Connect with us

Wyoming

Wyoming Bartenders: Wrong Orders, Bad Tips, Getting Hit-On, Here's…

Published

on

Wyoming Bartenders: Wrong Orders, Bad Tips, Getting Hit-On, Here's…


This story began as a deep dive into the famed James Bond drink order. The British agent with a license to kill had to have his martinis shaken, not stirred.

Why would 007 order it that way? Does it make a difference? When would you shake a drink or stir it, and why?

Cowboy State Daily asked several Wyoming bartenders for their answers, and mostly what we got back was a diatribe on how customers don’t know how to order anything or sometimes appear to be purposely making their life a living hell.

The answer became a bartender’s rant on what they face every night until closing time.

Advertisement

OK, a smart journalist goes where the story takes him, and this pivot was a goldmine.

Shaken, Not Stirred

In an earnest attempt to deconstruct the martini Bond orders in almost every movie, we asked people who wouldn’t know a Grey Goose from a Black Velvet. Why does Bond demand his martini is shaken, not stirred?

“He wanted a virgin drink?” one person said.

“It was preselected code to confirm the bartender was an agent working for the Crown?” posed another.

Yet another wondered if it was “to make sure his drink was not poisoned.”

Advertisement

Wow, well, on to the professionals.

First, it’s interesting to note that author Ian Fleming first details fictional British Secret Service agent James Bond’s drink preference in his 1953 novel “Casino Royale,” though Bond does not speak those words until “Dr. No,” and what he actually says is, “Shaken, and not stirred.”

But we’re splitting hairs.

Let’s start with the drink order. A martini is a gin and vermouth, garnished most often with an olive. A vodka martini substitutes vodka for gin. Bond orders his with both gin and vodka, by the way.

Nearly every martini drinker prior to the 1988 movie “Cocktail” would have the drink stirred. Shaking a martini dissolves air into the liquid — a process called “bruising” the gin — making a martini taste too sharp.

Advertisement

In the 1950s and ’60s, potato-based vodkas ruled the day. The potato would have a slightly greasy or oily texture to it. One reason to have a vodka martini shaken would be to break up this greasy feel and make the drink smoother and cleaner.

A simpler reason for shaking a drink over stirring is to make it colder. Much colder.

While good-tasting gin would not benefit from this and may actually be ruined, a vodka martini is improved by the releasing of air bubbles and added cold. Plus, the drink would be more watered down after shaking than if it were stirred.

Technically, a shaken martini is called a Bradford, but nobody remembers that anymore.

By and large, bartenders never shake clear liquids, only drinks with juices.

Advertisement

Jackson bartender Dustin Stolp says a martini is not very popular anymore but recalls stirring as the general rule with the classic drink.

“I think the proper martini is supposed to be stirred not shaken,” he said. “The way it is today, though, everyone wants everything shaken at some point. I don’t even remember the last person that asked for anything stirred except maybe a Manhattan.”

Abby Roich has tended bar at Stockman’s and Wind River Brewing Co. in Pinedale, as well as Buckhorn Bar, Cowboy Saloon, 3rd Street and Born in a Barn in Laramie. She offered her take.

“Shaking a drink, you are aerating it. You do this for anything made with a juice like pineapple juice or orange juice. If something is carbonated, you definitely would not shake it,” Roich said. “We shook quite a few drinks at 3rd Street, mostly just for the presentation aspect.”

Need For Speed

Fast-forward 60 years to Wyoming and the Million Dollar Cowboy Bar in Jackson, famous for its saddle stools and tourist trap honky-tonk vibe.

Advertisement

It’s a Saturday night. The place is packed as always. Dustin Stolp is behind the wood slinging drinks.

Stolp would never refer to himself as a mixologist. There was a time he knew his fancy drinks, but these days it’s all about speed.

“When I’m three-deep and trying to keep everyone happy, that’s when I have to make the bar and me money,” Stolp said.

Most of his pet peeves have to do with tactless customers who slow his roll.

“String orders,” he said. “I’m super busy and a guy gives me a six-drink order. He doesn’t group anything in an organized way: ‘A shot of tequila, a Pacifico with a lime, vodka soda, a Bud — no, wait, two Buds — another vodka soda …’

Advertisement

“First off, be ready with your order when I come to you. Then, give me the drinks all at once and the beers all together. That never happens,” Stolp added.

Worst of all, sending a bartender back to the well is a sin.

“I remember everything, ring him up, and come back with the drinks and he’ll say, ‘Oh, and five waters,’” he said. “For some reason they don’t think of water until after the order. Anything that sends you back to your well to get drinks is a pain in the butt.

“Or he’ll turn around to someone behind him and get their order to give me. You are closing out that order and moving on in your mind and this guy is killing you with what’s called a string order.”

Roich has worked all sorts of places. A college hangout where it was mainly pulling taps at Laramie’s oldest watering hole, the Buckhorn Bar. Or 3rd Street Bar where everyone knew your name.

Advertisement

“When I worked at the Buckhorn in Laramie, it’s a college town dealing with huge crowds. It was quantity over quality, pumping drinks out as fast as you can,” Roich said.

“3rd Street was more like ‘Cheers.’ You were excited to go to work there each shift because the same older people sat at the same place and drank the same thing,” she said. “You didn’t even have to ask their order. You just had it ready for them when you noticed them walk in.”

Bartending Style

Better bartenders ooze cool.

They are easy to talk to. Their social skills are finely honed. They’ve seen it all, heard it all, and they know to avoid topics like politics, sports and religion.

There still exists old pubs where a wizened barkeep named Sam or Moe listens to marital problems as he snaps a white bar towel crisply on his shoulder.

Advertisement

A cop on the beat and a neighborhood pub tender have some of the keenest profiling skills on the planet.

“One of my best friends in college was dating this guy, but this other guy was also interested in her,” Roich recalled. “She shows me a picture of the two dudes and I immediately pick out one of them.

“‘Him,’ I tell her. ‘He is one of our best customers. He is nice and patient and tips well.’ It says a lot about someone’s personality how they treat service industry workers.”

Roich’s friend did ultimately choose “him,” and they’ve been married 10 years now.

Somewhere there undoubtably are gin joints like Coyote Ugly where scantily-clad barmaids do everything it takes to keep the men boozing. One such establishment, Hogs ’n Heifers in NYC, was rumored to be the bar moviemakers modelled “Coyote Ugly” after.

Advertisement

And there are still actual Tom Cruise bartenders (“Cocktail,” 1988) who get by on bottle-flipping flair. But in the real world, a bartender’s life is less psychologist, less stripper and less circus juggler than Hollywood portrays.

“I was never a mixologist. I started bartending at 21. I didn’t know anything. If someone ordered something fancier than a Jack and Coke or a Pendleton and seven, I might have to go Google it,” Roich admits. “I was mostly cracking beers, not really mixing flavors and garnishing them in a way to make a pleasurable presentation. At some of the places I worked at we were lucky if we had lemons or limes at times.”

Most bartender gripes arise from the stress of the job when it’s busy and imbibers are drunk. “In the weeds” is how the service industry refers to the condition of being taxed to the limit.

When you’re there, patience is hard to come by.

“Another annoying thing is when your head is down and you are working on an order and someone else is yelling their order right in your face,” Stolp growled. “Normally, I can block those guys out but sometimes …”

Advertisement

What Stolp likes to do when it’s really busy is prep his next customer with a quick look.

“I will make eye contact and say, ‘Coming to you next. Be ready with your order.’ When it’s your turn, I will make direct eye contact and maybe give them a little point,” Stolp said.

Situational awareness could go a long way toward making a barkeep’s life a little breezier. When the crush is on, bartenders suggest keeping your order simple.

“Custom-order drinks in a busy bar don’t work. You walk into the Cowboy Bar Saloon on a Saturday night and Chancey [Williams] is playing after a Cowboys football game and order a complicated craft cocktail? Take a lap,” Roich said. “Read the room. We aren’t pouring that right now.”

Tipping Is Not A City In China

Ever wonder if tipping elicits better service?

Advertisement

Bartenders say they remember who tips generously and who makes a habit of stiffing their server. When it’s busy, the scrooge might get passed over if the big tipper is also waiting.

But gratuity is not always anticipated, and bartenders range widely about what their expectations are.

“It’s not necessarily a big deal for me. Not everyone is a billionaire. Everyone has their own tip style. As long as it’s something,” Stolp said. “If you are a Jackson Hole snowboarder, I’ll take a dollar on your order. But cashing out a $200 tab and getting 10 bucks? That’s a bummer. That’s just rude.”

Roich said there are good guidelines people can follow.

“If you are running a tab, a good rule of thumb is throw 20-25% on your cashout. If you are pay as you go, ordering beer after beer and not tipping, well, I would rather see someone tipping sporadically as they order.”

Advertisement

And do those generous tippers get special treatment.

“Hundred percent,” Roich said. “Bartenders identify those easy guys who come in. They don’t ask questions. They keep the interaction quick because they know what they want and you remember as well. Sometimes you hold up a number and they’ll nod, ‘Yes, three Coors Light.’

“They hand you their coat and you are happy to take it behind the bar because those are your people and you are happy. Those are the ones who got me through college.”

Event Bartending

Event bartender Sarah Adams works for a few catering companies in the Sheridan area.

She will get for specialty craft cocktails at weddings and such but, for the most part, a predetermined drink menu means she knows she will be mixing Moscow mules and huckleberry mojitos all night.

Advertisement

Still, that doesn’t mean her nights are easy.

“Talk about being in the weeds. There is nothing like a wedding gig rush when 200 thirsty guests swarm you after baking in the sun at the ceremony,” Adams said.

Open bars are often the case with weddings and other events Adams works. She said they can sometimes be a challenge in their own way.

“For one, when people aren’t paying for drinks, they usually are not tipping,” Adams said. “But worse, I feel more disrespected in an open bar situation.

“Like, I’m there as your personal serving wench, and I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had people claim there was not enough alcohol in their drink or they want a more generous pour because they are under the impression it is free booze. Well, someone’s paying for it.”

Advertisement

Adams adds that getting hit on is far more prevalent at events than tending bar commercially.

“Weddings have their own version of barflies and they just camp out with you all night. Lonely, on the make, or just plain bored,” Adams said. “Fifty-year-old uncles trying to pick me up is not my idea of a pleasant Saturday.”

Water And The Cut-Off

Water orders are irritating, according to most bartenders. Many bars set up a water station to keep their gin jockeys pouring the pricier stuff, but water has a purpose and a place.

“At one point in my career I found the water order really annoying. But as I got older, I realized I don’t need to be a grump about it. They are making a good choice. They are doing the right thing and I want my customers to be safe,” Roich said.

When customers don’t make smart choices, babysitting bartenders have to get crafty about cutting them off. Each has their own style.

Advertisement

“That’s what bouncers are for,” Stolp said.

As a sometimes bouncer himself, the 6-foot-4, 210-pound hockey player has no problem showing a belligerent drunk to the exit.

Roich tries to be more tactful.

“It’s easy to go with the, ‘I’m going to ignore you’ route,” she shared. “Usually, that person is at the point where they will just give up. If they get surly, that’s why we have bouncers. If it is someone I know, I usually pour them a soda and say, ‘This one’s on me,’ and all I did was give them a coke.

“Each case is different,” she continued. “I might say, ‘How about a water this time?’ Sometimes I am point blank. ‘You are going to be sad at me if I continue to serve you. Let’s dial it down for the night.’ I’ll tell you one thing. People hardly ever remember or are mad at me when I see them next. In fact, some thank me for cutting them off.”

Advertisement

The Good, The Bad And The Buy Back

Back to the “shaken, not stirred” controversy.

Rather than an appearance of snootiness, bartenders across the board appear to relish drinkers who know exactly what they want.

“Someone orders a Grey Goose martini, super dry, dirty,” Adams Said. “I like that he knows exactly what he wants. Give me a top-shelf shot-caller anytime. It’s much better than the customer who says, ‘Surprise me.’”

Roich agrees.

“If I got a James Bond ‘shaken not stirred’ order I would be like: ‘Rad, this guy knows what he wants,” she said.

Advertisement

What bartenders hate is indecision, rookies and rude people.

Want to send a bartender reaching for the Xanax? Wobble up to the bar with a gaggle of your girls and slur, “We want FUN shots!”

“If some girl comes in and it’s her 21st birthday and her group says, ‘Make us a special shot.’ That’s cool. Let’s make her night special,” Roich said. “But when there are 30 people at the bar and someone is sucking your time, it can get aggravating.”

Longtime New York City bartender and consultant Ross Fairly lists as one of his all-time most annoying drink orders the “I-don’t-know-what-I-want” order.

“You are the bane of the bartender’s existence. Who let you in here?” Fairly said. “I can’t tell you what you want because I’m not you. I can tell you what I like: Jack on the rocks. If you don’t want that, I’m fresh-out of ideas.

Advertisement

“Step aside or go to Applebee’s where you can stare at the disgusting drink menu and order something that has Hershey’s chocolate syrup in it.”

“Same,” Roich said. “When I get the ‘what do you recommend?’ or ‘what do you like?’ I say my favorite is a shot of Wild Turkey. Nine time out of 10 that is not going to be what they end up ordering.”

Adams has noticed more and more people expect a drink menu.

“The drink menu is behind me on these four shelves. If you are an adult and you’ve been out past 9:30 p.m. before, you should know what you like,” she said.

A few other faux pas?

Advertisement

Whistling for attention or claiming to know the owner. Those never goe over well.

And don’t ever, under any circumstance, ask the bartender to smile. Roich, for one, would have you tossed for that.

Jake Nichols can be reached at jake@cowboystatedaily.com.



Source link

Advertisement

Wyoming

Rivalries and Playoff Positioning Highlight Week 11 Wyoming Girls Basketball Slate

Published

on

Rivalries and Playoff Positioning Highlight Week 11 Wyoming Girls Basketball Slate


It’s Week 11 in the 2026 Wyoming prep girls’ basketball season. That means it’s the end of the regular season. 3A and 4A schools have their final game or games to determine seeding before the regional tournament, or if a team is locked into a position, one last chance to fine-tune before the postseason. Games are spread across four days.

WYOPREPS WEEK 11 GIRLS BASKETBALL SCHEDULE 2026

Every game on the slate is a conference matchup. Several rivalry contests are part of this week’s schedule, such as East against Central, Cody at Powell, Lyman hosting Mountain View, and Rock Springs at Green River, just to name a few. Here is the Week 11 schedule of varsity games WyoPreps has. All schedules are subject to change. If you see a game missing, please email david@wyopreps.com.

CLASS 4A

Final Score: Laramie 68 Cheyenne South 27 (conference game)

Advertisement

CLASS 3A

Final Score: Lyman 40 Mountain View 26 (conference game)

Submit a Score to WyoPreps

CLASS 4A

Final Score: Evanston 41 Riverton 39 (conference game)

Final Score: Natrona County 42 Kelly Walsh 38 (conference game) – Peach Basket Classic

Advertisement

Final Score: #4 Thunder Basin 64 Campbell County 32 (conference game)

CLASS 3A

Final Score: #1 Cody 77 Worland 33 (conference game) – 5 different Fillies with a 3, and Hays led the way with 34 points.

Final Score: #2 Lander 49 Lyman 34 (conference game)

Final Score: #4 Wheatland 51 Douglas 40 (conference game)

Advertisement

Final Score: #5 Powell 48 Lovell 42 (conference game)

Final Score: Burns 56 Torrington 43 (conference game)

Final Score: Glenrock 78 Newcastle 30 (conference game)

Submit a Score to WyoPreps

 

Read More Girls Basketball News from WyoPreps

Advertisement

WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 2-25-26

WyoPreps Girls Basketball Standings 2-23-26

WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 10 Scores 2026

WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 2-18-26

WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 9 Scores 2026

Advertisement

WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 2-11-26

WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 8 Scores 2026

WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 2-4-26

WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 7 Scores 2026

WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 1-28-26

Advertisement

Nominate A Basketball Player for the WyoPreps Athlete of the Week Honor

WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 1-21-26

WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 5 Scores 2026

WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 1-14-26

WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 4 Scores 2025-26

Advertisement

WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Rankings 1-7-26

WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 3 Scores 2025-26

WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Rankings 12-24-25

WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 2 Scores 2025-26

WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Rankings 12-17-25

Advertisement

WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 1 Scores 2025-26

 

CLASS 4A

Rock Springs at #2 Green River, 5:30 p.m. (conference game)

#4 Thunder Basin at #5 Sheridan, 5:30 p.m. (conference game)

Advertisement

#1 Cheyenne East at #3 Cheyenne Central, 6 p.m. (conference game)

Jackson at Star Valley, 6 p.m. (conference game)

CLASS 3A

#3 Pinedale at Mountain View, 4 p.m. (conference game)

#1 Cody at #5 Powell, 5:30 p.m. (conference game)

Advertisement

Buffalo at Glenrock, 5:30 p.m. (conference game)

Submit a Score to WyoPreps

CLASS 3A

Newcastle at Buffalo, 12:30 p.m. (conference game)

Glenrock at Rawlins, 3 p.m. (conference game)

Torrington at #4 Wheatland, 5:30 p.m. (conference game)

Advertisement
Submit a Score to WyoPreps

 

Wyoming Boys 4A Swimming & Diving State Championships 2026

4A Boys State Swim Meet for 2026 in Cheyenne

Gallery Credit: David Settle, WyoPreps.com





Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Wyoming

Political storm in Wyoming as far-right activist caught handing checks to lawmakers

Published

on

Political storm in Wyoming as far-right activist caught handing checks to lawmakers


Controversy has engulfed Wyoming’s state legislature after a conservative activist was photographed handing checks to Republican lawmakers on the state house floor, in an incident that has highlighted intra-conservative divisions and the role of money in the Cowboy state’s politics.

The political storm started on 9 February, when Karlee Provenza, a Democratic lawmaker, took a photo showing Rebecca Bextel, a conservative activist and committeewoman for the Teton county Republican party, handing a check to Darin McCann, a Republican representative, on the legislative floor. Marlene Brady, another Republican representative, stands in the photo’s background, a similar piece of paper pinched between her fingers.

“You have a person from the richest county in the country coming down to Cheyenne to hand out checks on the house floor,” Provenza said. “I have never seen something so egregious.”

Questions around the checks were soon swirling, and answers weren’t forthcoming. When asked what Bextel gave to her, Brady told a reporter for local outlet WyoFile: “I can’t remember.”

Advertisement

Then Bextel herself addressed the incident. “I raised $400,000 in the last election cycle for conservative candidates, and I will be doubling that amount this year,” Bextel wrote on Facebook on 11 February. “There’s nothing wrong with delivering lawful campaign checks from Teton county donors when I am in Cheyenne.”

Since then, it has emerged that the checks came from Don Grasso, a wealthy Teton county donor, who told the Jackson Hole News and Guide that he wrote the checks for Bextel to deliver to 10 Freedom caucus-aligned politicians. Grasso said the checks were intended as campaign contributions, and were not tied to specific legislation. It is unclear how many checks were ultimately delivered, but two of four confirmed recipients include the speaker of the house, Chip Neiman, and John Bear, the former head of the Wyoming Freedom Caucus.

The Wyoming house has formed a legislative investigative committee, and the Laramie county sheriff’s office said they’d open a criminal investigation.

Bextel declined to answer questions from the Guardian. Brady, McCann and Bear did not respond to requests for comment.

Neiman said he considered the criticism a “wraparound smear campaign”. He said: “It never once crossed my mind that this was bribery.

Advertisement

“These legislators, myself included, are now guilty until we can prove that we’re innocent. How is that right in this country? Isn’t that a little bit backwards?”

The scandal has highlighted long-standing divisions in Wyoming’s Republican party, which in recent years has seen a growing divide between old school, more moderate conservatives and a harder-right Freedom Caucus.

Several former Republican lawmakers forcefully condemned their colleagues for accepting the checks, and a local Republican party branch called for the lawmakers’ resignations.

Ogden Driskill, a Wyoming Republican senator, told the Guardian he does not consider Bextel’s actions to be illegal, but that “just because you can do it doesn’t mean you should”.

Bextel has spent years pushing against housing mitigation fees in Wyoming, and Driskill noted that she distributed the house floor checks just days before a bill she had publicly supported was set to be heard. Bextel was registered as a member of the press, not as a lobbyist when she delivered the checks.

Advertisement

“Ethically and morally, it’s bankrupt to a massive degree,” Driskill said.

Neiman said that he and other legislators who received checks have supported similar bills in the past: “Bribery is paying somebody to do something they would not otherwise do.”

Nationally, the 2024 election cycle saw record-spending from the mega-wealthy, as well as dark money groups. Wyoming followed the trend, in a tense red-on-red primary season.

For those gearing up to campaign this year, Teton county, the richest in the US, and Bextel’s picturesque home turf, is an essential stop. Its extreme wealth gives it a foothold on the national level as well. Palantir chief executive Alex Karp and Donald Trump attended an annual Republican leadership fundraiser at Jackson Hole in 2024, and JD Vance attended the same one in 2025.

Bextel pulls dollars from Teton county into the Freedom Caucus side of Wyoming’s conservative split. She hosted no-press-allowed meet and greets earlier this year benefitting leading candidates for Wyoming’s governor and open US House seat.

Advertisement

In an interview with the Open Range Record, a media network she co-founded, Bextel said controversy around the checks was solely because she was making “even playing field” in Wyoming against the state’s more moderate Republicans, who she calls “George Soros” candidates. She said that she will be sure to keep raising money – just away from the legislative floor.

“I guess I’m gonna ask all the gentlemen and gentleladies to step outside the Capitol while I hand them a check,” Bextel said. “Let me be clear: I’m doubling down.”

But it’s not just wealthy local donors putting their weight behind the factions. Last election cycle, out of state groups spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on anonymous and often inaccurate mailers.

“These actors, especially from the far right, they like to push the bounds of the norms,” said Rosa Reyna Pugh, an organizing and advocacy consultant at Western States Center, an Oregon-based non-profit focused on democracy in the western United States. “They like to see what policies they can kind of push, and see where they can play a piece,” Reyna Pugh said.

While Neiman and Driskill fight politically, they do agree on one thing: summer will bring an expensive and brutal campaign season.

Advertisement

“You’re going to see more dark money than you’ve ever seen. We’ve done absolutely nothing to enforce it. Our secretary of state has not even made a slight attempt to deal with it,” Driskill said. “You’re going to see lots and lots of outside money and I think you’re seeing it on both sides.”

As national questions swirl around pay-to-play politics and profiteering in the Trump administration, Provenza wants better for the Cowboy State.

“We should not be aligning ourselves with how the federal government is conducting itself or how federal elections conduct themselves,” Provenza said. “We owe something far better and more honest to the people of Wyoming than that.”



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Wyoming

Wyoming man reaches plea deal to avoid jail time in wolf-abuse case

Published

on

Wyoming man reaches plea deal to avoid jail time in wolf-abuse case


A Sublette County man who captured and brought an injured wolf into a bar in February 2024 has struck a deal with prosecutors that could keep him out of jail, reports WyoFile.

A signed plea agreement filed with the Sublette County District Court and acquired by WyoFile on Wednesday afternoon means that Cody Roberts, 44, would likely no longer face trial. It had been set to begin March 9.

Under the deal, Roberts withdraws his earlier not guilty plea and changes that plea to guilty or no contest for felony cruelty to animals.

The deal calls for a prison sentence of 18 months to two years that would be suspended in favor of 18 months of supervised probation and a $1,000 fine. Additionally, agreed-upon conditions of his probation include: no hunting or fishing; no alcohol, presence at bars or liquor stores; and a requirement that Roberts follow recommended addiction treatment.

Advertisement

As part of the deal, the parties are asking that a “pre-sentence investigation report” be ordered by the court.

Roberts allegedly acquired a wolf by striking it with a snowmobile, leaving it “barely conscious” on Feb. 29, 2024. Photos and video from that night showed him posing for pictures with the animal and even kissing it. The wolf’s behavior suggests that it was gravely injured, according to biologists who’ve reviewed video of the muzzled animal while it was prone and barely moving on the floor of the Green River Bar.

The Wyoming Game and Fish Department initially handled the incident, issuing Roberts a $250 fine for possession of warm-blooded wildlife. The state agency declined to seek stiffer penalties or jail time, and Game and Fish officials maintained that predatory animals, including wolves, were exempted from felony animal cruelty laws.

Sublette County law enforcement officials disagreed. In August, prosecutor Clayton Melinkovich convened a grand jury that indicted Roberts for felony animal cruelty. That crime could have put Roberts in jail for up to two years, though his plea agreement averts mandatory time behind bars as long as he successfully completes probation.

WyoFile is an independent nonprofit news organization focused on Wyoming people, places and policy.

Advertisement





Source link

Continue Reading

Trending