Wyoming
2 Years After Vanishing, New Investigation Into Boyfriend Of Irene Gakwa
GILLETTE — It’s been two years since a nursing student from Kenya disappeared from her home in Gillette, and a neighboring law enforcement agency has opened a new and unrelated investigation into her live-in boyfriend.
Irene Gakwa, now 34, vanished from the home in Gillette that she shared with Nathan Hightman in late February 2022.
Hightman, 40, is now serving a three- to six-year sentence in Wyoming state prison after pleading guilty last fall to three felonies related to financial and intellectual property crimes against her.
Among those crimes include draining Gakwa’s bank account after she disappeared and maxing out her credit card with more than 80 purchases totaling nearly $7,000, including a shovel, pair of boots and pants from Walmart for $36.19, according to court documents.
Hightman also pleaded guilty to deleting her email account after she vanished.
Police say Hightman has been uncooperative in their investigation and is considered a person of interest in her disappearance. However, to date, no charges have been leveled against him related to her whereabouts.
As of Friday, there are no new updates in Gakwa’s case, Brent Wasson, Gillette deputy chief of police, told Cowboy State Daily.
New Investigation
A new investigation opened by the Torrington Police Department in November stems from the period in which Hightman had been incarcerated at the Wyoming Medium Correctional there, where he’s been since being transferred from the Campbell County Detention Center in late June 2023.
Following the unknown incident, Hightman was moved to the maximum security Wyoming State Penitentiary in Rawlins where he is now, according to the Wyoming Department of Corrections offender locator. It’s not clear if the open investigation had anything to do with his transfer.
Per policy, WDOC does not share information about an inmate’s transfer.
“Movement of inmates and the specific reasons (beyond intake) are not releasable due to safety and security reasons,” Stephanie Kiger, records and communication lead and public information officer for WDOC, stated in an email to Cowboy State Daily.
Kiger further said that Hightman has no record of disciplinary infractions.
It’s also not clear if the Torrington investigation has anything to do with Hightman yanking his sentencing appeal to the Wyoming Supreme Court, which happened during the same time period.
Meanwhile, = Torrington police remain tight-lipped about the nature of their investigation into Hightman.
Torrington Police Chief Matt Johnson declined to comment, citing an open investigation.
“The investigation is not yet complete,” he told Cowboy State Daily. “When it is completed, the information will be submitted to the Goshen County Attorney for review and consideration of criminal charges.”
Where’s Irene?
Meanwhile, nearly two years to the day she disappeared, Gakwa’s family and friends are left with questions about what might have happened to her.
Gakwa moved from her home in Nairobi, Kenya, to Boise, Idaho, in 2019 to be closer to her two elder brothers, Kris Gakwa and Kennedy Wainaina, and their families. While in Idaho, she worked as a health aide and attended nursing school.
By all accounts, she’s a kind, soft-hearted woman who works hard.
Gakwa met Hightman after answering his personal ad on Craigslist. The two dated on and off for roughly 18 months before moving together to Wyoming in July 2021.
Nobody who knew Gakwa knows why the couple moved to Gillette, which struck her family as odd because she hates cold weather.
Hightman bought a one-story home on Pathfinder Circle in north Gillette, where he was employed as an at-home tech support worker prior to his arrest.
Neither Gakwa’s brother nor their family and friends had high regard for Hightman after meeting him for dinners and gatherings on several occasions. Wainaina said they found him controlling and distant.
“I didn’t have a good feeling about him,” Wainaina said.
At the same time, they wanted to afford their sister independence. Gakwa stopped communicating with her family in late February 2022, which was the family’s first sign that something was terribly wrong.
Typically, she spoke with her father, Francis Kamboh, in Kenya via What’s App every day. When those conversations stopped in late February, the family knew something was wrong.
Her brothers drove from Idaho to Gillette to report her officially missing March 20.
His Story
For his part, Hightman maintains his innocence, according to court documents, and denies having anything to do with her disappearance.
He contends that Gakwa left their residence late one evening in late February, court documents state.
He told police that Gakwa came from dinner and said she was leaving before getting into a dark-colored SUV with her belongings packed into two black plastic trash bags. Hightman said she didn’t tell him where she was going, only that she was unhappy and was leaving Wyoming.
And though Hightman admitted to police that he stole Gakwa’s money when first interviewed, court documents state he said he did so as a means of coercing her into contacting him after she left.
In a brief text exchange with this reporter last May, Hightman said he’s innocent, and he would love to share his side of the story, but his legal counsel had advised against giving interviews.
To date, he has not been charged with any crimes related to Gakwa’s disappearance, despite a nearly eight-hour search of Hightman’s home by Gillette police and FBI on Oct. 13, 2022.

Bounty On His Head
During his incarceration in Torrington, Hightman further shared in a written letter that he had been moved three times since arriving because there may have been “a bounty” on his head from fellow prisoners, though he couldn’t say for certain whether that was true.
His public defender, Nathan Henkes, had referenced this bounty during Hightman’s sentencing in May, which he said forced Hightman to be held in protective custody while at the Campbell County Detention Center in Gillette. Henkes blamed the bounty on heightened attention after Hightman’s story made state, national and international news.
Hightman didn’t know if rumors of a bounty were true.
In his letter, Hightman said that his “first and second cellmates knew who I was before I even said hello.”
While in Torrington, he said he was initially kept in isolation but expressed a desire to be moved to general population.
He also lamented losing everything he owns at the age of 40 as a result of his incarceration, likening it to “watching a train wreck and being tied down, unable to stop it.”
Hightman has not answered any additional correspondence since arriving in Rawlins.
More Coverage
Fiancé of Missing Kenyan Irene Gakwa Pleads Guilty to Felony, Financial Crimes
Fiancé Of Missing Gillette Woman Pleads Not Guilty To Felonies Related To Crimes Against Her
Fiancé of Missing Gillette Woman Seen Purchasing Boots and Shovel, Arrested on Multiple Felonies
Boyfriend of Missing Gillette Woman Charged with Multiple Felonies
Boyfriend Now Considered ‘Person of Interest’ In Missing Gillette Woman Case
Authorities Seek Help in Locating Missing Gillette Woman; Man Living With Woman Not Cooperative
Wyoming
Wyoming battles tougher flu in 2025–26 season, health experts report
CASPER, Wyo. — While the fall and winter are often highlighted by snowfall and holiday gatherings, the season is also marked by the coughing, running noses and chills that come with the flu. This year, health experts warn of an especially virulent flu in Wyoming and beyond.
Data from the Wyoming Department of Health show that Wyoming saw 426 new influenza cases reported in just the final week of 2025, with well over 1,000 cases in total through flu season thus far in Wyoming. The report also states that, through Dec. 27, there had been 19 deaths in Wyoming caused by the flu this season. Nationally, the CDC reports more than 7.5 million cases of the flu and more than 3,100 deaths.
The uptick in flu cases is seen locally, too, the Natrona County Health Department told Oil City News on Thursday.
“While we don’t have exact numbers locally and only have the statewide data that’s reported, I can definitely say anecdotally that locally we’re seeing the same trends that we’re seeing statewide and nationally,” health department PIO Hailey Bloom said. “There is a surge in the rate across our community, the state and the country.”
Bloom said the surge in cases can partially be attributed to this year’s particular strain. The current flu is a mutated strain known as subclade K, originating from the common flu-causing virus influenza A and its variant H3N2. The strain is one of the more aggressive influenza variants, Bloom said.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, subclade K is also more adept at resisting immune systems that have already built up protections against other strains of the virus. Bloom also said this season’s vaccine may not be ideally suited for combating the current strain.
“We use the flu season in the southern hemisphere as a predictor [when crafting the vaccine], and we did see that there were some strains not as effectively combated by this year’s flu shot,” she said. “Some years we get a really, really good match on the flu shot and all of the circulating strains are perfect matches to that shot, and some years it’s not as perfect.”
However, Bloom also said some of the increased cases can be attributed to a lower number of people getting vaccinated, which remains the best way to avoid the virus.
Bloom said 989 Natrona County residents have gotten a flu shot through the health department so far this season. That’s down from the 1,227 distributed in the 2024–25 flu season and the 1,478 the year before that.
The decline in vaccinations similarly mirrors a nationwide trend. In mid-December, the CDC reported that roughly 32.5 million flu shots had been given thus far, which is down about 1.9 million from the same point the prior flu season.
People still in need of a vaccine can get one at the Natrona County Health Department by calling ahead and setting up an appointment or by walking in, Bloom said. Vaccinations can also be administered at other locations like various local pharmacies.
Other than getting vaccinated, tips for avoiding the flu include regularly washing hands, avoiding people you know to be sick, exercising caution if feeling under the weather and dressing appropriately for the weather, Bloom said.
“This year’s flu is more aggressive, more intense and not as well covered by the vaccine, so it’s definitely nasty,” Bloom said. “All that said, the flu shot is still going to give significantly more protection than not getting one.”
Related
Wyoming
Former director of Colorado Parks and Wildlife lands a job in Wyoming
This story is part of our Quick Hits series. This series will bring you breaking news and short updates from throughout the state.
The former director of the Colorado Parks and Wildlife (CPW) agency is joining Wyoming’s Game and Fish Department.
9-News reported that Jeff Davis was hired as the department’s deputy director in late December. That’s after Doug Brimeyer retired.
He starts the job in February.
Davis resigned from CPW last year instead of being fired as part of a settlement agreement. The settlement agreement Davis signed did not directly cite a reason for his termination.
Davis joined CPW as the state reintroduced wolves. His resignation came shortly after Washington state said it would not provide wolves to Colorado’s reintroduction program.
Before joining CPW in 2023, Davis had a long career in the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. While there, he focused on coordinating conservation initiatives involving interdisciplinary teams and salmon recovery.
Wyoming
Activists react after Wyoming high court rules abortion ban unconstitutional
BILLINGS— Activists on both sides praised and criticized the Wyoming Supreme Court’s ruling of abortion bans as unconstitutional on Tuesday in a 4-1 majority.
The ruling marks the end of a four-year legal battle in Wyoming since the state’s 2022 abortion ban went in place with the U.S. Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision, which overturned abortion rights on a federal level.
Watch for the report:
Activists react after Wyoming high court rules abortion ban unconstitutional
The ban was put on hold after Wyoming’s only abortion clinic, Wellspring Health Access in Casper, led a suit against the state.
“I was holding my breath as I opened it and read it. But soon that turned to being rather elated. We couldn’t be more pleased with the opinion,” said Julie Burkhart, the clinic’s president.
Vanessa Willardson
The decision comes after a years-long fight and setbacks, including an arsonist who set the clinic on fire in May of 2022.
“We were set to open that next month, but unfortunately that arson set us back by 11 months. We weren’t able to open that until 2023. It was quite devastating,” said Burkhart.
“I don’t think it’s moral, ethical, appropriate for anyone to tell another person what they can or cannot do with their own body,” she added.
Wellspring Health Access
For a Montana advocacy group, it was a different story.
“I was very disappointed,” said Amy Seymour, president of Yellowstone Valley Christians for Life, an anti-abortion advocacy group.
“These pre-born children who are unique, complete, living, individual human beings from the moment of their conception, they can be protected if Wyoming decides to have a constitutional amendment to that degree,” she added.
Vanessa Willardson
Wyoming state Speaker of the House Chip Neiman, a Republican, echoed Seymour’s sentiments with a written statement.
“Today’s decision is an abomination. Four unelected justices thwarted the will of the people to establish a ‘right’ to kill an innocent baby. Thanks to these justices, Wyoming has some of the most radical abortion laws in America. I will not stand for that, and will continue fighting for innocent unborn babies,” said Neiman.
Wyoming Supreme Court strikes down abortion bans, keeping procedure legal
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