Wolfe Willow, the man shot by a U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs officer Monday on the Wind River Indian Reservation, is recovering in a Riverton hospital from a gunshot wound.
Willow was shot during a domestic altercation that devolved into a knife fight, he told Cowboy State Daily.
Willow, 36, was in the intensive-care unit of SageWest Health Care in Riverton on Wednesday, where a Cowboy State Daily reporter surveyed his bandaged side and other bandaged areas Willow called “stab wounds” resulting from the family fight preceding the shooting. Â
The FBI had confirmed Tuesday that a BIA officer “fired his weapon” on the reservation and the FBI is investigating the incident. Â
The agency offered “no further information” from the investigation, but stated it would provide the “facts of the shooting” to the U.S. Attorney’s Office of Wyoming for review. Â
Acting U.S. Attorney Bob Murray, an appointed federal prosecutor, will have final discretion on whether the shooting was justified. Â
In an interview with Cowboy State Daily, Willow said he and his girlfriend’s family had been drinking together since noon Monday, when “her cousins showed up.” Â
Willow said a knife fight ensued, he gained control of one of the knives.
Police came to the scene just before 3 p.m., Willow said, and soon after, an agent shot him. Â
Scanner traffic at the time indicated an officer had shot a man who was wielding a knife.Â
Both Willow and his mother stated that Willow had served as a U.S. Marine. He also told Cowboy State Daily he suspected his girlfriend’s family disliked him “because I’m a sex offender.” Â
Willow had been sentenced to 36 months of federal incarceration in 2011 for abusive sexual contact. Â
He said that he suffers post-traumatic stress disorder and was suffering from flashbacks just prior to the incident. Â