Cowboy State Daily Video News: Monday, May 20, 2024

Monday's headlines include: - Casper Shooting Victim's Father Heartbroken - Yellowstone's 11-year-old One-Eyed Wolf Going Strong - YNP Worker Discovers What Happens When Bear Spray Explodes In Car

WC
Wendy Corr

May 20, 20247 min read

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(Cowboy State Daily Staff)
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It’s time to take a look at what’s happening around Wyoming! I’m Wendy Corr, bringing you headlines from the Cowboy State Daily newsroom, for Monday, May 20th.

The father of 17-year-old Lenea Brown, who was gunned down at a Casper park Tuesday by her ex-boyfriend, is devastated. He told Cowboy State Daily’s Dale Killingbeck that he wants justice for his daughter, who he says exuded compassion.

“He just shared that she was a beautiful girl, that she had just turned 17 on May 4, that the day of her death he had gotten a copy of her birth certificate so that she could get her driver's license, and she was going to start driving to work, to where she worked at an ice cream shop. She loved her job. He said that all of the people that work with her loved her, and he just said she didn't have an angry bone in her body.”

Brown was shot in the head and killed at Buckboard Park, in a southwest Casper neighborhood, just after midnight Tuesday. Police have charged her former boyfriend, 15-year-old Eavan Castaner, with her murder.

Wolf 907F in Yellowstone has lived an unusually long life. 

Along the way, she's given birth to multiple litters and lost her left eye. Outdoors reporter Mark Heinz says it’s quite a feat for a Yellowstone wolf to survive to age 11, which is more than three times the average lifespan of a wolf. 

“They're very territorial, and they fight a lot with other packs. So a lot of wolves get killed doing that. And then also a lot of wolves die trying to take down prey… She just gave birth to pups here about two weeks ago, which is incredible… no telling how much longer she'll live. Typically, you know, if they don't get killed, usually they get killed when they're still young. But if they do live to an advanced old age, the biologist said it's about the same as a large breed of dog, just biologically 10 or 12 years is about all they can expect.” 

Only about one out of every 300 wolves even makes it to age 11 in the wild. Most are killed around age 3 or 4.

Whipps found remains stored on shelves, buried in communal coffins or shipped out of state. So he told Cowboy State Daily’s Pat Maio that he’s on a mission to change that.

“He first became alerted to this issue of the remains back in August ‘22, kind of the tail end of the pandemic. And when a local funeral director in Casper came knocking on his door to recover a body to return to his funeral home. And he casually asked Mr. Whipps, ‘What do you want me to do with the rest of the bodies back at the funeral home?’ and Mr. Whipps was surprised, and had no clue what he was talking about. A couple of questions and answers later, he was able to determine that these funeral homes, two major ones in Casper, have been engaging in different ways of either holding the bodies locally, burying them, or they were sending them off to the Topeka, Kansas area.” 

Whipps says the number of unclaimed cremated remains fluctuates because of the endless stream of people who die, and those who are too poor to get a proper burial.

When safely compressed in its steel can, ready to save someone’s life on a hiking trail in Yellowstone or Grand Teton national parks, bear spray is not only useful, it’s essential gear.

Left in a hot car, however, it becomes a ticking time bomb that could really, REALLY ruin someone’s day - and car - if it explodes. That’s a lesson a worker at Yellowstone National Park recently learned the hard way, by leaving a can of bear spray on the dashboard of his vehicle. Cowboy State Daily’s Andrew Rossi reports that the canister blew through the windshield and launched itself more than 200 feet.

“It just left a big hole and then launched through the windshield, over 100 feet away before it landed. I spoke to a detailer in Cody, a car interior detailer. And he said that he's dealt with a million and one things that are just as noxious and disgusting, as you can imagine. But bear spray gave him some pause. It's not that he wouldn't want to do it, but it's so caustic and it's got so much bad stuff in there that he said, he doesn't do hazmat cleanups, and that would probably be a hazmat cleanup.”

Neither the vehicle nor the canister was excessively hot or in direct sunlight. Nevertheless, the canister’s explosion damaged the windshield, dashboard and an airbag while coating the entire interior with its potent chemical concoction.

And Cowboy State Daily’s crime and courts reporter Clair McFarland is a by-the-rules kind of person. In her column this week, Clair tells us that she was absolutely mortified when she got a call from the school that her middle-born son was kept inside for lunch detention - that is, until her son gave her his perspective.

“The email said that Middleborn was throwing apples at the school building, and that I needed to talk with him about his behavior and show him what respect for the facilities. And I asked him, ‘What are you doing? You know, that's not your building.’ But then we had a talk about, you know, lunch detention and you know, ‘This is a consequence, you've been shamed. You've been confined,’ and he was like, ‘No, I loved it, because I got out of the storm, and I got to read the Hunger Games’… which is a well written, fascinating story - and I gotta be honest, watching him pull it out of his backpack again and snuggle down in the passenger seat of my car, I was thinking, ‘Man, I could sure use a lunch detention.’”

And that’s today’s news. Get your free digital subscription to Wyoming’s only statewide newspaper by hitting the subscribe button on cowboystatedaily.com. And don’t forget to subscribe to our YouTube channel! I’m Wendy Corr, for Cowboy State Daily.

Radio Stations

The following radio stations are airing Cowboy State Daily Radio on weekday mornings, afternoons and evenings. More radio stations will be added soon.

KYDT 103.1 FM – Sundance

KBFS 1450 AM — Sundance

KYCN 1340 AM / 92.7 FM — Wheatland

KZEW 101.7 FM — Wheatland

KANT 104.1 FM — Guernsey

KZQL 105.5 FM — Casper

KMXW 92.5 FM — Casper

KBDY 102.1 FM — Saratoga

KTGA 99.3 FM — Saratoga

KJAX 93.5 FM — Jackson

KZWY 106.3 FM — Sheridan

KROE 930 AM / 103.9 FM — Sheridan

KWYO 1410 AM / 106.9 FM  — Sheridan

KYOY 92.3 FM Hillsdale-Cheyenne / 106.9 FM Cheyenne

KRAE 1480 AM — Cheyenne 

KDLY 97.5 FM — Lander

KOVE 1330 AM — Lander

KZMQ 100.3/102.3 FM — Cody, Powell, Medicine Wheel, Greybull, Basin, Meeteetse

KKLX 96.1 FM — Worland, Thermopolis, Ten Sleep, Greybull

KCGL 104.1 FM — Cody, Powell, Basin, Lovell, Clark, Red Lodge, MT

KTAG 97.9 FM — Cody, Powell, Basin

KCWB 92.1 FM — Cody, Powell, Basin

KVGL 105.7 FM — Worland, Thermopolis, Basin, Ten Sleep

KODI 1400 AM / 96.7 FM — Cody, Powell, Lovell, Basin, Clark, Red Lodge

KWOR 1340 AM / 104.7 FM — Worland, Thermopolis, Ten Sleep

KREO 93.5 FM — Sweetwater and Sublette Counties

KGOS 1490 AM — Goshen County

KERM 98.3 FM — Goshen County

Check with individual radio stations for airtime of the newscasts.

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Authors

WC

Wendy Corr

Broadcast Media Director