Wyoming
Wyoming Reporter Arrested For Using Forged Documents To Fight Wind Farm
A reporter from southeastern Wyoming submitted forged documents and lied about her credentials during state permitting proceedings through which she opposed a controversial wind farm project, court documents allege.
April Marie Morganroth, 40, who also has listed aliases of April Marie Hamilton and April Marie McClellan, now faces 10 felonies in Wheatland Circuit Court. If convicted, she could face up to 65 years in prison and $65,000 in fines.
The name Morganroth uses as a journalist in her byline is Marie Hamilton, which is also listed in the case’s criminal affidavit.
Hamilton is the publisher of the short-lived Wyoming Sentinel, a startup publication that has been inactive since late last year that covered Platte, Goshen and Laramie counties. Hamilton also has worked as a freelancer for Wyoming outlets.
Platte County Deputy Attorney Marel Bunker Roth charged Hamilton on Monday in Wheatland Circuit Court. If the court finds probable cause to back the charges during Hamilton’s March 18 preliminary hearing, it will ascend to the Platte County District Court for a potential trial.
Investigators allege Hamilton, objecting to a wind farm project a state panel was reviewing, submitted forged documents including letters purporting to be from a doctor and teacher; in an effort to sway state officials. Investigators also said Hamilton lied about her credentials and that she was a property owner near the project.
Converse County Sheriff’s Investigator Benjamin Peech wrote in a March 9 evidentiary affidavit, now filed in Wheatland Circuit Court, that his undersheriff assigned him and Investigator Amber Peterson to help the Platte County Attorney’s Office investigate allegations of forgery and perjury, relating to a multi-day administrative hearing.
Hamilton could not be reached for comment Friday, as Cowboy State Daily left a voicemail with her phone. Her court record shows the public defender’s office is being assigned to her case: that office has declined for years to comment on ongoing cases. It did not immediately return a late-day voicemail Friday.
The Project
The Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality’s Industrial Siting Council, whose administrative arm is the Industrial Siting Division, heard testimony in November and December 2025 regarding whether NextEra Energy Resources could gain a permit to build a wind farm in the Chugwater area.
It’s been a controversial topic in Platte County. Disputes about the wind project also led to a citizen complaint for Gov. Mark Gordon to investigate and push for the removal of all three Platte County Commissioners.
But, citing concerns over some dubious and some untrue claims in that complaint, Gordon declined Feb. 25 to act upon it.
Hamilton submitted exhibits to the Industrial Siting Division (ISD) for the hearings.
Three exhibits, titled Exhibits J, K, and L, Hamilton asked the division to admit under seal since they concerned her children.
One was a letter allegedly authored by Dr. Aaron Meng, and the other two were documents allegedly authored by Laramie County School District No. 1 teacher Audrey Adams.
Hamilton called them true documents and spoke about them at length, Peech recounted in his affidavit.
But Marianne Shanor, the attorney representing NextEra, called Wyoming Attorney General supervisory attorney Greg Weisz the night of Nov. 20, saying she believed the documents might be forgeries.
The council held an executive session Nov. 21 to review the three exhibits.
Hamilton asserted they were true documents authored by Meng and Adams, says the affidavit, adding that Hamilton also said Meng and Adams would call into the hearing later.
The affidavit says Hamilton testified under oath at this hearing.
Letters Face Scrutiny
Meng and Adams did not call into the hearing, says the affidavit.
Around Thanksgiving, Weisz and his paralegal assistant Carrie Mays contacted the supposed authors of the exhibits, who both denied having written them, the affidavit says.
Both provided documentation denying they’d written the documents, Peech added.
One final portion of the wind permitting hearing was set for Dec. 29.
Hamilton asked to withdraw as a party to the proceedings, and she asked to withdraw the three exhibits, but Weisz objected, since the exhibits had drawn testimony from her and the members of the Industrial Siting Council had viewed them.
Peech confirmed essentially this same series of allegations by interviewing Industrial Siting Division administrator Jenny Staeben, his affidavit says.
Staeben furnished more details as well.
She said that ahead of the hearing, Hamilton had claimed to own a property on JJ Road in Chugwater, which Peech would later confirm belongs to someone else, the affidavit says.
Staeben reportedly said Hamilton claimed her address was required by federal law to be kept confidential since she’s a reporter.
Hamilton asserted that she was enrolled at the University of Wyoming law school and was working on her law degree, that she had a bachelor’s degree, master’s degree and a PhD in journalism from Arizona State University, that she owned the Hamilton/Geiss brand in Wyoming, and that she operated various family ranching businesses in several states — the affidavit relates from Staeben’s account.
Staeben said she kept the confidential exhibits in a safe at her office.
At the hearing Dec. 29, Weisz told the council in a public hearing that he’d obtained documentation that the people Hamilton had claimed authored the exhibits, did not author the exhibits.
Cowboy State Daily reported on that hearing. Hamilton told the outlet afterward that the Industrial Siting Division had ignored her attempts to show the documents’ origin.
She also claimed the agency violated her child’s privacy by airing some of their contents during the authenticity debate.
Weisz at the Dec. 29 hearing did not go into detail as to the documents’ health claims. He denied Cowboy State Daily’s request for the documents, noting they were under seal.
Investigator’s Search For Identity
Peech wrote in the affidavit that a Spectrum bill dated May 13, 2023, linked Hamilton to an address in Cheyenne.
He also wrote that an April Marie McClellan, which he listed as one of Hamilton’s alias names, was convicted of felony forgery in Arizona in 2008.
Peech wrote that he contacted the University of Wyoming and the personnel there told him “no person with any of the names had ever been enrolled in the University of Wyoming or University of Wyoming Law School.”
The Wyoming Brand Inspector’s office confirmed that there were no current or former brands under Hamilton’s name or aliases, Peech wrote.
An arrest warrant return document says “Morganroth” was arrested Tuesday at 10:30 a.m., pursuant to a March 3 warrant.
Work As Reporter
The Wyoming Sentinel, the online publication for which Hamilton is listed as the publisher, has not published any news stories in more than three months. She has previously written for the Platte County Record Times.
Over the last few months, Hamilton has been writing for the Oil City News with her most recent story having been published last week.
She wrote many stories about the state legislative session, which ended last week.
Oil City News managing editor Klark Byrd told Cowboy State Daily in a Friday interview that Hamilton was on a freelance contract.
“All her stories were double-checked by me before we published, and verified with legislative videos as they went live on YouTube,” said Byrd. “And that was her only work for us.” That work spanned from Feb. 10 to March 6, he said.
Once Oil City management learned of her arrest, said Byrd, “we terminated the freelance contract.”
More About That Hearing
The proposed build by NextEra Energy Resources is a 300-megawatt wind energy, 150 megawatt solar and 150 megawatt battery storage system (BESS) facility slated for a Platte County parcel east of Chugwater and Interstate 25.
The council approved the permit after hours of testimony Dec. 29, and amid locals’ concerns over the potential health risks of living near turbines, the potential to kill eagles, incursions on wildlife corridors by the solar project, and the chance that the BESS could rupture and pollute the groundwater, or suffer a thermal runaway.
The council added conditions for groundwater quality monitoring, and a greater distance between wind towers and a concerned resident’s home.
The Tally
The counts filed against Hamilton are as follows:
Three counts of possession of forged writings, punishable by up to five years in prison and up to $5,000 in fines;
Three counts of forgery, each punishable by up to 10 years in prison and up to $10,000 in fines;
Four counts of perjury, each punishable by up to five years in prison and up to $5,000 in fines.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.
Wyoming
Dan Speas Fish Hatchery temporarily closed to visitors as construction begins on new cool-/warm-water expansion
CASPER, Wyo. — On Thursday, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department announced that the Dan Speas Fish Hatchery will be temporarily closed, beginning June 25, due to the construction of a brand-new, state-of-the-art cool-/warm-water fish production facility.
A release from Game and Fish says that the brief pause in public access is a necessary step to ensure the safety of visitors and staff during the heavy-lifting phases of the project.
“We had hoped to keep access open to the hatchery, but we have discovered there will be too many safety hazards during the demolition phase of construction,” said Lars Alsager, Game and Fish superintendent of Dan Speas. “The Department will reassess the closure in the fall of 2026, once initial demolition and foundational work are safely wrapped up.”
As Wyoming’s largest producer of fish for stocking, the Dan Speas Fish Hatchery — along with the state’s nine other fish hatcheries — will continue its normal cold-water fish production uninterrupted throughout the entire construction process.
Once the expansion is complete, the new facility will dramatically boost Game and Fish’s ability to manage diverse recreational fishing opportunities across Wyoming by raising sport fish locally, rather than importing them from other states.
Anglers can look forward to high-quality, in-state production of walleye, sauger, crappie, bluegill, largemouth bass and channel catfish.
“This project marks a thrilling milestone for Wyoming’s outdoor community, ensuring a robust, self-sustaining future for cold, cool and warm-water sport fishing right here at home,” adds Alan Osterland, chief of fisheries.
The release notes that the Wyoming Game and Fish Department is committed to keeping the community in the loop every step of the way. They included a brief snapshot of what to expect throughout the project:
- Fall 2026: Demolition and foundation work conclude, and the department reassesses public access to the facility.
- Fall 2027: Construction of the new cool-/warm-water fish production facility officially ends.
- Spring 2028: The first batch of cool- and warm-water fish will be produced and prepared to stock Wyoming waters.
“The Wyoming Game and Fish Department extends its sincere thanks to the public for their understanding and cooperation as we build a premier fishery asset for generations of anglers to come,” the release states.
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Wyoming
Colorado And Oregon Lift Fishing Restrictions, Drought Will Kill Fish Anyway
Facing extreme drought in the wake of an exceptionally mild winter, officials in Colorado and Oregon have thrown up their hands and told anglers at some reservoirs: Catch all the fish you want, because they’re going to die anyway.
Conditions aren’t nearly so dire at two of Wyoming’s premier fishing reservoirs, Flaming Gorge in Sweetwater County and Boysen in Fremont County, where limits remain in place and the angling should remain good this summer, a state park manager and marina owner told Cowboy State Daily.
In northeastern Oregon, fishing limits were lifted on three reservoirs on the Powder River, a tributary of the Snake River, which originates in Wyoming.
Colorado is allowing unlimited angling on Antero Reservoir on the South Platte River in the central part of the state, and the Nee Noshe Reservoir to the southeast.
Utah has loosened catch limits on Crouse Reservoir, east of Salt Lake City, and Nine Mile Reservoir, south of the city.
In each instance, state agencies surmised reservoirs are getting so low and stagnant the fish are doomed regardless, according to numerous media reports.
No Emergency, Yet
Despite drought conditions across the state, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department doesn’t have “immediate plans to enact emergency regulations to liberalize creel limits,” according to fisheries management coordinator Mark Smith.
“However, conditions could change rapidly. If an emergency change to creel limits were to occur that information would be disseminated widely to the public and posted at the water for anglers to find,” Smith said in an email to Cowboy State Daily.
Some of Wyoming’s larger reservoirs have conservation pools, or “dead pools,” to act as buffers for fisheries when water is running low, Smith said.
Even so, “all stored water has limitations,” he added. The water at Flaming Gorge and Boysen is expected to drop enough to render some boat ramps useless.
So, Game and Fish is watching closely for a “tipping point” that might warrant a change in fishing regulations, Smith said.
Bad New For Small Waters
For smaller fisheries, the news isn’t quite so good.
“Ultimately, our goal is to protect all of our fisheries, but we recognize that some of our small waters have already been lost, or will be lost, to drying,” Smith said.
Sometimes that happens so fast there isn’t time to react, he said.
“For example, when we were finally able to access roads and assess small ponds in the 33 Mile country north of Casper this May, most of those fisheries had already succumbed to low water elevations and poor water-quality conditions,” Smith said.
“Other sagebrush stock-water reservoirs could face a similar fate,” he added.
Emergency regulations require the governor’s signature.
“Emergency regulations take effect immediately upon the Governor’s approval and would be lifted if conditions improved and fish were likely to survive,” Smith said.
Boysen Could Lose Boat Ramps
Boysen Reservoir has been roughly 70% full during June, Boysen State Park superintendent John Bass said.
Boysen is one of Wyoming’s top destinations for walleye, and also boasts good trout fishing.
Bass said he doesn’t anticipate the reservoir dropping to the point of mass fish die-offs or calls to lift all fishing limits.
According to Bureau of Reclamation estimates, Boysen will slowly fall, but remain above 50% capacity.
All four Boysen boat ramps are usable, he said. They are Bannon, Tough Creek, Fremont Bay and Cottonwood Bay.
“Although, as the lake starts falling, the Fremont and Cottonwood Ramps will be too shallow to use. But that’s a fairly common occurrence in my 10 years here,” Bass said. “The Brannon and Tough Creek boat ramps will be usable for the remainder of the year, until ice-up.”
‘The Marina Could Be Gone’
Likewise, there’s no reason to think officials will call for a free-for-all at Flaming Gorge, which straddles the Wyoming-Utah state line, Buckboard Marina owner Tony Valdez said.
“I don’t think we’ll be at the stagnant water level, where we could lose all of the fish,” he said.
Flaming Gorge draws anglers from all over the region for its prized kokanee salmon. It’s also known for lake trout and other species.
The Bureau of Reclamation this spring announced that Flaming Gorge is set for a million-acre-foot drawdown to make up for severe shortages downstream at Lake Powell, on the Utah-Arizona state line.
An acre foot is the amount of water that would flood an acre of land to the depth of one foot.
Valdez has previously expressed concerns the drawdown could ruin kokanee spawning areas. Kokanee are already under pressure because of competition with lake trout and burbot.
Wyoming Game and Fish and the Utah Division of Wildlife already lifted catch limits on smaller lake trout (under 28 inches) and burbot, in hopes of helping the kokanee.
Valdez said he doesn’t expect fishing limits to be suspended on any other species.
However, boat ramps could be rendered useless as the reservoir drops for the drawdown, he added.
Valdez said his marina could also tank this summer.
“This year, the marina could be gone. In fact, I’ve got to go deal with that right now, and move some stuff around (because of dropping water levels),” he said during a telephone interview with Cowboy State Daily.
Catfish Getting Scarce
Valdez said if there’s any danger of water dropping to fish-killing levels it would hit first upstream, at Fontenelle Reservoir.
“If it did get that low, the first one to go would be Fontenelle, then the Green (River) and then Flaming Gorge. But I don’t see it dropping that low,” he said.
Drought has ruined some of the fishing on the Blacks River, which feeds Flaming Gorge on the west side, Valdez said.
That river once was a hot spot for catfish, he noted.
“People still catch catfish near the confluence, more so in the lake than on the river. The river gets stagnant,” he said.
While Flaming Gorge is holding its own for now, the long-term picture could be stark.
During a Tuesday meeting in Denver, members of the Upper Colorado River Commission said conditions along the river system – which includes the Green River – are dire.
Wyoming state engineer Brandon Gebhart said it could be the worst year on record for the Colorado River basin.
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.
Wyoming
Politics in the Park: GOP gubernatorial candidates share visions for Wyoming governor
This news report mentions suicide. If you or someone you know is in immediate danger of harming themselves, please call 911. If you or someone you know is experiencing suicidal thoughts, call the U.S. National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 988 or text “WYO” to 741-741 for the Crisis Text Line.
CASPER, Wyo. — Three Republican gubernatorial candidates shared their views on a myriad of topics spanning taxation, energy production, resource rights and more Wednesday at the third Politics in the Park forum.
The event at Casper’s Washington Park featured state Sen. Eric Barlow, retired Marine Corps Col. Brent Bien and State Superintendent of Public Instruction Megan Degenfelder. The candidates seek to replace Gov. Mark Gordon, who cannot run again due to term limits.
Fellow Republican candidate Curt Blake did not attend the forum, which was hosted by the Natrona County Republican Party and the Natrona County Republican Women. Other candidates in the race include Democrat Kenneth Castner and Constitution Party nominee Rebecca Bextel.
Taxes, budget and education
When asked about economic growth and budget strategies, the candidates offered different plans. Bien called for deep tax cuts and deregulation. He expressed support for a November ballot initiative that would exempt 50% of a primary residence’s assessed value from property taxes.
Barlow warned that broad tax cuts could hurt local public services.
“All your property taxes support local governments, your schools, your cities, towns, and counties and your special districts,” he said.
Degenfelder said the key to low taxes and maintaining services is increasing state energy production. She said the state must deliver public services efficiently without overspending, adding that the private sector is solely responsible for creating jobs and economic growth.
Elaborating on job creation and how to stimulate the economy, all three pointed to the state’s public education system as a primary workforce development driver. They stressed a need to shift focus toward trade schools and career-based learning to prepare students for current opportunities.
“We skipped an entire generation of teaching these kids [trades] when they were in school,” Bien said, emphasizing that electricians and welders can currently name their price.
Degenfelder said pushing too many students toward college caused a workforce disconnect and led young people to leave the state. She said Wyoming must prepare students for local job openings to keep them from moving away.
Barlow said educational institutions must partner directly with local industries to align training and secure the economy.
Energy and climate
Questions about uranium mining, rare earth minerals and oil and gas leasing on state lands drew unified support for ramping up extraction and streamlining the permitting process while avoiding federal overreach. Degenfelder spoke about the national security implications of domestic rare earth processing.
“Do you know who processes 90% of rare earths? It’s not another state. It’s China,” Degenfelder said. “I spent time in China. Trust me, we do not want China to be in control of who’s processing rare earth minerals.”
Bien urged the state to speed up leases and permits to generate employment. Barlow supported subsidizing and promoting rare earth processing.
Regarding climate change, Bien rejected the narrative of man-made climate shifts and favored legacy industries.
“I do believe that God controls the climate,” Bien said.

Degenfelder said climate policies have been weaponized against Wyoming’s legacy energy industries, and argued that Wyoming’s cleaner-burning coal should be used globally. Barlow advocated for an all-of-the-above approach where all energy sources compete without subsidies.
When asked about specific infrastructure projects, including an influx of data centers and a proposed pumped hydroelectric project at Seminoe Reservoir, the candidates saw things differently. Bien firmly opposed both. He said a 2010 state law unfairly granted tax waivers to multibillion-dollar corporations, creating a system of corporate favoritism that leaves local ranchers and small business owners empty-handed.
Degenfelder said she supports data centers only if they don’t deplete water resources or raise utility rates for residents. Barlow countered the negative premise of the question entirely, saying the state already has over two dozen data centers without widespread neighbor complaints or resource abuse.
All three candidates agreed the State Board of Land Commissioners has a fiduciary duty to balance energy development with long-term benefits for schools and communities, and that the state must push back against federal regulations that threaten Wyoming’s core industries.
Infrastructure, water and land access
The candidates answered questions about infrastructure, water rights and corner crossing. Degenfelder said keeping water is vital to Wyoming’s survival and pledged to work with the federal government to stop what she considered downstream theft.
“Without water, we don’t have life. Nothing else matters,” Degenfelder said. “And right now, for many, many years, we’ve allowed these downstream states to steal Wyoming’s water and now we’re in the fight for our life … for our water rights.”
2026 Politics in the Park coverage
Bien said he wouldn’t give up any more water rights beyond original compacts. He suggested investing state savings into local water storage and irrigation. Barlow acknowledged that the current multi-year drought has created natural and legal challenges, adding the Legislature is increasing its technical and legal expertise to defend water rights.
On the topic of corner crossing, the candidates noted recent court rulings that favor public access but offered different solutions. Bien said the Legislature should define a corner, Degenfelder favored case-by-case reviews, and Barlow proposed land exchanges to resolve disputes.
“If we want to have less conflict, less corner crossing, let’s work toward fewer corners,” Barlow said. “Let’s work toward consolidations within the current law. Let’s work toward things that make meaningful access available to those public land users and still protect all the private property rights.”
Healthcare and community services
The candidates expressed support for telehealth expansion, rural healthcare access and annual cancer scans for firefighters.
Degenfelder said emergency medical services should be an essential service. Bien said funding models need standardization before making a statewide EMS designation.
Barlow promised to create a healthcare strike team on Aug. 19 if he wins the primary election. He said the team would bring providers, payers and patients together to improve care.
The candidates supported protecting Medicaid for vulnerable people. Bien called for tort reform to lower insurance costs, while Degenfelder spoke about expanding the healthcare workforce pipeline.
On the state’s high veteran suicide rate, candidates supported wrap-around services, with Barlow citing local nonprofit partnerships and Bien pushing for robust VA hotline access. Degenfelder said Wyoming must make sure returning veterans are provided with strong community support and are made fully aware of the services available to them.
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Regarding food insecurity, the candidates advocated for localized solutions, with Bien calling for ranchers to feed local schools and Barlow suggesting potential state support for school boards using their funds for nutrition programs. Degenfelder said her strategy focuses on creating more physical sites for food access and actual meals, rather than expanding government programs.
All three candidates opposed the decriminalization of marijuana.
They agreed the state’s pardon and expungement system needs reform to help nonviolent offenders restore their rights.
When asked what they would stop, Bien named corporate favoritism and regulation.
“Number one is to stop the exodus of young people from the state of Wyoming,” Degenfelder said. “You should not, if you’re a grandparent, have to get on an airplane just to see your kids and your grandchildren.”

Barlow pledged to protect public lands and reduce “the divisiveness, the ugliness that’s going on in our political climate.”
“I don’t believe it serves this nation,” he said.
Federal overreach and transparency
When asked how they would assert state authority, Bien cited the 10th Amendment and a Montana court case involving federal funds.
“So, it is one of those things to where, if it’s not in the best interest of Wyoming and it falls within the 10th Amendment and outside of those enumerated powers, I will definitely push back,” Bien said.
Degenfelder favored working with a sympathetic federal administration to return power to the states. Barlow said he would order the state attorney general to challenge unconstitutional federal mandates.
On transparency, Bien called for a state audit and an end to nondisclosure agreements in public–private partnerships. Barlow pointed to the need to update the Wyoming Public Records Act for the digital age, while Degenfelder focused on giving grassroots citizens direct access to the governor’s office rather than catering to special interests.

Closing thoughts and up next
In a lighter moment regarding daylight saving time, the candidates joked about the inconvenience, with Barlow suggesting moving the clock a half-hour permanently. He and Bien mentioned the possibility of working with governors from neighboring states to press the federal government to do away with the time change. Degenfelder said it’s an issue the Legislature is grappling with.
The evening wrapped up with a lightning round about the candidates’ favorite things about Wyoming. Barlow and Degenfelder praised the honest, hardworking people, while Bien celebrated the state’s wide, wild landscape.
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