Share this:

Local prosecutors continue to investigate whether felony animal cruelty charges are warranted in the now year-old case of a western Wyoming man accused of badly injuring a juvenile wolf with a snowmobile and then showing off the wounded animal in a Sublette County bar.

The Wyoming Game and Fish Department took the lead in responding to the Feb. 29, 2024 incident. The agency’s investigation and subsequent citation were quickly adjudicated without public notice: Daniel resident Cody Roberts was fined $250 for possessing the wolf, though steeper penalties could have been assessed if the warden opted to send the case to court. 

At the time, Game and Fish officials contended in a statement that “animal cruelty charges are not applicable to predatory animals.” However, not everyone agrees with that legal assessment.

Once the incident became public a month later — attracting immeasurable scorn, but also death threats from around the world — Sublette County Sheriff K.C. Lehr and Attorney Clayton Melinkovich launched their own investigation.   

A Wyoming man who captured, tortured and killed a wolf sparked outrage across the world and prompted a wave of social media posts. (collage by Tennessee Watson/WyoFile)

“Can there be additional charges?” Lehr told WyoFile in April 2024. “I’m looking at that right now in consultation with our county attorney.”

One year and five days later, that investigation is ongoing. 

“It is still active,” Melinkovich told WyoFile on Monday. “It’s not just pending — and it’s not like it could be pending forever.” 

Since the case remains open, Melinkovich cannot disclose exactly what has taken so long, but he attributed it to forces beyond his control. 

“Investigations take time, especially when you involve third-party labs,” the county attorney said. “Anytime you’re using outside entities to process evidence, it takes time.”

Sublette County staff attorney Clayton Melinkovich addresses Gov. Mark Gordon and other state officials at a December 2023 Pinedale meeting. (Mike Koshmrl/WyoFile)

The lab results — of whatever is being tested — are now in, he said. But Melinkovich, like many other county attorneys, is overrun by his caseload. In early February, a heinous murder occurred within his jurisdiction: Big Piney resident Dakota Farley was shot and killed with a compound bow allegedly fired by his “closest, most trusted” friends, the Pinedale Roundup reported.

Roberts’ treatment of the wolf was moved to the backburner. 

“In a triage of priorities, it is not at the top of the list right now,” Melinkovich said. 

Existing law

Still, prosecutors will eventually decide whether to decline charges or bring the infamous incident, which included a stop at the Green River Bar, to court, he said.  

“Charges that could apply would be felony animal cruelty,” Melinkovich said. “The statute says ‘an animal’ and ‘an animal’ includes a predatory animal.” 

According to Melinkovich’s interpretation, the Wyoming Criminal Code has an exemption for predatory species in the animal cruelty laws, but only for hunting purposes. But a person who abuses an animal, he said, is not fully exempted from the felony animal cruelty laws — including cruelty toward a wild predatory animal. 

Wyoming Game and Fish wardens are also authorized to enforce those felony animal cruelty statutes, Melinkovich said. 

Felony animal cruelty is committed in Wyoming if a person, “knowingly, and with intent to cause death or undue suffering, beats with cruelty, tortures, torments or mutilates an animal,” according to Section 6-3-1005 of the criminal code. The potential punishment is not more than two years in prison, a fine of up to $5,000, or both. 

Citing Sublette County’s investigation, Game and Fish officials declined comment. 

“The Wyoming Game and Fish Department cannot comment on pending or ongoing litigation within or outside of our jurisdiction,” Chief Warden Dan Smith said in a statement. 

Although there are differing interpretations of the Wyoming Criminal Code and what Roberts could have been charged with, lawmakers took steps in recent weeks to shore up perceived inadequacies. 

And new statute

On Monday, Gov. Mark Gordon signed into law House Bill 275, “Treatment of animals,” brought by Jackson Republican Rep. Andrew Byron. The signed act creates the authority for Game and Fish wardens to enforce a new offense for torturing, tormenting, mutilating or causing undue suffering to wildlife — including predatory animals and predacious birds — that have been taken into possession. Violations start at a misdemeanor, but second or subsequent offenses are a felony.

Because it’s just becoming law — the effective date is July 1 — Roberts, who possessed the wounded wolf in 2024, could not be charged for that new violation, Melinkovich said. 

Rep. Andrew Byron, R-Jackson, during the Wyoming Legislature’s 2025 budget session. (Mike Vanata/WyoFile)

House Bill 275, which was dubbed the “clean kill bill,” passed its committee and floor votes by wide margins every step of the way. The overwhelming support throughout the legislative process was heartening for Paul Ulrich, a Sublette County oil and gas industryman and fishing guide who co-founded a group, Wyoming Sportsmanship, that pushed the bill. 

“It’s a big deal for Wyoming,” Ulrich told WyoFile. “Our goal was to ensure that our statutes reflected our ethical philosophy, and I think in large part that was achieved.” 

Ulrich did not want to get into the middle of the Sublette County-Wyoming Game and Fish disagreement over existing law, but he stood behind the need for reform. 

“I believe that up until two days ago, the statutes were inadequate,” he said Wednesday. “That’s the very reason we pressed and pushed and gained so much support for House Bill 275. The bill makes a very clear statement that torture of any of Wyoming’s wildlife is unacceptable.”  

Some wildlife and sportsmanship advocates maintain the law still falls short. 

Roberts’ case put a spotlight on the legal-in-Wyoming practice of running down coyotes and other species with snowmobiles and striking exhausted animals. It’s how the Sublette County man acquired the wolf: He struck it until it was “barely conscious,” according to Game and Fish officials. 

Rep. Mike Schmid, R- La Barge, during the Wyoming Legislature’s 2025 budget session. (Mike Vanata/WyoFile)

There were two failed attempts in the Legislature to prohibit this brutal form of hunting, both spearheaded by La Barge Republican Rep. Mike Schmid, whose district includes Daniel and the Green River Bar.   

“I’m proud of Mike [Schmid] for standing up for what he believes,” Ulrich said. “A lot of people in Wyoming agree with him, that we have more work to do. And I’m one of them.” 

Cody Roberts — the man whose actions prompted an ongoing investigation, creation of a new law and push for creating more — did not respond to WyoFile’s request for an interview. To date, his account of what happened has never been told.

Mike Koshmrl reports on Wyoming's wildlife and natural resources. Prior to joining WyoFile, he spent nearly a decade covering the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem’s wild places and creatures for the Jackson...

Join the Conversation

36 Comments

WyoFile's goal is to provide readers with information and ideas that foster constructive conversations about the issues and opportunities our communities face. One small piece of how we do that is by offering a space below each story for readers to share perspectives, experiences and insights. For this to work, we need your help.

What we're looking for: 

  • Your real name — first and last. 
  • Direct responses to the article. Tell us how your experience relates to the story.
  • The truth. Share factual information that adds context to the reporting.
  • Thoughtful answers to questions raised by the reporting or other commenters.
  • Tips that could advance our reporting on the topic.
  • No more than three comments per story, including replies. 

What we block from our comments section, when we see it:

  • Pseudonyms. WyoFile stands behind everything we publish, and we expect commenters to do the same by using their real name.
  • Comments that are not directly relevant to the article. 
  • Demonstrably false claims, what-about-isms, references to debunked lines of rhetoric, professional political talking points or links to sites trafficking in misinformation.
  • Personal attacks, profanity, discriminatory language or threats.
  • Arguments with other commenters.

Other important things to know: 

  • Appearing in WyoFile’s comments section is a privilege, not a right or entitlement. 
  • We’re a small team and our first priority is reporting. Depending on what’s going on, comments may be moderated 24 to 48 hours from when they’re submitted — or even later. If you comment in the evening or on the weekend, please be patient. We’ll get to it when we’re back in the office.
  • We’re not interested in managing squeaky wheels, and even if we wanted to, we don't have time to address every single commenter’s grievance. 
  • Try as we might, we will make mistakes. We’ll fail to catch aliases, mistakenly allow folks to exceed the comment limit and occasionally miss false statements. If that’s going to upset you, it’s probably best to just stick with our journalism and avoid the comments section.
  • We don’t mediate disputes between commenters. If you have concerns about another commenter, please don’t bring them to us.

The bottom line:

If you repeatedly push the boundaries, make unreasonable demands, get caught lying or generally cause trouble, we will stop approving your comments — maybe forever. Such moderation decisions are not negotiable or subject to explanation. If civil and constructive conversation is not your goal, then our comments section is not for you. 

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. Cody Roberts not only needs to be charged and convicted of felony animal cruelty. The owners and people in thay bar need some kind of repercussions. Anyone of them at any moment of this could of reported that he had an injured wolf in the bar. Not one person in there including the owners did the right thing! This is so horrible my heart is hurting that I even saw this , but im glad the right people stood up for the right thing even if it was too late for thos poor wolf God bless her … Cody Roberts should get jail time absolutely why wouldn’t he ? Look at the crime he committed

  2. Cody Roberts needs to get jail time and a massive fine for what he did to that young wolf. He needs to lose his hunting privileges for life. Hunting is one thing…..torturing is a whole nother story. Possession of LIVE wildlife is ILLEGAL. It may be legal to run them down ( I do not support that law) with a snowmobile, its not legal to beat it almost to death, take it to your home, and then to a public establishment, and TORTURE it for hours ) allegations support it was barely concious, and then take it out behind yhe bar and shoot it. Allegedly being drunk at the time. He could lose his CDL license with a DUI. Also it is ILLEGAL to take an animal into an establishment which serves food/drink as it OBVIOUSLY IS NOT A SERVICE ANIMAL. Probably illegal to discharge a firearm within city limits also. And he obviously finds the entire incident, and his pittance of a 250.00 fine laughable. NO ANIMAL, WILD OR DOMESTIC DESERVES TO BE TORTURED. I am keeping my comments civil, you get more positive response by doing so. What I would really love to say is not appropriate on a public forum. I hope he gets convicted and does jail time, he loses some of his “entertainment” rights and a much bigger fine. At this time, while my family was planning a vacation to Wyoming, we have decided to go elsewhere. We have no desire to spend our money or support a state that allows the vile treatment of a wild animal.

  3. Thanks, Mike Koshmrl, for keeping this story alive. As an environmental attorney and animal lover, I hope justice is received. However, I also am deeply sad for the little boy that Cody Roberts was and can only imagine how he was treated to become so cruel. We need to break the cycles of abuse.
    The greatness of a nation can be judged by the way its animals are treated. ~Mahatma Gandhi

  4. Cody Roberts took the wolf behind the bar and shot it in town after possessing and tormenting it at home and in a bar it for many hours. He should receive $5000 fine and 2 years IDOC (max). In addition, if he still has a CDL, he should lose it after being charged and convicted of DUI.Punish him and set an example for others.

  5. We need to somehow keep this story alive. Cody roberts, the owners of the green river bar, the patrons that were in that bar that did nothing that night, and everyone who re-elected holly roberts into a government position need to be burdened by this for the rest of their lives.
    Why no punishment? Because his wife has friends in high places. Because Cody us a contracted worker with the wyoming fish and game department. It’s dangerous when people know they can get away with crimes.

    1. While you cannot hold his wife responsible for his actions……to use HER contacts to avoid what any other person accused of what he did is disgusting, and illegal. He also needs to lose his contract jobs with Wyoming Fish and Game. He was convicted and given a laughable fine, but nonetheless convicted. How a state agency can allow him to keep his job is not acceptable. Probably the wife’s contacts allow this to happen. Being drunk and discharging a gun in town is illegal, the fine being a lot more than 250.00. Again wife’s political position let’s him slide on these charges.

  6. What Cody Roberts to the wolf was beyond cruel. Time will not lessen how people world wide felt that such a cruel and abusive crime is a mistameaner. He is not the only narcissistic humane that performs such cruelty and felony charges need to be put through or people are literally getting away with incomprehensible acts of cruelty. It is absolutely shameful that laws do not protect any animal animals from sadistic humans.

  7. I grew up in a hunting family and that man is disgusting. He probably feels small and it’s his way of feeling powerful, probably doesn’t treat his wife or kids with much kindness either. What a great role model

  8. I will NEVER travel or stay in Wyoming until it is illegal to kill wild animals in any way that is unfair to the animal as in snow mobiles. What a backward and uncivilized community. Karma will handle people like you

  9. This is absolutely horrendous! Any human being that can watch the video of a gravely injured animal being tortured and take joy in it is NOT a mentally stable human. Cody Roberts and his aunt who made a video herself about the innocent wolf are not mentally stable and need to be held accountable. Being allowed to run down and torture ANY living being is the most horrible thing I have heard of and the “good ole boy” attitude needs to STOP. The video, pics, eyewitness accounts are enough evidence! Throw the book at them both. And to think, his own daughter was there! Not a great upbringing! Another generation of animal abusers!

  10. As a former Wyoming Rancher I’m embarrassed that Wyoming persists in allowing the sickening practice of allowing predators or any other animal to be hunted in this cruel and barbaric method. The whole world is watching and Wyoming needs the whole world to bring tourism dollars to the state. This will discourage many and Wyoming continues to sport a “guilty as charged” shiner over this issue.

  11. It’s PAST time for felony animal cruelty charges. There’s actual video, for crying out loud AND Cody Roberts admits he ran over and tortured the young wolf. Charge him!

  12. Take a look at your own dog or cat, lamb or horse, etc and point out how YOU would respond to seeing it be eaten alive. Actually the anger should be focused on those willing to sacrifice other folks living so they could enjoy the thrill of seeing the kids 4-H or FFA lamb, calf, or pony being eaten alive or the devastation to the lamb crop that would be sold for food for a family of humans. Unfortunately there is a lack of concern for those negativly impacted by wolves….just to thrill those who pay no price.

    1. No one is advocating that predators should not be managed. This, however, is sadistic, brutal, inhumane, barbaric, recreational bloodsport. No animal should treated this way. And the legislators who persist in allowing it are just as guilty. Wyoming will continue to suffer worldwide criticism and condemnation as long as it’s allowed to continue. Wyoming needs tourism much more than it needs the damage these practices produce.

    2. I live in the desert. I’ve lost two cats to desert predators – probably coyotes, maybe owls – because they got outside. And I would never run a coyote over with a motorized vehicle. The idea sickens me. Wolves and coyotes are living creatures trying to survive. You act like they come after your “living” like they’re a rival business owner. They’re wild animals. And no one’s family is going hungry because a wolf killed livestock.

  13. the hideous outrageous cruelty of this case, and the barbaric practice of allowing snowmobiles to run over these animals is a heinous act of such proportion that it will not go away until the legality of it goes away…. citizens of Wyoming, and decent residents of this planet. keep fighting to end the sadistic practices of tormenting animals…..and please advocate to get psychologic help to the demented individuals who practice acts of torture to the animals…. make Wyoming recognized for the beauty of its natural landscape and the animals who were meant to roam freely in the magnificent land….

  14. I’m guessing that many of ‘alpha male’ maga voters see those of us who care about the humane treatment of animals as some kind of ‘wokeness’. BTW, Cody Roberts is not ‘alpha’ but a sniveling baby who gets his giggles by abusing animals and parading his idiocy in front of other like minded (morally deficient) betas…

    Sorry to see the Wyoming establishment reinforce this abhorrent behavior as it continues to slow walk doing anything about it. But I’m not surprised.

    1. David. You’re wrong on MAGA voters supporting this behavior. My opinion is your just as bad of human as the guy driving the snowmobile that done this. If I would have been present in the bar that nite. I would have confronted this jerk. Than called the law. If that led to physical confrontation that would been fine as well. It really speaks a lot about the bar customers present that DIDN’T speak up and make that call. Small town or not. You stand on principles. Right is right. Wrong is wrong.

  15. As long as the Ag community continues to insist they must be able to “mash” predators with snowmobiles any real reform of these laws will stall. They and the recreational “mashers” are the entire reason we do not have a law outlawing this horrible practice.

    1. You can thank filth like Magagna (Wyoming Stock Growers) for maintaining the legal deployment of this action

  16. The allowance of torture to any innocent animal is the allowance of torture to all of them. One can not pick and choose. It is well known that psychologists have identified individual behavior such as this as an indicator of a psychopathic personality capable of unspeakable harm. If we look the other way we are essentially agreeing that this is acceptable.

  17. Charge him with a felony, prosecute him, and convict him. Take away his hunting privileges while you are at it.

    1. I agree. The behavior was stupid, cruel, and I think the courts have plenty more to deal with. Put this away.

  18. Yes Cody Roberts should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law! And that is not really enough as the laws are too lenient in protecting innocent animals from stupid people. Even better, he should receive the exact same treatment!

  19. I would take any statement for Game Warden Chief Dan Smith with a grain of salt. While he was the Head Game warden for the Cody region, Smith spent a lot of time covering for the bad actor Powell warden who put the State of Wyoming into a multi million dollar lawsuit, yet was allowed to “retire” early and retain full benefits. Mission #1 of the Game and Fish department is to cover for themselves and any misfit employees.

  20. just looking at the photograph of the wolf in the bar i feel the sickness that the state of wyoming allows to continue perpetuated by the livestock industry and our representatives in the state legislature.

  21. Wyoming still has a black eye over this incident. The problem has not been resolved because enough people don’t want it to be resolved. It’s a form of sick recreation. Cody Roberts should already be serving time in prison and his hunting, fishing, and trapping privileges revoked for life. We still haven’t forgotten what happened to Matthew Shepherd.

  22. There is no reason to treat an animal like this. Only a person with psychopathic personality traits would do something like this.

    Wolves need to be hunted and their numbers managed, and cruelty to an animal should in no way be considered comparable to hunting.

  23. Thank you for keeping this story alive! That bill is better than nothing. Wyoming g had a chance to make a difference and chose to side with the torturers. Ranchers don’t need to run over predators, shame on Wyoming!

  24. when you take an animal listed as a “predator” put on a muzzle, leash and collar and parade it around some backwoods dive bar, posing it for pictures for all your toothless friends, in essence you’ve “domesticated” the same animal. Then, go behind the bar and shoot same animal. Yep, IMHO, that predator became an animal and the thrillbilly who caused this all should be charged with felony animal abuse. The Game and Fish were pretty gutless handling this case so maybe the Sublette Co. Attorney can show some huevos.

    1. The county prosecutor has had a year to display a set of “huevo’s” and if he hasn’t done it yet, probably won’t. This Cody Roberts character must have quite a bit of clout in Sublette County to only receive a slap on the wrist $250 fine. Heck, the fine people at the world class Daniel Bar easily got 4 times their moneys worth yakking it up over this event

  25. Excellent article. Thank you, WyoFile and Mike Koshmrl for keeping up with this story. The issue is not finished – not by a long shot. The majority of people who live in Wyoming abhor all animal cruelty and want it stopped. What Cody Roberts did brought the practice to light because he got caught. I am so grateful for the person/people who first revealed this story so that reform could begin. They were brave and ethical. I thank them and WyoFile for honesty and integrity.

  26. An intriguing part of this story is the bit about “third-party labs.” Two veterinarians spoke to the Game and Fish Commission at its April 2024 meeting during a public comment period devoted to the Daniel wolf incident. They asked whether WGFD had taken the trouble of retrieving the wolf’s carcass and submitting it for forensic necropsy at an accredited laboratory. The purpose would be to assess the nature and severity of its injuries. This should be part of any investigation where severe animal abuse or cruelty is suspected. WGFD claimed in a press release that “we’re satisfied that every tool we have available was used, and used to the best of our ability. The Department has acted with transparency and in compliance with Wyoming law.” In two follow-up letters I wrote to Richard Ladwig, president of the Game and Fish Commission, I encouraged that a forensic necropsy be done. So far as I know, WGFD never acknowledged it authorized examination of the wolf’s remains and, if so, what were the results.

    If attorney Melinkovich has now received the results of just such an examination, particularly given WGFD’s formal commitment to transparency, they should be made public.

  27. I’m hoping somewhere along the line team orange will find a better way to genuflect than committing acts of animal cruelty or defending them in the public square. The positive in this prosecution’s incompetence and sloth is cody the coward will be running up her legal bills. She might lose her business and job in the long run. Looking for karma to show up.