense's SkillBridge program, transitioning service members can train with the Wyoming Department of Corrections before separating from active duty, creating what officials hope will become a new pipeline into correctional careers. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/18/hageman-barrasso-wont-support-democrat-bill-to-stop-federal-land-sales/] – Yellowstone rangers resorted to using a front-end loader and a bit of creativity to get a 2,000-pound bison carcass away from a busy road near Canyon Village on Friday. Cowboy State Daily's Andrew Rossi reports that a wildlife photographer said a grizzly was circling the area determined to have the roadkill for breakfast. "First they tied a chain around the bison's neck and lifted it, but then they couldn't get it up high enough to get in the dump truck, so they had to tie up one of its legs and lower it in that way, and this was all within public view. Most things that die in the park stay in the park. So when there's a bison carcass that people see near the road and the parks move it, they take it to a secret location where it can be dumped, and then it's free for all the animals in the park to utilize, because that's a big source of food for a bunch of animals." Photographer April Mead has seen and shared images of Yellowstone's carcass removal process before, but this one was notably different. It seemed as if the park's experienced staff were improvising the best way to get the job done quickly and safely. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/19/yellowstone-rangers-bulldoze-2-000-pound-bison-roadkill-while-grizzly-circles/] — And that's today's news. Get your free digital subscription to Wyoming's only statewide newspaper by hitting the Daily Newsletter button on Cowboy State Daily Dot Com [https://cowboystatedaily.com/] - and you can watch this newscast every day by clicking Subscribe on our YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMZ6-7-Nv-0ycvqgTIttIFQ] channel, or listen to us on your favorite podcast app. Thanks for watching - I'm Mac Watson, for Cowboy State Daily.

22 de jun de 20268 min
Portada del episodio Cowboy State Daily Video News: Friday, June 19, 2026

Cowboy State Daily Video News: Friday, June 19, 2026

It's time to take a look at what's happening around Wyoming for Friday, June 19th. I'm Mac Watson – Data centers with huge power needs are lining up to plug into Wyoming's power grid. Cowboy State Daily's Renee Jean reports that regulators, utilities and lawmakers are wrestling with how to serve massive electric loads without spiking rates for regular consumers. "As Senator Case put it to me, it's like comparing Earth to Jupiter, the kind of loads that we used to deal with versus what we're looking at, it's Earth to Jupiter, orders of magnitude different. so into all that matrix comes Senator Lummis. She is pushing a federal fix to, you know, ensure that data centers can connect in a reasonable timeframe to the grid and get the transmission that they need. Does this kind of federalize the grid when it comes to data centers, so is that bypassing local control? Senator Case told me, well, that has implications, you know." Wyoming exports roughly 12 times more power than it uses, a fact regularly touted by data centers planning to build in the Cowboy State, who suggest their projects will help keep more of that power at home. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/18/wyoming-wrestles-with-unprecedented-power-demand-from-massive-data-centers/]. – The Drug Enforcement Administration has installed license plate cameras on or around the Wind River Reservation, authorities confirmed Thursday. Cowboy State Daily's Clair McFarland reports that Sen. Cale Case calls it "somewhat '1984'-ish." "The BIA finally confirms, 'Look, it wasn't us.' The DA, the Drug Enforcement Administration, has an agreement with the tribes, and so my efforts over the past several months to get the tribes to comment have been futile, but Senator Cale Case, at a committee meeting on Tuesday, said this is the growing surveillance state. In an interview Thursday, he said, 'This is 1984 ish.' that doesn't mean everyone within the tribe agrees, but the statements, the public statements, have been that the tribal governments entered into an agreement with the DEA to put these up." Sen. Case added that the installation of the camera is "a big step in our surveillance society." Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/18/license-plate-readers-at-entrances-to-wind-river-reservation-spark-controversy/] – John Bear, one of the most powerful members of the Wyoming Freedom Caucus, has a GOP challenger for his Gillette House district. Cowboy State Daily's Clair McFarland reports challenger Doug Moore says the difference between him and his opponent is he doesn't see himself "being a career politician." "So you got Doug Moore, who works in the coal sector, who's a business owner, longtime resident of Gillette, and you've got John Baer, who also has has backed the coal industry and has been a budget hawk in the legislature. So, looking at these two men, I asked Doug, like, 'What's the differences? Are you going to join the Freedom Caucus?' Because John Baer is a big Freedom Caucus, a big voice for the Freedom Caucus, and Doug Moore said, 'No.' He feels that the Freedom Caucus derives too much direction from its national umbrella entity, and he said he wants to represent the people." Bear countered Moore's statement with "I am the only conservative in this race." Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/18/john-bear-one-of-the-freedom-caucus-most-powerful-members-has-a-challenger/] – A man in Yellowstone who was caught stepping illegally onto a fragile hot spring could get jail time and a hefty fine when park rangers catch up to him. Cowboy State Daily's Andrew Rossi reports that a visitor who posted a photo of the trespasser said, "Don't be this guy." "When Yellowstone catches someone in the act of thermal trespass, they impose fines and even jail time as a way to deter people from repeating the behavior, from straying off the boardwalk, from stepping on the fragile thermal features, because it protects themselves from serious injury or even potentially death, and it protects the fragile landscape, so everyone can enjoy it, but apparently all the fines and jail time and signs and boardwalks aren't enough to stop people, as was evidenced by this person who was caught stepping onto the very fragile terraces at Mammoth Hot Spring, looking for what I can only assume to be a better selfie." Earlier this year, 50-year-old Eric Bedient was sentenced to five days in jail [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/04/10/texas-man-gets-jail-for-leaving-trail-of-footprints-on-yellowstone-hot-springs/] for walking directly across Canary Spring, Mound Terrace, Palette Hot Spring, and Jupiter Terrace at Mammoth Hot Springs in November 2025. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/18/dont-be-this-guy-yellowstone-selfie-seeker-steps-illegally-onto-hot-spring/] – I'll have more news from Cowboy State Daily right after this. Cowboy State Daily News continues now…. – A long-awaited speed test to see whether Wyoming pronghorn are faster than Africa's cheetahs was a bust. Cowboy State Daily's Mark Heinz reports that a buck and a doe antelope were captured this spring near Pinedale by Wyoming Game and Fish researchers, with the animals outfitted with high-tech speed tracking collars and set loose. "They went through all this and everybody was excited, and the darned antelope never got the, I think, the buck that his fastest speed was 27 miles an hour, and it's, it is because what they were hoping for is after they were captured and messed with and set free, they take off running really fast, they didn't, I mean, they went like 20 miles an hour, which, you know, it's probably like a trot for an antelope. for the rest of the two or three hour testing period, they were just wandering around." Officials are hoping to do another test in the winter with the challenge being how to nudge the pronghorn into an all-out sprint, without unnecessarily harassing or stressing them. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/18/ultimate-test-wyoming-antelope-vs-african-cheetah-to-see-which-animal-is-faster/]. – George Mocsary, a firearms law expert, says the U.S. Supreme Court's Thursday opinion upholding a marijuana user's right to keep a gun is important for Wyoming. Cowboy State Daily's Clair McFarland reports that Mocsary says "the case is ultimately about whether government can take away a constitutional right." "I was asking him about this law, and he's like, this is bigger than marijuana, or I was asking him about this case, you know, and he said, this is bigger than marijuana. Firstly, guns are part of our everyday life here in Wyoming, but secondly, if the government can just kind of create a broad category untethered from specific showings of danger for that person in that category, then who's next? I mean, I'm paraphrasing, but that's kind of the indication he gave." A federal law bars habitual users of unlawful drugs from knowingly possessing guns. People convicted under that law can face 15 years in prison and lose their carry rights for life. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/18/firearms-expert-says-supreme-court-marijuana-case-important-for-wyoming-gun-owners/]. – Wyoming's congressional delegation says they don't support a Democrat bill that bans the sale of large swaths of federal lands. Cowboy State Daily's Mark Heinz reports that Rep. Harriet Hageman says she opposes any effort that threatens our Western way of life. "Senator Cynthia Lummis, Senator John Barrasso, and Representative Harriet Hagman, all oppose this. They say it's, it's kind of a devil in disguise bill that they see it just causing more problems and causing more federal control and less public access to Wyoming's public lands. I also talked to some Wyoming conservationists who are at least from what they can tell kind of like what they know of the bill so far." The lead bill is H.R. 9176, the Public Lands Integrity Act, introduced to the House earlier this month by Rep. Gabe Vasquez, D-New Mexico. A mirror bill was introduced in the Senate by Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colorado. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/18/hageman-barrasso-wont-support-democrat-bill-to-stop-federal-land-sales/] – For 15 years, Steve Braithwaite has driven a 23-foot banana across the country. Cowboy State Daily's Kolby Fedore reports that on Wednesday, just like hundreds of times before, he was pulled over by law enforcement. "Steve Braithwaite was pulled over in Billings, Montana by a highway patrol trooper. The trooper said that his luggage on the back was covering up his license plate, but Braithwaite claims this happens all the time. He says he is one of the most pulled over men in America. He believes that law enforcement officers are just, just trying to get a closer look at his banana car. He's been driving this car for over 12 years. He got started because he was an antique car collector, and he says that he got bored going to the old car shows. When he was standing in the gas station line, he noticed a banana, and it wasn't curved like a regular banana, it was straight, and that got the wheels turning, and he began to think about how he would make an automobile out of a piece of fruit." Braithwaite tells Cowboy State Daily that he's driving from his native Michigan to Seattle, Washington with his goal to reach all 50 states in his banana car. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/18/giant-banana-pulled-over-in-montana-driver-says-cops-have-stopped-him-100s-of-times/] — And that's today's news. Get your free digital subscription to Wyoming's only statewide newspaper by hitting the Daily Newsletter button on Cowboy State Daily Dot Com [https://cowboystatedaily.com/] - and you can watch this newscast every day by clicking Subscribe on our YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMZ6-7-Nv-0ycvqgTIttIFQ] channel, or listen to us on your favorite podcast app. Thanks for watching - I'm Mac Watson, for Cowboy State Daily.

19 de jun de 20268 min
Portada del episodio Cowboy State Daily Video News: Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Cowboy State Daily Video News: Wednesday, June 17, 2026

It's time to take a look at what's happening around Wyoming for Wednesday, June 17th. I'm Mac Watson – A federal judge in Montana has thrown out more than 1.5 million acres of Wyoming oil and gas leases sold under the Trump administration. Cowboy State Daily's Renee Jean reports that's forced the state to return $50 million in payments. "Why is this case involving one and a half million acres of Wyoming oil and gas leases being heard in Montana and the and the answer, according to the oil and gas industry here in Wyoming, that I talked to, is these environmentalists have discovered a friendly judge in Montana who has ruled against oil and gas now three times on this issue, and so they're venue shopping. So, this group waited like years before bringing this suit, and finally they bring this suit. Well, some of these oil and gas leases have already been developed and are producing oil. They waited that long that some of these are already producing oil. It's enormously destructive to the industry." The decision, issued by Chief Judge Brian Morris out of the U.S. District Court of Montana on June 12th, is sparking outrage in the oil and gas community. It's the third time the Obama appointee has ruled against the U.S. Department of the Interior over the protection of sage-grouse habitat. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/16/montana-judge-tosses-1-5m-acres-of-wyoming-oil-and-gas-leases-costs-state-50m/] – Gov. Mark Gordon on Tuesday sued his tax board for refusing to recognize a 4% limit on property tax increases. Cowboy State Daily's Clair McFarland reports that the governor says the board exceeded its law-given authority, and the executive branch's job is just to "take care that the laws be faithfully executed." "The Wyoming Board of Equalization last week told they issued a public report that was also kind of notice to assessors, like, hey, this 4% cap on property tax increases from year to year looks unconstitutional. It's got these crazy results, and we're not going to certify your tax values if that's in the calculation. and so assessors were scrambling last week, like, how do we deal with this? Whom do we obey, state law or the board that has the duty to certify the taxes? And so Governor Gordon on Tuesday was like, let's just ask a court to settle this, so he filed a motion in court for the court to block the board's non-certification, and for the court to settle the issue. The constitutional dispute." Gov. Gordon also asked the court to block the actions of the State Board of Equalization. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/16/gordon-sues-his-tax-board-to-stop-it-from-blocking-property-tax-cap/]. – With its stark white feathers and red eyes, what Audubon Rockies says looks like a rare 1-in-30,000 albino robin has been hanging out in the yard of a Cheyenne-area couple. Cowboy State Daily's Kolby Fedore reports that the homeowner says "It's following its mother around and begging for food." "Heather Wiseman lives outside of Cheyenne. She says by day she's an X-ray technician, and at night she's become something of an amateur bird watcher, so she was really excited when she came home and she found a white robin, which has since been confirmed to be an albino bird. According to Zach Hutchinson, the community science director with Audubon of the Rockies, when albinism shows up in birds like robins, they will be all white or partially white, but the key is that you'll notice they have pink eyes, and in this Robins case, it does have those signs." Heather and Eric Wiseman tell Cowboy State Daily that they've been keeping tabs on a snow-white fledgling robin with pink-red eyes since it first appeared in their yard June 6th. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/16/rare-1-in-30-000-albino-robin-hangs-out-in-yard-of-cheyenne-area-couple/]. – Wyoming's attorney general on Tuesday said he appointed two prosecutors to investigate whether Secretary of State Chuck Gray violated any laws by releasing sensitive voter data to the federal government. But Cowboy State Daily's Clair McFarland reports that neither decided to charge Gray with a crime. "George Powers filed a writ of mandamus, telling the court, hey, I don't think the AG is doing what he's supposed to be doing here. Can you make him, can you get a special prosecutor, High Court, and get this investigation going? Well, the AG fired back Tuesday, saying we already got two special prosecutors, and neither of them wants to charge Chuck Gray. So the high court now can decide whether George Power's writ of mandamus petition is moot, meaning irrelevant, and I suppose George Powers can look at his options." In April, George Powers, a semi-retired attorney based in Cheyenne, filed an official complaint with the AG's office accusing Gray of violating a state election law. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/16/ag-says-prosecutors-declined-to-charge-chuck-gray-with-a-crime/] – I'll have more news from Cowboy State Daily right after this. Cowboy State Daily News continues now…. – Rail Tie, one of Wyoming's most controversial wind projects, got a new five-year extension from Albany County on Tuesday. Cowboy State Daily's Kate Meadows reports that the lone commissioner who voted against the extension says the company is "fishing to keep the project alive." "The Albany County commissioners voted two to one today to extend a permit for work on the Rail Tie wind project south of Laramie. The project has been controversial, it's on 26,000 acres and would generate 504 megawatts of wind energy. However, it's another big wind project. There are opponents arguing that it would play into this wind wall that we've been hearing about, the Wyoming wind wall, where all these big wind projects are connecting to each other in southeastern Wyoming, and kind of creating this massive wind farm." The vote allows developers to continue work on the 504-megawatt facility proposed on roughly 26,000 acres about 15 miles south of Laramie. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/16/albany-county-extends-permit-for-rail-tie-wind-project-despite-opposition/] – Hundreds of swallows are swarming and nesting in Angie Pitts' lean-to in Mountain View. Cowboy State Daily's Andrew Rossi reports that she didn't mind until she saw the bird droppings covering her vehicles, which she describes as "gross." "In two weeks, it looks like all of her vehicles have been painted with white polka dots, and she's not particularly happy about it. Unfortunately, there's not a lot you can do. One thing she has been told to do, but has refused to – which is wise – because it's illegal, is to pull out the .22 and deal with the swallows that way. And while that's a very Wyoming solution to the problem, it is illegal to shoot swallows or do anything to disturb them while they're nesting, both by state and federal law." When Pitts pulled out her GMC pickup, she was "disgusted" by the number of bird droppings. Her red truck was so thoroughly covered, from hood to tailgate, that it looked as if she had painted it with white polka dots, but was quickly cleaned up with soap, water, and a pressure washer. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/16/cody-fire-department-back-in-stampede-parade-allowed-to-throw-water-balloons/] – After years of watching lawn chairs and coolers appear earlier and earlier along the Rodeo parade route, the Sheridan City Council on Monday banned people claiming spots too early. Cowboy State Daily's Kate Meadows reports the police chief says this has been a problem for years. "Police Chief Travis Kultiska has been asking residents for years to please set up just one day before the parade, rather than, you know, three or four days before, and he said rather than people complying, the problem seemed to get worse, where people were showing up earlier to claim their spots, and more people were showing up, so he felt like he had no choice but to approach the city council and ask for a resolution." The new rule prohibits anyone from placing personal property on public sidewalks, streets or alleyways along the parade route before 5 p.m. the day before the parade unless they receive authorization from the city. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/15/wyoming-game-and-fish-kills-bighorns-that-wandered-into-cheyenne/]. – A nonprofit in Mills is training dogs to interrupt military veterans' PTSD attacks. Cowboy State Daily's Dale Killingbeck reports that veteran Carol Salveson says after she lost her Green Beret son to suicide, she poured herself into a new mission. "She's a former Air Force, a veteran Air Force weather person, but when her son, a Green Beret, committed suicide, she decided she was going to train dogs. She just felt like I'm going to do this, and she started doing it on her own to help veterans. And then she found this organization, Project Kenny, which was started on the West Coast, and now it's centered in Casper, and she is their dog trainer, certified dog trainer." Salveson, who has always been a dog person, said her son also loved dogs and even when deployed to Afghanistan would find a feral dog to adopt. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/16/wyoming-group-trains-dogs-to-interrupt-veterans-ptsd-attacks/] — And that's today's news. Get your free digital subscription to Wyoming's only statewide newspaper by hitting the Daily Newsletter button on Cowboy State Daily Dot Com [https://cowboystatedaily.com/] - and you can watch this newscast every day by clicking Subscribe on our YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMZ6-7-Nv-0ycvqgTIttIFQ] channel, or listen to us on your favorite podcast app. Thanks for watching - I'm Mac Watson, for Cowboy State Daily.

17 de jun de 20269 min
Portada del episodio Cowboy State Daily Radio News: Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Cowboy State Daily Radio News: Tuesday, June 16, 2026

It's time to take a look at what's happening around Wyoming for Tuesday, June 16th. I'm Mac Watson – Wyoming's coal sector is startled at Republican candidates who oppose data centers. Cowboy State Daily's Clair McFarland reports that industry leaders say the revival of coal is largely due to projected demand for energy from data centers. "It's an interesting issue in Republican politics, because you have a lot of Republicans in Wyoming that are saying, 'Whoa, slow down or stop the data centers, particularly on agricultural land.' So, we're an energy state and we're an ag state, so that's I think we find a little the divergence, because you have people, Republicans in ranch country in particular, who have concerns about water pollution, other things, and yeah, that's that's the divide is usually Republicans are pro energy, but if it's an issue for ranch owners, then all of a sudden you're going to see those fractures." President Donald Trump has touted the sector's expansion as part of a coal industry revival [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/04/trump-sending-700-million-to-coal-industry-including-wyoming-coal-plant/], and part of beating China in a technology advancement race. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/15/coal-industry-frustrated-with-gop-candidates-who-want-to-kill-data-centers/]. – A Wyoming man named Aron Snyder confirms he's the person seen tossing, kicking and stabbing a coyote in a video. Cowboy State Daily's Mark Heinz reports that Snyder admits the video is "a very bad optic," and apologized in a weekend social media post. "He said, as he recalls, somewhere around 2019-2020 they were hunting coyotes on a Texas ranch, or somewhere thereabouts, and and that's when the when the events in that video transpired, and you know, in a video statement that he put up on social media, he said he understood that it was a bad optic, and he also said he found no fault or had no quarrel with the company that he'd worked for, which is a primitive outdoors, it's a clothing and gear company, but they, they announced that they had terminated him." Cowboy State Daily reached out to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, asking if the department is investigating the incident depicted in the coyote-killing video. TPWD law enforcement spokeswoman Maggie Berger promptly responded with an email saying the department would check into it. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/15/a-very-bad-optic-wyoming-man-apologizes-for-controversial-coyote-killing-video/] – Despite calls to delay or deny a 3,500-acre annexation for Microsoft data centers, Cheyenne's Public Services Committee narrowly recommended approval Monday. Cowboy State Daily's Renee Jean reports that a councilman urged them to postpone to give the city time to negotiate a $50 million agreement. "The most notable thing today was Councilman Larry Wolf's proposal to create a community benefit agreement. He called for the public service committee to postpone or even recommend denial of the annexation of Microsoft until the city has a chance to negotiate a $50 million community benefit agreement, his idea would be that money would be used for permanent improvements to Cheyenne, the city would consult with Microsoft, but would ultimately be the sole decider of what to do with that money." Despite Wolfe's push, the PSC voted 2-1 to recommend annexation of the 3,500-acre property to the full council, along with zoning changes and future land-use map changes. Councilman Pete Laybourn cast the lone "no" vote on these measures, which will be before the Cheyenne City Council at its next meeting June 22. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/15/cheyenne-committee-backs-microsoft-annexation-while-councilman-pushes-50m-deal/] – A group of young men is suing the Wyoming Boys' School claiming they were attacked, confined in a chair, and made to wear a mask. Cowboy State Daily's Clair McFarland reports one security guard is alleged to have said, "The best part of the chair is watching the kids cry and scream." "What you have right now are two very different accounts of what's going on. You have the logs from the Wyoming Boys School, where staffers are saying these boys were attacking people, destroying property, being threatening, causing this problem. That's why he was restrained. That's why he was placed in detainment. That's why he was placed under a special status. And you have the boys coming back and saying here are areas where this restraint or detainment was completely excessive. Here's where the cameras don't support the video, doesn't support what the state is saying, and so where what you have is kind of a factual clash, and the federal judge needs to decide whether it's enough of a factual clash to send this case to trial." Three men — Blaise Chivers-King, Charles "Rees" Karn, and Dylan Tolar — sued the Wyoming Department of Family Services [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2024/04/30/wyoming-boys-school-denies-it-beats-humiliates-and-confines-teens/], the Wyoming Boys' School in Worland, and 10 former and current employees in 2024. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/15/court-filings-say-wyoming-boys-school-staffers-restrained-attacked-boys/] – I'll have more news from Cowboy State Daily right after this. Cowboy State Daily News continues now…. – A Minnesota man says a stranger spent years building a life in Wyoming using his identity, earning more than $500,000, fathering a child and leaving Martin Almendarez owing child support. Cowboy State Daily's Kolby Fedore reports that Almendarez says "I don't even know him nor have I ever been to Wyoming." "For years Martin Almendarez has been struggling with someone using his identity to earn income that they don't pay taxes on, and last week he learned from the IRS that they were going to start garnishing his wages for income that he didn't receive. Also, he learned that he owes child support for a child that he never had. Almendarez was finally able to get a hold of police in Gillette, and they were able to make an arrest, which gave him great relief last week when 45-year-old Jose Reyes was taken into custody." According to Gillette PD, Reyes faces four counts of unauthorized use of someone's personal identity. He's currently being held at the Campbell County Detention Center on a $500,000 cash-only bond. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/12/investigation-launched-in-graphic-coyote-torture-video-allegedly-shot-in-wyoming/]. – A pair of young bighorn sheep rams that wandered into Cheyenne were killed by Wyoming wildlife officials. However, one biologist and wildlife researcher says it's not necessary. Outdoors Reporter Mark Heinz reports that Jack States says they should be quarantined instead. "Game and Fish made the decision to go ahead and euthanize those rams, and they donated the meat. I think it went to the First Lady's kind of food pantry program, but the reason those sheep were killed was because of disease risk. Anytime sheep wander into a settled area like that, there's the chance they might interact with domestic sheep or goats, and they can pick up a lot of pathogens, the chief of which is pneumonia, which can be really hard on wild sheep herds." While bighorn sheep are hardy enough to survive Wyoming's worst weather in its roughest terrain, they are highly susceptible to disease. Pneumonia outbreaks, sometimes transmitted from domestic sheep, can be bighorn conservationists' worst nightmare. In some cases, entire herds are nearly wiped out. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/15/wyoming-game-and-fish-kills-bighorns-that-wandered-into-cheyenne/]. – A first-of-its-kind renewable natural gas facility under construction in central Nebraska will convert cattle manure into pipeline-quality natural gas from the cow waste produced by a huge feedlot. Cowboy State Daily's Kate Meadows reports that leaders are saying this project could benefit Wyoming ranchers and farmers. "There's a lot of excitement over this agricultural renewable energy project in Nebraska with Neogenics and the partner with this feed lot. It's a newer project for them. Jim Magagna with the Wyoming Stock Growers Association said a project like this will probably be more beneficial for the ranchers and farmers who use the land, who have the land for this, than the actual production of energy. We have lots of natural gas, but this could create an additional revenue source for ranchers and farmers who are struggling in a very tight cattle market." The project will capture methane produced by decomposing livestock manure and convert it into renewable natural gas, or RNG, that can be injected directly into existing natural gas pipelines. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/15/nothing-goes-to-waste-nebraska-builds-plant-to-turn-cow-manure-into-natural-gas/] – So far, nobody's claimed a renegade Russian tortoise found wandering around in Thermopolis's Riverside Cemetery. Cowboy State Daily's Andrew Rossi reports that the cemetery worker who found it says "I'm hoping someone didn't abandon it, because that's not cool." "Tortoises are common pets in Wyoming, even though there are no tortoises native to Wyoming. So, in this instance, it seems a Russian tortoise was found in Riverside Cemetery in Thermopolis. Nobody knows how it got there, and more intriguingly, nobody's claimed it. There are a lot of people who want to claim it, who want to take care of it, and it has found a good foster home that could become its forever home." The last native Wyoming tortoise died millions of years ago, so the cemetery worker who found the tortoise knew he was dealing with a tortoise on the lam. He picked up the tiny tortoise, which was less than six inches long, and gave it a safe space to munch on some lettuce. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/15/i-saw-something-moving-renegade-russian-tortoise-found-in-thermopolis-cemetery/] — And that's today's news. Get your free digital subscription to Wyoming's only statewide newspaper by hitting the Daily Newsletter button on Cowboy State Daily Dot Com [https://cowboystatedaily.com/] - and you can watch this newscast every day by clicking Subscribe on our YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMZ6-7-Nv-0ycvqgTIttIFQ] channel, or listen to us on your favorite podcast app. Thanks for watching - I'm Mac Watson, for Cowboy State Daily.

16 de jun de 20269 min
Portada del episodio Cowboy State Daily Radio News: Monday, June 15, 2026

Cowboy State Daily Radio News: Monday, June 15, 2026

It's time to take a look at what's happening around Wyoming for Monday, June 15th. I'm Mac Watson – Wyoming lawmakers Friday vowed to rework the Food Freedom Act after months of controversy at small-time food producers and family-owned shops. Cowboy State Daily's Clair McFarland reports that business owner Mark Nelson who owns the Hippy Cow Creamery says he was ordered to stop selling raw milk lattes. "He was describing these Catch-22's, where he could get a commercial food license, but then he'd still have to pasteurize milk, and he can create raw milk lattes in his home kitchen, which is a few feet away from what they consider his commercial kitchen, because it's a professional grade latte machine, and so he was talking about all these just weird little catches in the law were with some inconvenience and some trouble, you could sell these lattes under very similar circumstances. Several lawmakers talked about wanting to perfect and discuss and develop bills that Representative Steve Johnson brought to expand the Food Freedom Act." Nelson tells Cowboy State Daily that to survive the huge setback in business from losing the latte sales include installing a $20,000 ADA-compliant bathroom at the shop even though there's another ADA-complaint bathroom "literally 65 feet away." Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/14/legislators-take-aim-at-closing-wyoming-food-freedom-loopholes-to-help-sellers/] – Wyoming business owners say they are leaving a lot of money on the table because they can't fill open jobs, forcing them to turn away customers and reduce hours. Cowboy State Daily's Renee Jean reports that one owner says he keeps banging his head against the wall, trying to come up with a solution. "The labor crunch is so tight in Wyoming, people are doing things that are unheard of, you know. This guy with Ranch Eats, he's not only got health insurance for his employees, that's 100% employer paid, but he's also offering a 401 k plan with a 4% match on top of that, and then you know he has an employee of the quarter program, you get a $250 bonus, plus a limousine trip. Wyoming loses 70% of its of the people who are in their 30s. They've lost 70% of those by then. By the time people reach 30, 70% will leave the state and go somewhere else. That's the highest, pretty much in the country." With too few workers to go around, businesses have been quietly curtailing their hours on what seem like odd days — Tuesday and Wednesday — and billing that as "new summer hours." Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/13/from-cafes-to-clinics-wyomings-labor-crunch-is-holding-the-economy-back/] – The Wyoming Game and Fish Department is investigating a graphic video where an alleged Wyoming man tortures a seemingly wounded coyote. Outdoors Reporter Mark Heinz reports that the video was sent to Cowboy State Daily by a private investigator who says he also sent it to Game and Fish. "There's allegations that a person who is reportedly from Wyoming was videoed grabbing what appears to be a wounded coyote by a tail, pulling it out from underneath a bush, throwing it, the thing tries to run, but can't really run, because apparently it's been wounded. Guy runs up to it, kicks it in the head, pulls out a knife, stabs it. A private investigator sent this information out to Cowboy State Daily, to the Wyoming Game and Fish Department, to agencies and animal rights groups. Game and Fish did confirm that they are investigating something in connection to that incident, because it's an active investigation, they can't offer any information." Game and Fish Spokeswoman Amanda Fry confirms that the department is investigating the alleged incident. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/12/investigation-launched-in-graphic-coyote-torture-video-allegedly-shot-in-wyoming/]. – A detective was about to fly to Wisconsin to arrest the lead suspect in the 32-year cold case of a woman whose nude body was dumped along I-80 when he got the news the suspect was dead. Cowboy State Daily's Jen Kocher reports that authorities zeroed in on Roger L. Dirkey as the alleged killer, but they were too late. "Investigators believe that Roger L Durkee is responsible for murdering the former Jane Doe Shafter Jane Doe, who has since been ID as Marion Alexander. so the investigators from the Elko County, Nevada Sheriff's Office were a week or so away from flying out to Milwaukee to actually arrest Dirkey. While they're making their travel plans to go out there, they learned that he had died. For all practical purposes, they thought he was alive because he wasn't showing up dead in the databases, so there was some glitch between when he died and his getting entered in the Wisconsin Vital Services, so as they're making these plans, they learned that he actually had died, and they got it confirmed. His DNA was the likely match of DNA found on her body. And then they had other evidence too." Authorities say during the investigation, they found that he had searched nearly 90 Google searches for Shafter Jane Doe, that was one strong piece of evidence in the investigators' minds. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/14/after-32-years-suspected-shafter-jane-doe-killer-avoided-justice-by-dying/]. – I'll have more news from Cowboy State Daily right after this. Cowboy State Daily News continues now…. – Steer wrestlers raised money last week for the Montana woman who lost her hand in a rodeo accident. Cowboy State Daily's Kate Meadows reports that the woman's husband, who is the Montana State rodeo coach, says, "It's pretty neat that a college kid could organize something like that." "Jaden Whitman and his older brother were driving home from a rodeo in Washington state when they started talking about what they could possibly do to help the Whitaker family. So he texted his coach to see if that would be okay, and Coach Kyle Whitaker responded and said yes. He told Cowboy State Daily that he was just almost choked up that he couldn't believe that a college student would come up with an idea like that." The Presley Whitaker Benefit Steer Wrestling Jackpot happened last weekend in Whitehall, Montana, raising nearly $40,000, mostly to help cover Presley's mounting medical bills. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/14/steer-wrestlers-rally-to-raise-40-000-for-woman-who-lost-hand-in-rodeo-accident/] – Sgt. Zach Burns remains in critical condition after being shot multiple times by a gunman in Baggs on Monday. Cowboy State Daily's Greg Johnson reports that the mayor says people reacted immediately and like heroes. "This deputy was already around town, so as soon as the call came in. He was there and got shot several times, and it seems that he probably owes his life to a couple of local business owners who have businesses right close. They rushed over, and from what the mayor was telling me, there was a lot of blood, and that they acted quickly to try to stop that, to slow that down until EMS got there, and EMS also got there very, very quickly." A deputy being shot, coupled with a high-speed chase and shootout with the suspect, is enough to make Monday one of the darkest days in the 116-year history of the tiny town of 411 people. Read the full story HERE [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/12/deputy-shot-in-baggs-saved-by-quick-acting-residents/]. – Divers who plunge the depths of the Colorado River and Flaming Gorge Reservoir find all kinds of treasure, from antique six-shooters to cellphones. Cowboy State Daily's Dale Killingbeck reports that one woman burst into tears when given her phone back that had her grandchild's birth video on it. "He found this part of a two-mile stretch on the Colorado River below the Hoover Dam. He said that he just happened to dive one time, and he started finding wallets and different things, and so he said, 'Hey, this is great, you know? It makes diving exciting.' So he started talking it up with others, and now every Saturday, pretty much they go and dive that stretch of the river. And like three years ago, he found a six shooter that was in its holster, rusted, and he believes it was down there for at least 10 years." Tony "Gunner" Pierce of Provo, Utah and his diving partner, Ken Wige, who is from Las Vegas, are advocates for diving in the West and enjoy rallying people to different spots from Wyoming to Utah and Idaho year-round to explore what is going on underneath the surface of reservoirs, rivers, and lakes. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/13/six-shooters-and-cellphones-divers-find-all-kids-of-treasure-in-colorado-river/] – Longtime Yellowstone RV travelers David and Jennifer Sinclair were leaving a gas station in Canada when the front bumper of their truck tore off while being towed. Cowboy State Daily's Andrew Rossi reports that a video of them dragging the bumper down the road has been viewed millions of times. "They were driving the RV when the incident happened. No one was in the pickup truck, but someone else spotted them going down the highway, and it went viral based on that, because they were dragging a bumper down the highway and nothing else. But they said that they were aware of what happened. Within a minute, someone flagged them. I think the same person who took the video flagged them, they pulled off, they recognized what happened, they recovered their pickup truck, and nobody was harmed, and thankfully they were at a stoplight when the whole thing happened." Fortunately for the couple, the motorhome was stopped at an intersection when the tow base broke off. Sinclair said it "could have been much worse if it failed in motion." Unfortunately, they didn't notice and kept driving, leaving their front bumper-less truck sitting in the middle of the road. Read the full story HERE. [https://cowboystatedaily.com/2026/06/13/oh-no-full-time-rv-couple-lose-truck-when-front-bumper-tears-off-while-towed/] — And that's today's news. Get your free digital subscription to Wyoming's only statewide newspaper by hitting the Daily Newsletter button on Cowboy State Daily Dot Com [https://cowboystatedaily.com/] - and you can watch this newscast every day by clicking Subscribe on our YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMZ6-7-Nv-0ycvqgTIttIFQ] channel, or listen to us on your favorite podcast app. Thanks for watching - I'm Mac Watson, for Cowboy State Daily.

15 de jun de 20269 min