North Dakota
Former North Dakota Deputy Attorney General Troy Seibel dies at 48
BISMARCK — Former North Dakota Deputy Attorney General Troy Seibel has died.
North Dakota Attorney General Drew Wrigley confirmed the 48-year-old’s death Tuesday afternoon but additional information has not yet been released.
“I was informed this morning that Mr. Seibel passed away. He and I have not communicated since he departed this office in early 2022,” Wrigley said in a statement. “No additional information has been made available to me at this time. My prayers are with Troy’s family and loved ones.”
Seibel, a Mandan resident, served as the North Dakota labor commissioner under Gov. Jack Dalrymple. Former Attorney General
Wayne Stenehjem
appointed Seibel as his chief deputy in December 2016.
Stenehjem
died of cardiac arrest on Jan. 28, 2022,
according to his family. Wrigley was then appointed to succeed Stenehjem in February 2022. Seibel resigned a month later. Wrigley then
replaced Seibel with former Legislative Council attorney Claire Ness.
Days after Stenjehem’s death, his spokeswoman, Liz Brocker, deleted Stenehjem’s email account, an act that Seibel signed off on, according to reports, prompting a criminal investigation into the matter. Seibel’s emails were also deleted about a month after he resigned from the post.
In March 2024, Wrigley announced there would not be any
charges in connection with Stenjehem’s deleted emails.
However, Seibel began to face personal legal issues in late 2022 following his resignation from public office.
Seibel was arrested in November 2022 after a North Dakota Highway Patrol trooper responded to a rollover crash at McKenzie Drive and the West Bismarck Expressway in Mandan. The trooper said he saw Seibel going 125 mph in a 55 mph zone before hitting a snowbank, according to a declaration of probable cause.
Seibel was then charged with driving under the influence of alcohol at more than twice the legal limit. At that time,
Seibel also faced charges stemming from a 2023 incident in Mandan
in which police responded to a hotel pool on Feb. 18 after receiving reports that a man was “making threatening, rude and sexual comments towards children,” according to court documents. A Morton County judge issued a warrant for Seibel’s arrest on a misdemeanor charge of disorderly conduct.
In May 2023, Seibel pleaded guilty in Morton County District Court to the DUI charge. Prosecutors then agreed to stop pursuing a disorderly conduct charge filed in connection to the February disturbance. Prosecutors said that
as long as Seibel did not violate any laws and stayed away from the Mandan hotel for 360 days, the case would be dismissed and sealed,
but prosecution could resume if Seibel broke the conditions of the agreement. The charges no longer appear in the North Dakota court record system.
For the DUI, Seibel was sentenced to 360 days of unsupervised probation and ordered to undergo a chemical dependency evaluation and complete any recommended treatment for the DUI charge. North Dakota Department of Transportation records noted Seibel’s license was suspended at the time.
However, according to court records, Seibel never completed the chemical dependency evaluation that was ordered as part of his probation terms. A probation revocation hearing was scheduled for July 9, 2024, in Morton County but Seibel did not appear in court and a bench warrant was issued for his arrest.
Wendy Reuer covers all things West Fargo for The Forum.