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Wyoming History: Casper Double-Murderer Shot Down By Sheriff In…

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Wyoming History: Casper Double-Murderer Shot Down By Sheriff In…


CASPER — Big, bold headlines and at least seven front-stories in the Casper Daily Tribune tell the tale of the day in 1924 a cloud of evil “unspeakably shocked” and “profoundly grieved” the Oil City.

A well-known and well-connected businessman gunned down his 10-year-old son and pretty wife, dumped their bodies in the North Platte River and headed east to Douglas. There, he was confronted by a familiar face in a hotel corridor during the early morning hours of a Sunday 100 years ago.

Following an exchange of gunfire, the Converse County sheriff walked away alive and the businessman, Fred Van Gorden, was dead.

“It is difficult for those who knew the affable Fred Van Gorden in life to realize that he committed the act that he did,” the Casper Daily Tribune editorialized March 17, 1924, two days after his gruesome crimes. “Were he in possession of his reason, we all know he would not have done it.

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“It is not charity to the dead to believe he was temporarily insane, it is simply believing the truth. … Fred Van Gorden was in no manner so deeply involved that he could not have been saved by friends, had they but known.”

A Casper real estate and insurance agent, Van Gorden appeared to be the guy you wanted to know. He served on the Casper City Council, was an upstanding member of the First Presbyterian Church, a Mason and member of the Kiwanis Club.

Fred was married to Pearl. They had grown up in the same town in Iowa, married, moved to Nebraska, where they had a son, Arthur.

Arrival In Wyoming

In 1914, the couple moved to Douglas and lived there for a year.

During their time there, they likely came to know Albert “Al” Peyton, who had served a term as sheriff from 1912-1913, and in 1914 was operating a grocery store.

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In 1915, the young family headed west to Casper and Fred Van Gorden got a job at the Golden Rule Store, which sold clothing. He later worked for Webel Commercial Co. and was in charge of the ladies’ department. When the company sold out, Van Gorden started his own company in May 1921.

His first office was in the Daily Tribune’s basement, then he moved to an office at the Rialto Theater. He specialized in real estate transactions, bond selling and insurance.

In 1924, the couple lived in a new house they recently had built on a city lot at 412 S. Grant St. Their previous little home sat in the back part of their lot. Arthur had a collie dog.

They were living the American dream.

Van Gorden was active in his church. He was listed as a contact for men who wanted to know more about a “brotherhood class” at the church, according to a Jan. 20, 1924, article in the Casper Sunday Tribune. Van Gorden also appeared in the paper the previous year on April 29, as a captain of the church’s building fund.

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Sheriff, Again

Meanwhile in Douglas, the former grocer Peyton had run for sheriff again in 1922 and was elected.

He was well-known for helping people in the community and trying to keep a lid on the illegal activity surrounding the Prohibition era. A biography written by his wife and published in “Pages From Converse County’s Past” recall how he was involved in several raids and received a written commendation from the town council in Lost Springs for putting two stills out of business.

Peyton would also lead efforts to find the victims of the Cole Creek train wreck in late September 1923, spending a week scouring the North Platte River for bodies, several of them friends. He caught pneumonia for his efforts.

But appearances can be deceiving.

Van Gorden, 42, saw his financial debts and woes closing in by March 1924.

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Friends told the Daily Tribune that his mortgage was beyond his means, and it was known in the community that his business was not thriving. Van Gorden had told his wife the house was paid for, but in reality he had a mortgage of $5,400, friends told the newspaper.

At Van Gorden’s business, he had received $6,100 from Casper businessman R.J. Fuchs to invest in first mortgages. According to the Daily Star Tribune, Van Gorden faked signatures on mortgages that represented $4,122 of Fuchs’ investment.

Fuchs discovered the forgeries and his attorneys gave Van Gorden an opportunity to make good on the money without ruining him in the community.

Meanwhile, the paper reported Van Gorden also owed $2,500 to insurance companies and had been threatened with a March 15 deadline for payment or a warrant for his arrest on suspicion of embezzlement would be issued.

Van Gorden had told Fuchs earlier March 15 at a meeting that he had raised the money to make his forgeries good. He asked Fuchs for a few more hours to get him the money.

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Van Gorden had allegedly asked other creditors as well to meet him in his Rialto Theater office at 4 p.m. on that Saturday.

Evil Manifests

Instead, late that afternoon at his 412 S. Grant St. residence, Van Gorden called to his son, Arthur, who was outside playing with his dog.

Van Gorden asked Arthur to come down into the basement. As the son looked to his father, Van Gorden lifted up a .45-caliber revolver and shot Arthur once in the head and once in the heart.

Van Gorden also shot and killed the dog, likely to keep it from barking at the loss of its master.

About 6, Pearl came home from a women’s group meeting, probably driving into the garage. She also was called down to the basement.

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Evidence there would later show she was shot in the head. The bullet passed through and a fragment ended up in a hallway that was found by law enforcement.

In the basement, Van Gorden tried to clean up the blood stains, wrapped his wife’s body in a man’s overcoat and tried to fit the bodies into the back of his Chevrolet sedan. He drove out of the garage, closed the door from the inside leaving blood-stained fingerprints.

As he drove away, a neighbor would later told police she thought she saw Pearl Van Gorden sitting in the back seat and wondered if the couple had an argument.

Prior to leaving the house, a desperate man had penned a series of notes.

“Van Gorden wrote a brief note to W.B. Cobb, his attorney, saying he ‘could not stand the gaff any longer and asked him to settle his affairs,’” the Daily Tribune reported March 17, 1924. The note was marked “special delivery.” It was dropped off at the post office shortly before 7 p.m.

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A note to an insurance adjuster in Denver asked him to take over Van Gorden’s business.

Disposing Of The Bodies

After driving down the Yellowstone Highway, he turned off on the road that led to the city dump and a recently constructed North Platte River bridge.

He dumped the bodies in frigid waters, leaving blood stains on the bridge. Van Gorden then drove to Douglas.

Meanwhile, the special delivery note arrived for attorney Cobb at about 9 p.m. Cobb alerted police, thinking his client was planning to kill himself.

Casper Police and Natrona County deputies discovered the apparent murder scene in the basement. Blood spray was on walls, boys’ overshoes clotted blood, and the ashes of burned clothing in the basement furnace.

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They also found a bed stripped of sheets and a holster hanging on the wall without a pistol in it. Bloody keys were found in a box outside the garage door.

A notice was put out for police to be on the lookout for Van Gorden’s Chevrolet.

Van Gorden arrived in Douglas about 12:45 a.m. and parked his car at the Overland garage. He told an attendant he would pick it up at 6 a.m.

“The garage attendant noticed that there was blood all over the car and that the rear cushion has been removed,” the Casper Sunday Tribune reported March 16, 1924. “He notified the sheriff who took charge of the matter at once.”

The Natrona County Sheriff had notified Peyton that Van Gorden might be headed his way.

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Converse County Sheriff Al Peyton from a photo taken in 1912. (“Pages From Converse County’s Past”)

The Confrontation

The Douglas County Budget reported March 18, 1924, that Van Gorden registered at the Labonte Hotel under an assumed name.

News accounts relate Peyton had checked boarding houses throughout the town, and when he ascertained Van Gorden was at the hotel, the sheriff took a room next to him. When the murderer stepped out into the hall at 3 a.m., Peyton opened his door and ordered Van Gorden to surrender.

“Van Gorden fired at Peyton and missed, and a bullet from Peyton’s gun dropped Van Gorden,” the Budget reported. “Van Gorden was well-known in Douglas, having been employed here several years ago.”

Peyton’s wife wrote in her family’s biography that at 5 a.m. that morning she received a call that there had been a shooting. She was terrified her husband had been shot.

“It was seven o’clock before the family discovered that Al had killed Fred Van Gorden, who had murdered his wife and son in Casper,” Lena Peyton wrote. “Van Gorden was a Camp Perry marksman who fired first; AI thought that it was a miracle that he had survived. AI did not like to kill anything and the shock of the shootout in the LaBonte Hotel caused him much suffering.”

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Meanwhile, Natrona County authorities had searched gullies and bridges for bodies and stopped at 2 a.m. on Sunday. They resumed later that morning and discovered the blood-stained bridge and, using grappling hooks, recovered both Pearl and Arthur Van Gorden’s bodies.

Funerals for Van Gorden’s wife and son were held Tuesday, March 18, 1924, at First Presbyterian Church. Their bodies were put on an afternoon train and sent to Greenfield, Iowa, for burial.

The murderer’s body was placed on the same train when it reached Douglas and was sent with them. Funerals for the family were held in Iowa.

The Casper Daily Tribune would again editorialize on Van Gorden in its Wednesday, March 19, 1924, edition. The tone of the editorial was less sympathetic.

“There is a lesson imparted in the Van Gorden tragedy, old as time. … It has to do with honesty and uprightness in daily transactions,” the editor wrote. “Had Fred Van Gorden adhered to his earlier training and not wandered off into the unfamiliar field of double-dealing, there would be a more cheerful story to tell today. When he ceased to be square, his troubles multiplied, and climaxed in horrible tragedy.”

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Dale Killingbeck can be reached at dale@cowboystatedaily.com.



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Wyoming Reporter Now Facing An Additional 10 Felony Charges

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Wyoming Reporter Now Facing An Additional 10 Felony Charges


The Platte County Attorney’s Office has nearly doubled the possible penalties for a Wyoming reporter accused of forging exhibits in an environmental case tied to her staunch opposition to a wind farm.

The 10 new counts against April Marie Morganroth, also known as the Wyoming-based reporter Marie Hamilton, allege that she convinced her landlords that she’d been approved for a home loan to buy their property, and grants to upgrade it.

Hamilton was already facing 10 felony charges in a March 9 Wheatland Circuit Court case, as she’s accused of submitting forged documents and lying under oath before the Wyoming Industrial Siting Council.

That’s an environmental permitting panel that granted a permit to a NextEra Resources wind farm, which Hamilton has long opposed. She’s also reported on NextEra’s efforts and the community controversies surrounding those.

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Then on Wednesday, Platte County Attorney Douglas Weaver filed 10 more felony charges: five alleging possession of forged writing, and five more alleging forgery.

The former is punishable by up to five years in prison and $5,000 in fines; the latter by up to 10 years in prison and up to $10,000 in fines.

Hamilton faces up to 65 years in prison if convicted of all charges in her March 9 case. The March 25 case would add up to 75 years more to that.

Both cases are ongoing.

Hamilton did not immediately respond to a voicemail request for comment left Thursday afternoon on her cellphone. She bonded out of jail earlier this month. The Platte County Detention Center said Thursday it does “not have her here.” 

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The Investigative Efforts Of Benjamin Peech

Converse County Sheriff’s Lt. Benjamin Peech investigated both cases at the request of Platte County authorities, court documents say.

When he was investigating evidence that Hamilton submitted forged documents and lied under oath for Industrial Siting Council proceedings, Peech also pursued Hamilton’s claim that she owned property on JJ Road, and that she’d bought it with a U.S. Department of Agriculture loan.

The property, however, is registered under Platte County’s mapping system to a couple surnamed Gillis, says a new affidavit Peech signed March 19, which was filed Wednesday.

Peech spoke with both husband and wife, and they said they had the home on the market to sell it, and Hamilton contacted them in about July of 2025.

Hamilton told the pair that she and her husband wished to buy the property and were pre-qualified for a USDA loan through Neighbor’s Bank, wrote Peech.

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But the property didn’t meet the standard of the loan, Hamilton reportedly continued. Still, she’d been approved for a USDA grant to work on the problems with the property and bring it up to the standards to qualify for the loan, she allegedly told the homeowners.

Papers

Hamilton provided the couple and their realtor with letters from USDA showing her loan pre-approval and grant approvals, the affidavit says.

During the lease period that followed, Hamilton was late “often” with rent and didn’t provide the couple with work logs until pressed, Peech wrote.

In early 2026, the lieutenant continued, the homeowners became concerned and asked Hamilton about her progress improving the property.

Hamilton reportedly sent the homeowners two invoices from contractors, showing she’d paid for work to be done. She said the wind had delayed that work, wrote Peech.

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The affidavit says the Gillis couple sent Peech the documents Hamilton had reportedly given them, along with supporting emails showing those had come from one of Hamilton’s email addresses.

The Loan approval documents showed the respective logos for USDA Rural Development and Neighbor’s Bank at the top of each page, the lieutenant wrote, adding that the documents assert that Hamilton and her husband had been approved for the loan.

“There was then a list of items that needed to be completed — 14 items — prior to Final Loan Approval,” related Peech in the affidavit.

A signature at the bottom reportedly read, “Sincerely, USDA Rural Development Neighbors Bank Joshua Harris Homebuying Specialist.”

Grant Document

The documents purporting Hamilton had received a grant also showed the USDA Rural Development logo at the top of each page, with the names of Hamilton and her husband, other boilerplate language and a description of a $35,000 home buyer’s grant.

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The project was about 65% complete at the time of review, the document adds, according to Peech’s narrative.

Peech describes more documents: a January notice, an invoice bearing the logo and name of “Cowgirl Demolition and Excavation, LLC,” and another invoice bearing the logo and name of “Pete’s Builders Roofing and Restoration.”

Real Estate Agent

Peech spoke with the Gillises’ real estate agent, Kay Pope, and she said she’d tried to verify the USDA grant and pre-approval by calling Susan Allman, who was listed in the documents as the Casper-based USDA agent. Pope left several messages without response, the affidavit says.

Pope spoke with Hamilton’s real estate agent, and he said he’d spoken to Allman, and he gave Pope a phone number.

Cowboy State Daily has identified Hamilton’s real estate agent and tried to contact him for further clarification.

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Pope called that number and left messages without response, wrote Peech.

Peech then called a USDA Rural Development office and spoke with a Janice Blare, deputy state director, he wrote.

Peech sent the three USDA letters to Blare and gave her “all of Hamilton’s names and aliases,” he added.

The lieutenant wrote that Blare later told him the USDA investigated the letters and determined no evidence existed to show the USDA had issued them.

No records existed either, of Hamilton “using all her alias permutations” or her husband within either the USDA loan program or grant program, wrote Peech.

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The USDA didn’t have an office at the address listed in two of the letters. The address pertains, rather, to a dirt lot. The USDA Rural Development office didn’t have a program titled “Rural Communities Home Buyer Program” as listed on two of the letters.

On Nov. 6, 2025, the date of the first letter purporting Hamilton had been approved for the grant program, all U.S. government offices including USDA were on furlough, noted Peech from his discussion with Blare.

A person named Susan Allman didn’t appear in USDA’s employee records, Blare reportedly added.

The Phone Call

Peech called the cellphone number one of the letters listed for Allman, “and this was disconnected,” he wrote.

The number Hamilton’s real estate agent had given was a voice over internet protocol number that Bandwidth LLC operates but is assigned to Google, added Peech.

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Meanwhile, Converse County Investigator Amber Peterson spoke with the construction and roofing companies listed in the documents.

Chad Derenzo of Pete’s Roofing confirmed the logo and name listed on the documents were his company’s own — but said his company hadn’t issued the bid listed in those documents, according to the affidavit.

“Their company had never contracted to do work for Hamilton or at the… JJ Road address,” the document says.

The invoice also bore an address in Torrington, Wyoming, and his company doesn’t have a Torrington office, said Derenzo, reportedly.

Jessica Loge of Cowgirl Demolition and Excavation gave similar statements, saying the documents bore her logo, but her company hadn’t issued the bid or contracted with Hamilton.

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Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.



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Wyoming State Parks announces pause on potential visitor center project at Sinks Canyon State Park

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Wyoming State Parks announces pause on potential visitor center project at Sinks Canyon State Park


(Lander, WY) – The Wyoming Department of State Parks and Cultural Resources (SPCR) is announcing a pause on a possible visitor center project at Sinks Canyon State Park following public engagement efforts conducted in late 2025. On Dec. 1, 2025, Wyoming State Parks, in partnership with Sinks Canyon WILD,  hosted a public forum and gathered […]



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Coyote Flats Fire near containment as critical fire danger hits Black Hills, Wyoming counties

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Coyote Flats Fire near containment as critical fire danger hits Black Hills, Wyoming counties


RAPID CITY, S.D. (KOTA) – The grass is starting to return in the Black Hills, but the damage left behind by last week’s wildfire is still visible beneath the surface. The Coyote Flats Fire is now almost completely contained, but fire officials say the work for crews who battled the flames is far from finished.

“It’s been a long week,” said Gail Schmidt, fire chief for the Rockerville Volunteer Fire Department. Schmidt said firefighters worked the Coyote Flats Fire for multiple days as the blaze forced hundreds of people to leave their homes.

Schmidt also warned the timing is concerning.

“It’s early,” she said. “It’s early — and that’s the more concerning part. We haven’t even hit summer yet.”

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Some of the same crews, Schmidt said, have moved from the Black Hills to a second wildfire — the Qury (pronounced “Koo-RAY”) Fire. That fire has burned nearly 9,200 acres and was holding at 70% containment as of Monday.

Between multiple wildfires and routine emergency calls, Schmidt said the pace doesn’t slow down.

“The world does not stop just because there was a fire,” she said. “Life continues. We still have our day jobs that we need to go take care of.”

Another challenge arrives Wednesday, with critical fire danger forecast across the Black Hills and into parts of Wyoming, including Sheridan, Campbell, Crook and Weston counties. Forecast conditions include wind gusts up to 40 mph and humidity as low as 12%.

Schmidt said she believes fire lines are in good shape, but she’s watching the weather closely after recent high-wind events.

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“Saturday night, 50 mile an hour winds — that was multiple days ago, and there’s been a lot of work done since,” she said. “I personally am pretty confident that we’re going to be able to hold this fire through today.”

While spring is typically the region’s wetter season — which can help reduce fire behavior — Schmidt urged residents not to become complacent as wildfire season ramps up.

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