A 21-year-old Cheyenne man who was accused of shooting up a strangerâs Chevy truck from his driveway this spring was found not guilty of assault, after a trial jury acquitted him Wednesday. Â
Jason Lyle Jr. was driving home the evening of April 29 through a web of dirt roads northeast of Cheyenne when he passed another vehicle â quickly. Later statements indicated his driving was erratic.
Suddenly, three vehicles surrounded him. A jacked-up white Toyota Tacoma with a front-end winch rammed the rear of Lyleâs little black Mazda Miata, shaving off his spoiler, he told Cowboy State Daily in a Friday interview. Â
Lyleâs father Jason Lyle Sr. also joined the interview. Â
The man driving the Tacoma fired at least five shots at âJuniorâ during the demolition-derby chase on dirt country roads, the pair said.Â
Theyâre Shooting At MeÂ
Frantically, Junior called his sister Molly and said heâd been rear-ended and was under gunfire, the case affidavit relates. Â Â
Molly and her boyfriend were already on their way to the Lyle house in a separate vehicle after the three had hung out earlier that evening. Â
Junior told his sister to find a gun in the house. She thought he was joking at first, but as the seriousness of his tone settled on her, she fumbled around for the house for a gun and couldnât find one, she tearfully recalled during the trial. Â
Surveillance footage from that time shows Molly walking out to retrieve a cellphone from the car in the driveway. She appears to answer the phone while casually standing in the driveway, then she pivots and runs back into the house about 6 seconds later. Â
Get The RifleÂ
Junior made it back to his parentsâ home on Four Mile Road, where he also lives. He parked, rushed out of his car and ran for his home, leaving the headlights on and the driverâs side door open.
His sister held the door open to hurry him inside.
He retrieved his SKS rifle from the home and went back outside. Â
The Tacoma didnât stick around, but a grey Chevy Silverado was still in his driveway and a Lexus Gx470 SUV was behind it, he said.Â
Court documents filed three months later say the husband and wife in the Silverado claimed they didnât know that was Juniorâs home, and they were worried for the people inside the home given Juniorâs driving pattern.Â
The Lylesâ home surveillance footage shows the blare of headlights from the strangerâs truck and Junior running outside with a rifle, his own shadow in the porch light preceding him into the driveway. Â
Molly, barefoot in a summer dress, came out behind her brother and waved her arms as if to confront the occupants of the truck. Â Â
âI told them to leave and they wouldnât leave. I shot at them. I disabled their car,â Junior recalled, speaking of the Silverado. Â
Neither person in the truck was hit. Â
Junior fired at the Silverado, prompting the driver to speed backward out of the driveway and bolt east on Four Mile Road. Bullets hit the radiator and a wheel rim. Â
Junior went back into the home and exited without his rifle. He, his sister and his sisterâs boyfriend then went into the field with flashlights and picked up objects, the affidavit relates from additional surveillance footage of the incident.
Then Junior put his car in the barn, closed the barn door and sat down with his sister and her boyfriend in the driveway. The three can be seen fist-bumping on the footage, according to the affidavit. Â
Meanwhile, the driver of the Chevy called 911. Â Â
Brass And SpoilerÂ
Investigators arrived on scene. Â
Junior later rode with a Laramie County Sheriffâs Office deputy to the approximate area of the car chase to look for the lost spoiler and spent bullets. The deputy had explosives detection K-9 Deputy Arek search the area. Arek didnât alert on anything; there were no shell casings on the ground. Â
The deputy searched at Archer Road and Glencoe Drive, said Junior, who reportedly told the deputy at the time that he wasnât sure if that was the right spot. Â
Juniorâs dad, Lyle Senior, was on a work trip during the shooting. He went to the intersection of Sherry and Stewart Roads to investigate as soon as he got home May 1, he said. Â
There he found five spent 9 mm shells â and a black spoiler. Â
Lyle Senior shot photographs and called the sheriffâs office. It took a while to get a deputy out there and the dad was careful not to touch the evidence while he waited, he said. Â
âWhen they finally did come, they found even more brass than I did,â Lyle Senior said. He said the Tacoma was jacked up high enough to shave off the spoiler and grind an imprint of its winch into the Mazdaâs trunk without busting the little carâs taillights. Â
The judge would later call the scar from the winch âparticularized crease damage,â the dad related. Â
Nerve-WrackingÂ
The Laramie County District Attorneyâs Office charged Lyle Junior with two counts of aggravated assault â one for each occupant of the truck he disabled with his rifle shots. Aggravated assault is a felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison. Â
Lyle Junior had not been charged with a felony before, and he dreaded the thought of being convicted of one, he told Cowboy State Daily. Besides spending a maximum of 20 years in prison (which, however, would be an unlikely sentence considering his youth and lack of serious criminal history), a conviction would mean heâd lose his gun and voting rights, as well as the right to sit on a jury and hold public office. Â Â
âI was pretty nervous,â Lyle Jr. said of that months-long prosecution. Â
The young manâs dad called the monthslong prosecution ânerve-wracking.â Â
Standing Your GroundÂ
But between the day the charges dropped and Aug. 3, a few vital shreds of evidence surfaced. Â
The family hired Devon Petersen as defense attorney, and they worked with a private investigator. Â
âTwo independent witnesses â Crystal OâDell and Eugene Swainey â heard five to six gunshots that sounded like they were fired from a pistolâ the night of the car chase, Petersen wrote in an Aug. 3 motion to dismiss the case on self-defense grounds. Â
Petersen drew attention to Lyle Juniorâs calls to his sister while he was under gunfire. He then referenced three more eyewitnesses who had come forward, saying they saw multiple cars chasing young Lyle around the neighborhood. Â
âJasonâs car suffered significant damage as a result of being chased and rammed off the road,â the motion says. â(He) was afraid for his life.â Â
The vehicles drove onto Lyle Juniorâs property and blasted the home with their brights, Petersen wrote. Â
âHe showed them he had a rifle and they still did not leave,â the motion continues. âFinally, Jason Lyle, who is an extremely accurate shot with a rifle ⌠fired two rounds into the front part of the lead vehicle, and not toward the cab. Only then did the vehicles leave Jason Lyleâs property.â Â
The husband and wife who stalled out in the Chevy didnât have a gun, says the document, adding that Lyle was not asserting that those people were the ones who had shot him. Â
No Duty To RetreatÂ
Laramie County District Court Judge Steven K. Sharpe scheduled a full-day hearing Sept. 12 to hear arguments on young Lyleâs motion to dismiss the case based on Wyomingâs Stand Your Ground self-defense provision. Â
The law says that a person being attacked at a place heâs occupying lawfully can respond with reasonable defensive force and does not have a duty to retreat. Â
Sharpe declined to dismiss the case early based on the Stand Your Ground argument. Â
The case advanced to a Nov. 7 two-day jury trial. Â
Not Calling The Cops HereÂ
One argument the state launched at trial was that Lyle Jr. didnât simply call the police during the attack, he said. Â
âThey were like, âYou never called the cops.â But none of them ever did (until later),â said Lyle Jr, referring to the drivers who ran him down.Â
The driver of the Tacoma reportedly called police once he was home. He went home, put his gun away, then called 911 âand complained about Juniorâs driving,â Lyle Senior said. âAnd then he said, âOh by the way, I think heâs shooting at some cars down there.ââ Â
Rushing ReliefÂ
At the trial, the jury combed over video footage, including a collection of four panes from the Lyle home surveillance system. It heard testimony, including from the man and woman whoâd been in the Silverado, and from Molly. Â
Junior did not testify. Â
Petersen in his closing argument emphasized Wyomingâs self-defense laws, with their call for âreasonablenessâ â a notion whose confines 12 jurors had to define. The attorney said his client did precisely what was necessary to end the threat to his home. Â
The jury deliberated for about one hour before declaring Junior innocent. Â
âMy client and his family were very happy with the outcome,â Petersen told Cowboy State Daily on Friday. Â
âIt felt pretty good,â Junior said, remembering the moment the verdict was read. âI almost cried tears of joy.â Â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.




