Wyoming
Unpacking Future Packers: No. 23, Wyoming OL Caden Barnett
The Unpacking Future Packers Countdown is a countdown of 100 prospects who the Green Bay Packers could select in the 2026 NFL draft.
Brian Gutekunst has consistently invested in the offensive line. Since taking over as general manager of the Green Bay Packers in 2018, Gutekunst has drafted 17 offensive linemen. Out of those 17 picks, 12 of them were on Day 3.
With the Packers needing to bolster the depth of their offensive line, Gutekunst could once again target an offensive lineman on Day 3 of the 2026 NFL Draft, with a potential target being Caden Barnett. The Wyoming offensive linemen checks in at No. 23 in the Unpacking Future Packers Countdown.
A native of Texas and a high school offensive tackle, Barnett redshirted during his first season at Wyoming. In 2022, he started one game at right tackle. The following season, Barnett started 10 games at right tackle. In 2024, Barnett started 12 games at right tackle. During his final season at Wyoming, Barnett started 12 games at right guard.
“Caden Barnett represented loyalty for Wyoming in a landscape where that isn’t prioritized enough,” Alex Taylor, a University of Wyoming beat writer for WyoSports, said. “He’s one of the few players in this year’s draft class to play his entire career for one school, and that benefited him enormously with his development since coming out of high school. His continuity in the program allowed him to develop into a key leader for the team.”
At 6-3, 316 pounds, with 33-inch arms and tackle-guard versatility, Barnett certainly checks the boxes for the Packers. Throw in his athleticism and the potential to play center and he screams “Green Bay Day 3 offensive lineman.” Barnett clocked a 1.73 10-yard split, a 4.55 short shuttle, and a 7.65 3-cone.
Barnett is a strong run blocker. He plays with a ton of energy and is always looking for work. The Wyoming product has a high football IQ and understands how to use angles to help him open up running lanes. His athleticism is on full display when he gets out in space. He has nimble feet and moves like a tight end. He doesn’t labor and is quick to hit his landmarks. Barnett plays with a low-center gravity and stays under his blocks to great surge.
“There are several clips of Barnett running 15 yards upfield and pancaking a defensive back on a run play,” Taylor said. “He is very athletic and agile for his size, which allows him to use his size advantage to gain leverage on edges or up the middle. He played both tackle and guard in college, which has given him a variety of looks in run blocking.”
Barnett is probably best suited to play guard at the next level. He’s a bit heavy-legged and quicker edge rushers can give him issues. Get him inside, and he could thrive. During his lone season playing guard, he allowed 1 sack and 18 pressures. Out of those 18 pressures, six of them came against Nevada, where he played 35 snaps at right guard and 30 at right tackle. He stays balanced in his setup and doesn’t panic in his reset. His football acumen shows up in pass protection. He has alert eyes.
“His pass protection is fairly consistent,” Taylor said. “Aside from the occasional blow-by or penalty, Barnett has proven more than capable of defending his quarterback at both guard and tackle. He was playing in one of the worst passing offenses in the country the past two seasons, which made a lot of Wyoming’s plays predictable in certain situations.”
Fit with the Packers
In theory, the Packers have their starting offensive line in place for the upcoming season. They’ll roll out Jordan Morgan, Aaron Banks, Sean Rhyan, Anthony Belton and Zach Tom to protect Jordan Love.
Adding a player like Barnett, who offers four-position versatility, could prove to be incredibly valuable as the Packers need to bolster the depth of the offensive line.
With his experience, athleticism and work ethic, it’s not out of the realm of possibility that Barnett could challenge Belton for reps at right guard.
Even if Taylor doesn’t earn a starting role immediately in Green Bay, adding a player who could play multiple positions on Day 3 of the draft is a great use of resources.
“If anybody knows about Caden Barnett as a prospect, then they’ve probably seen the viral videos of him yelling and screaming up and down the field,” Taylor said. “His energy and willingness to be vocal exemplify who he is as a player. He has no problem leaving everything he has out on the field for his teammates, which isn’t something people can say about every NFL prospect in today’s era of NIL and transferring every other year.
Wyoming
Election Q&A: Douglas Moore for Wyoming House District 31
Wyoming
As immigrants self-deport from Wyoming, small towns could get ‘hollowed out’
Wyoming’s economy has a problem: The population is shrinking rapidly. In less than five years, the number of deaths could eclipse births. That could make it hard for rural towns to keep enough families to keep schools open or enough youthful entrepreneurs to start new businesses.
But there is one bright spot.
Between 2020 and 2025, “rural Wyoming gained about 8,400 new residents during that time, and nearly 30% of that growth, which equals around 2,600 people, came from international migration,” said The Daily Yonder rural data journalist Sarah Melotte. She’s been covering how immigration is staunching rural America’s population decline in states like Kentucky and Wyoming. “So a huge part of Wyoming’s rural population growth is coming from people who were born outside the U.S.”
But as Wyoming adopts more hardline immigration policies, some immigrants are choosing to leave.
Case in point: 27-year-old Ana Castro. She came to Jackson at age seven. Growing up, she got straight A’s and started volunteering in high school.
“I joined the Rotary Club. I was actually the Rotary student-of-the-month at one point,” Castro said over Zoom from her new apartment in Mexico City. “I joined the Latina Leadership program, which also has connections to the University of Wyoming. I joined different student organizations. I also was dabbling in immigration work at the time, and I was just very passionate about social causes.”
But Castro didn’t consider herself a Wyomingite until she got a full Hathaway scholarship to the University of Wyoming. There she earned a degree in criminal justice and eventually a job working for Laramie Main Street, a nonprofit advocating for local businesses. She helped found the Wyoming chapter of Juntos, an immigrant advocacy group, and sat on the boards of both the Laramie Plains Civic Center and the Laramie Public Art Coalition.
All the while, she was trying to get legal citizenship. Both of her sisters are legal citizens – one was born in the U.S. and the other married a citizen – and her mom has permanent residency because she was able to claim amnesty. That option was available to Ana as well but required testifying about traumatic events. Her mental health issues made this impossible.
“ I tried every single avenue to try to fix my status, and I exhausted all my options,” said Castro.
After Trump’s election, Castro began feeling unsafe. Especially when friends warned of ICE sightings in Laramie.
“I started to get really paranoid,” Castro said. “In the spring, we had a few incidents where immigration, whether it was a rumor – and there were a couple times where it wasn’t a rumor and immigration was present in Laramie. I remember I had to pack up all my stuff from the office at Main Street and [my boss] took me home one time. [Another time] my coworker drove me home.”
Castro had a mental health break. She couldn’t eat, couldn’t sleep.
“I remember laying in bed and just thinking, ‘Okay, I think I have to leave,’ in order to protect myself and in order to be able to move forward in a way that I felt was dignified,” said Castro through tears.
Her community in Laramie threw her a going away party.
Three months later, Castro flew to Mexico City, population 9 million. She hadn’t lived in a city larger than 30,000 since she was a child. She left behind all her belongings and her beloved dog, Paco, taking only two small suitcases and a carry-on. It was a difficult transition. For the first month, she lived with an aunt and uncle she barely remembered.
“I remember sobbing and saying, ‘You don’t understand because I had my future planned out. I had my entire future planned out in this beautiful community that I adored in the state that I loved and was so proud to be from.’”
Castro thought that future would include growing the Laramie arts and culture community. She’d been doing that by teaching pottery at the Laramie Plains Civic Center.
There, Jessica Brauer, the director of the center, went on a search to find signs of Castro. She made a beeline for the pottery studio where Castro spent much of her time.
“I’m curious if there’s any of her pieces left here,” Brauer said.
She looked over the name tags of artists on the shelves, but Castro’s name was gone. All of her artwork had been taken away, too.
“She taught workshops in here with Laramie Public Art. She made her own art that she sold,” Brauer said.
In a recent op-ed she wrote for WyoFile, Brauer said people like Castro are leaving because Wyoming is sending a message of cruelty.
“I think when Governor Gordon announced his support of ICE, I think that was probably a moment in which Ana and many people around the state said, ‘Well, that changes the risk I’m willing to take to stay in this place.’”
Brauer said that message is hurting nonprofits. For instance, she’s not getting as many volunteers these days and not as many organizations are partnering with hers.
“That weight is on my shoulders and it’s impossibly unsustainable.”
Rural data journalist Sarah Melotte said last year Albany County would have lost 158 people but instead it grew by 13 people, thanks to a foreign-born influx. Other counties have benefitted, too, Platte County perhaps most of all.
”In the five-year period between 2020 and 2025, Platte County didn’t see all that much population change as a net change. However, between 2020 and 2025, they saw almost 80 new residents from international immigration. So they would’ve lost population, and that’s not an insignificant number, considering this is a small rural county,” Melotte said.
Goshen County is gaining almost all of its growth from an immigrant influx. But Melotte said recent immigration policies may be causing a chilling effect for these counties.
“Population decline can hollow out essential workers from rural communities and decrease the tax base that towns rely on to keep lights on, to pay administrators. There are fewer nurses, there are fewer teachers,” she said.
According to U.S. census data, 26% of the state’s service jobs are held by immigrants, compared to 16% of locals. Immigrants are also twice as likely as locals to fill construction jobs. Same goes for jobs in the arts, entertainment and recreation sector. Plus, the state’s immigrant population is quite a bit younger. While only 26% of locals are working age, 44% of immigrants are.
“I think a lot of these jobs that normally would be held by Wyoming citizens are being held by immigrants,” said Platte County Representative Jeremy Haroldson, a founding member of the Wyoming Freedom Caucus that supports Trump’s deportation policies.
“When we pay out a wage to someone who’s not keeping that money in our communities or in our economy, we lower the level of our pond,” Haroldson said. “We are now at a point across the nation where we’ve watched the immigration workforce lower the level in the pond. I understand they’ve got families they’re feeding, they’ve got loved ones they’re taking care of, and I’m not at all upset about that. But I do understand the economic driver that it does for our entire economy, that is very detrimental.”
Still, Haroldson is sympathetic to Castro’s situation.
“If you consider yourself a Wyomingite, that’s awesome,” he said. “Let’s make the paperwork to make you a Wyomingite. That said, we also need to make sure that it isn’t so hard for these individuals to do that that’s an impossibility.”
It might be too late for Castro. She found an apartment, is working remotely for Laramie Main Street and making friends.
“I mean, here I have free healthcare,” Castro said. “I’m free. I have so much peace and calm.”
Castro has no plans to try to return to Wyoming.
Wyoming
Trans Woman Faces Assault Charges For Self-Defense, Despite Wyoming’s “Stand Your Ground” Law
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A trans woman in Wyoming is facing two felony charges — aggravated assault and possession of a deadly weapon with unlawful intent — after pulling out a gun on someone who had pushed her to the ground, per journalist Jeff Victor of The Laramie Reporter.
Rihanna Kelver was standing outside the Crowbar & Grill in Laramie, Wyoming, when a man — whom local state news publication Cowboy State Daily identified as Scott Durham — began to shout homophobic and transphobic slurs at her. Durham later shoved Kelver to the ground with such force that she injured her tailbone, per court testimony and surveillance footage detailed in the affidavit reviewed by The Laramie Reporter, which initially reported the altercation.
In response, Kelver drew a pistol from her bag, put in a round and pointed the weapon at Durham, which caused him to flee. Kelver, per The Laramie Reporter, kept the safety on and never fired.
Despite Wyoming’s “Stand Your Ground” statute, which allows people to use reasonable force in moments of self defense, Kelver faces up to 15 years in prison for both charges, as well as up to $11,000 in fines, per Cowboy State Daily. Kelver faces an additional year and $1,000 fine for a charge of interference with a peace officer.
Per the statute, “A person who uses reasonable defensive force … shall not be criminally prosecuted for that use of reasonable defensive force.”
According to video evidence detailed in court documents reviewed by The Laramie Reporter and Slate, Kelver was “alone, outnumbered, physically assaulted and left on the ground facing multiple aggressors,” as Durham was not alone during the incident.
Despite the overwhelming evidence that Kelver acted in self defense, a judge at a pretrial hearing agreed with the charges against Kelver, forcing her to go to trial.
Some of the facts of the case are disputed, per Cowboy State Daily, including Durham’s claim that Kelver initially approached him and that Durham only shoved her because she was the aggressor, despite Durham admitting this was a “three-on-one” situation, with the numbers stacked against Kelver.
Police who reviewed the footage wrote that Kelver approached Durham and that Durham pushed Kelver, per the affidavit.
Kelver allegedly said that she “did not recall pulling the firearm during the altercation.” Kelver said she had the gun for personal safety, having been stalked just the night before.
Per Cowboy State Daily, the charges against Kelver have changed multiple times. In November, Albany County Attorney Kurt Britzius lowered the charges from two felonies and a misdemeanor to two misdemeanors: reckless endangering and interference.
Kelver wrote a letter to Judge Robert Sanford apologizing for using the gun.
“I do not wish to spend any time attempting to garner sympathy nor victimhood,” Kelver wrote, per a court file reviewed by the Daily. “I wish to offer my sincerest apologies and condolences to your court and to my community.” She added she was “deeply sorry.”
However, following that letter, negotiations fell apart and the felony charges were reinstated in March.
“I fully respect the legal process and intend to address the facts in court, not necessarily anymore in the media,” Kelver told the Daily over the phone. “I did not go looking for confrontation. I genuinely believed my safety was threatened and my actions were taken in response to that threat.”
Once the facts are heard, she added, “it will be clear that this was a defensive response to a frightening situation. I just ask that people not rush to judgment based on incomplete information.”
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