A former Gillette librarian is suing three local activists, claiming they conspired to have her fired and defamed her by saying that keeping âinappropriateâ books in the libraryâs childrenâs section is criminal and that she was distributing pornography. Â
Terri Lesley on Wednesday filed a 44-page civil lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for Wyoming against Hugh and Susan Bennett, and their son Kevin Bennett. Â
The complaint accuses the Bennetts of targeting allies of a protected class (LGBTQ people), of conspiring to violate Lesleyâs rights, of defaming Lesley and of inflicting emotional distress upon her.
Lastly, the complaint accuses Hugh and Susan Bennett of misusing the legal process to target Lesley. Â
The controversy over sexually graphic and LGBTQ-themed books in the Campbell County Public Library System, specifically the Gillette branch, began in 2021 and culminated in the library board firing Lesley on July 28, after Lesley refused to move contested books from the juvenilesâ sections to adult sections.Â
The Bennetts were outspoken against the controversial books and Lesleyâs moves to protect them. Â
âLesley was in the right for refusing to discriminate in government contracts or remove certain books from the library collection,â Lesleyâs complaint alleges, â(but) the Bennetts continued headlong into their vicious smear campaign, knowing full well that their words were laced with falsity.â Â
Kevin Bennett disputed Lesleyâs claims Wednesday in a comment to Cowboy State Daily. Â
âAdvancing the ideas she was in defense of at our library is tantamount to child molestation; you canât put ideas in kidsâ minds like that without damaging them,â said Kevin Bennett. âJust because youâre not physically damaged doesnât mean youâre not emotionally damaged. Thatâs what those books were doing and thatâs what we were defending against, (though) thereâs a political trend to turn a blind eye.â Â
How It StartedÂ
Lesley started working for the Campbell County Public Library System (CCPLS) in 1996 and became executive director in 2013. The Gillette News Record in 2021 named Lesley one of its âTen Who Made a Differenceâ for withstanding the library controversy, the complaint says. Â
According to the legal complaint, community angst against Lesley and the library started in June 2021, when the library published a Facebook post promoting LGBTQ pride month and Rainbow Book Month. The post linked to the Libraryâs Teen Blog and touted âa few titles you can check out from your library that will connect you with the LGBTQIA+ collection at CCPL.âÂ
Campbell County Commissioner Del Shelstad questioned whether the county had designated these months. This surprised Lesley, because commissioners âdo not typically get involved in CCPLâs daily operations,â though they oversee the budget, says the complaint. Â
Shelstad emailed Lesley saying he was âdisturbedâ by the post and believed that âteaching this kind of behavior to minors is up to the parents not the government,â and the post suggested county government was giving special treatment to a certain group. Â
Lesley countered in her own email, saying Pride Month and Rainbow Book Month are national designations, and the post provides âdiverse cultural opportunities for reading, learning and entertainment to all citizens of our community.â Â
The Campbell County Library Board â which since 2021 has seen almost complete turnover â backed Lesleyâs stance at the time. Â
The Public MeetingÂ
The controversy over Pride Month continued. At a July 7, 2021, public meeting of the County Commission, Hugh Bennett described Pride Month as âimmoral,â âperverted,â and an âattack on family,â the complaint says. Â
âItâs an attack on the basic family structure because the basic family structure is the one thing thatâs the strongest that resists government and wars and immorality and losing the will to go on,â said Bennett, the complaint relates. âA lot of this is really subtle and wicked in its intimidation by authority figures of our most vulnerable people in society.â Â
Kevin Bennett spoke, saying alternate sexual identities âare known to cause suicide and HIVâ and that governments that encourage those may be âpedophilic in nature.â Â
Susan Bennett said the government was encouraging behavior akin to kleptomania and should regain its âmoral compass.â Â
The Bennetts at that time asked commissioners to move certain books out of the childrenâs and teen collections. These were: Â
- âA Quick and Easy Guide to Queer and Trans Identitiesâ by Mady G and Jules ZuckerbergÂ
- âAll Out: The No-Longer Secret Stories of Queer Teens Throughout the Agesâ by Saundra MitchellÂ
- âMusic from Another Worldâ by Robin TalleyÂ
Other residents piled on, saying the library was helping to demoralize the nation and promote pedophilia, Lesleyâs complaint alleges. Â
Lesley told the commission that the library is a âneutral placeâ tasked with providing diverse content. Â
The Magic ShowÂ
The library had a kidsâ magic show scheduled for July 14, 2021. Â
Lesleyâs complaint says the show was to be a âstraightforward magicianâs performanceâ and the magician had no history of presenting inappropriate content. Â
Shelstad, meanwhile, researched the act and found that the performer was a transgender woman. Â
âI am not thinking this is a good idea,â wrote Shelstad in an email to Lesley, according to the complaint. âTaxpayer money going to things like this only upsets the tax payers of our County more.â Â
Lesley wrote back, saying it was strictly a magic show. Â
The complaint claims that the commissioners and the Bennetts âcirculatedâ the news of the magicianâs transgender identity throughout the community, and former State Rep. Scott Clem, R-Gillette, on social media called the act a âtransgender magic showâ and a âcover to introduce and glorify something more insidious and harmful.â Â
Library staff began to receive threats, the complaint says. One person reportedly told a staffer, âCancel the program or else.â Â
The magician reported having received threats too. At the last minute, the magician cancelled the performance. Â
Billboards Show UpÂ
At a July 20, 2021, public commission meeting, Kevin and Hugh Bennett criticized Lesley for not warning the community about the performerâs gender identity, the complaint alleges.Â
The document says that days later, Hugh Bennett authored a column in his businessâ print magazine, named âAnybodyâs Autosâ after his business, accusing Lesley of failing to inform commissioners about the magicianâs gender identity and of lying about the reported threats. Â Â Â
Kevin Bennett in August 2021 organized a fairgrounds booth as founder of Wyomingâs chapter of Mass Resistance, an activist group opposing LGBTQ and sexually graphic content in libraries, says the complaint. Â
Kevin Bennett encouraged people âto sign petitions advocating for the banning of LGBTQ+ themed books and estranging LGBTQ+ community members from the library system,â the complaint alleges. Â
Electronic billboards funded by Mass Resistance soon appeared throughout Gillette displaying there was âchild indoctrination throughout our libraryâ and âinappropriate youth books in the library.â Â
âCriminal OffenseâÂ
Tensions in the community grew. Â
Residents criticized Lesley and the library board that summer, accusing them of corrupting, grooming and indoctrinating children while promoting danger and pedophilia, says the complaint. Â
At a library board and commission joint meeting Aug. 12, 2021, Lesley discussed the libraryâs book reconsideration policy and told people how to file challenges. Â
âLesley revealed that the library system had not faced any book challenges until they started receiving anti-LGBTQ+ book challenges in 2021,â says the complaint. âDuring her time as Library Director, none had progressed beyond the managerâs response.â Â
The Bennetts called for certain books to be removed, the complaint says, adding that Susan Bennett accused Lesley of committing a criminal offense.Â
Challenge FlurryÂ
A flurry of book challenges ensued. Between August and November 2021, 17 people filed 57 requests for consideration on 29 library books, says the complaint. Â
Most of these were centered around the experiences of LGBTQ+ people and âincluded age-appropriate content with that theme,â the lawsuit adds. Â
The document says none of these requests came from a parent whose child âlooked at or checked out any of the challenged books.â Â
Kevin Bennett challenged âThe Babysitterâs Covenâ by Kate Williams, saying it features critical race theory, attacks white people, promotes occultism and initiates âself-hatred based on ethnicity.â Â
Alleging IntimidationÂ
Lesley started to review the challenges. Â
The Bennetts kept coming to commission meetings and speaking out, says the complaint, sometimes implying that Lesley was violating Wyomingâs sex crime laws. Â
Lesleyâs complaint accuses the Bennetts of trying to intimidate her âinto complying with their censorship demands.â Â
âWhen their efforts continued to fail,â the complaint continues, âthe Bennetts intensified their efforts to have Ms. Lesley arrested.â Â
A Blackmail ClaimÂ
On Sept. 29, 2021, Hugh and Susan Bennett went to the Campbell County Sheriffâs Office and formally accused Lesley of disseminating obscenity to children, the complaint says. Â
The books they claimed comprised felonious behavior were: Â
- âDating and Sex: A Guide for the 21st Century Teen Boyâ by Andrew SmilerÂ
- âDoing it!: Letâs Talk about Sex, Consent, Virginity, Masturbation, LGBTQ Sex Ed, Contraception, Healthy Relationships, Sex Shaming, Body Image, STIs, Sexual Pleasureâ by Hannah WittonÂ
- âSex Is a Funny Wordâ by Cory Silverberg and Fiona SmithÂ
- âHow Do You Make a Babyâ by Anna FiskeÂ
- âThis Book is Gayâ by Juno Dawson
Susan Bennett at an Oct. 5, 2021, commissionersâ meeting said that if Lesley had removed the challenged books that summer, she and her husband would not have filed charges, the complaint alleges. Â
In her filing, Lesley calls this evidence that Bennett was trying to blackmail her by accusing her of a crime. Â
Blackmail is punishable by up to 10 years in prison in Wyoming. Â
Lesleyâs complaint alleges that the Bennetts used âinflammatory languageâ to garner support and didnât actually believe Lesley was promoting âpornography ⌠for simply failing to remove certain books.â Â
The Prosecutorâs WordÂ
Michael Stulken, Weston County Attorney and special prosecutor on Lesleyâs case, reviewed the Bennettsâ criminal complaint and concluded that not only were the books not obscene, but Lesley was protected by the Wyoming obscenity lawâs exemption for librarians and educators acting within their duties. Additionally, wrote Stulken, the books may have âscientific value,â which comprises another exemption under the stateâs obscenity law. Â
He authored his decision Oct. 27, 2021, explaining to the community why he would not file charges against Lesley.Â
âDespite the County Attorneyâs clear legal analysis, the Bennetts were undeterred,â says the complaint. It adds: âHugh Bennett told the press, âIâm not going to change my mind because of something a lawyer chooses to do or not do.ââ Â
The October date of Stulkenâs decision is a crux in Lesleyâs defamation argument. She alleges that after that point at least, the Bennetts should have known that her behavior was not criminal. Â
âDespite being informed by an authoritative and credible public source that their accusations of criminal conduct were false as a matter of law, the Bennetts persistedâ by speaking out, challenging books, discrediting Lesley and calling for her termination, says the complaint. Â
Board TurnoverÂ
The library board then turned almost entirely over, with only Charlie Anderson now remaining from the 2021 board. Â
Sage Bear, the wife of Rep. John Bear, R-Gillette, joined the board in 2022. Chuck Butler, Chelsie Collier and Darcy Lyon also joined the board. Â
Lesley on March 7, 2022, shared with Bear a legal analysis provided by Campbell County Attorney deputy Emily Williams. The analysis said that the current library policy rejected appeals based on peopleâs personal beliefs, and relocating books âis arguably censorship and therefore a violation of policy and the law,â says the complaint. Â
Bear turned to Nick Norris of Lubnau Law Firm for a second opinion. Â
The complaint says Norris advised both against moving the books, and against adding a designation for upholding âcommunity standardsâ to the libraryâs mission statement. Â
Except For WrightÂ
The Bennetts, meanwhile, kept launching book challenges. Â
Lesley suggested housing the parenting collection on higher shelves to prevent small children from accessing those books in an effort at âcompromise,â says the complaint. Â
The Bennetts kept calling for her resignation, the document adds. Â
The complaint alleges that Hugh Bennett in an April 17, 2022, meeting warned the county attorney against inaction, implying it would be the same as running âa political campaign based on being porn-friendly to kids.âÂ
One month later, county commissioners decided to cut the $32,600 budget designated for youth programs in the library system. Lesleyâs complaint calls this âpunishmentâ for the libraryâs refusal to move challenged books out of the childrenâs section. Â
Kevin Bennett allegedly said the loss of funding was because librarians had âlied in order to push their perspectiveâ and refused to move the books. Â
By June 20, 2022, commissioners restored childrenâs program funding to the library systemâs branch in the small town of Wright. Â
Kevin Bennett had pushed for Wright to retain funding because it didnât have âbad books,â the complaint says. Â
Getting FiredÂ
In late September 2022, Sage Bear allegedly told Denton Knapp, commissioners administrative service director, that she planned to revise the collection development policy and then fire Lesley. Â
The CCPL Board held a special meeting June 8, 2023, and approved what Lesleyâs complaint calls âhighly subjectiveâ revisions to the collection development policy. Â
The board met again July 24. Bear asked Lesley to move âpretty obviousâ books â âthe egregious stuffâ with âsexually explicitâ content meant for a more adult audience, using the new weeding process. Â
Lesley said that would violate the First Amendment. Â
âWell, if thatâs the way you feel then I feel like you should find another job,â Bear said, the complaint relates. Â
Lesley refused to resign. Â
The board fired her July 28, with only Charlie Anderson voting against the termination. Â
The Claims, The DemandsÂ
Lesleyâs complaint lists six civil claims and various demands. Her claims are: Â
- That all three Bennetts violated the Ku Klux Klan Act by targeting someone aligned with the LGBTQ agenda;Â
- That all three Bennetts conspired to violate Lesleyâs rights;Â
- That Hugh and Susan Bennett defamed Lesley by filing a criminal complaint against her when she didnât comply âwith their demands.â Â
- That all three Bennetts defamed Lesley by calling her actions criminal after Stulken announced they werenât;Â
- That all three Bennetts inflicted emotional distress on Lesley, ârecklesslyâ and intentionally;Â
- That Hugh and Susan Bennett abused the legal process.Â
Lesley is asking the court to award her:Â
- Declaratory and injunctive relief by declaring the Bennettsâ actions wrongful and stopping them in any way appropriate;Â
- Back pay, front pay and lost benefits compensation as established at trial;Â
- Compensatory damages, including for suffering and anguish;Â
- Punitive damages to punish the Bennetts;Â
- Exemplary damages to make an example of the Bennetts;Â
- Prejudgment and post-judgement interest at the highest lawful rate;Â
- A tax offset;
- Attorneysâ fees and costs;Â
- And any other relief that âjustice requires.â Â
Qusair Mohamedbhai, Iris Halpern and Azra Taslimi of Rathod Mohamedbhai LLC, of Denver, Colorado, are representing Lesley in her lawsuit. Â
Bennettâs Statement
Hugh Bennett emailed a statement to Cowboy State Daily Thursday, saying Lesley ârefused to follow the library boardâs instructions, citing the need to protect the âconstitutional rightsâ of children as her motivation, yet now complains that our exercise of free speech to redress grievances against the government she worked on behalf of has defamed her.â
Bennett called this âironic.â
âSpeaking up to protect our children and grandchildren from exposure to immorality and sexual deviancy by agents of our government is a constitutional right at the heart of the free speech amendment to the constitution,â Bennett continued. He concluded: âIf Ms. Leslie is such a die hard proponent of free speech, why isnât she appreciating the right of the rest of us to free speech?â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.




