Albany County paid $1.2 million to the family of a man killed by a sheriffâs deputy five years ago, but did not admit to any wrongdoing, the county announced Friday evening.
Former Albany County Sheriffâs Deputy Derek Colling shot and killed Robert âRobbieâ Ramirez, 39, during an incident following a traffic stop Nov. 4, 2018.
Ramirezâs mother Debra Hinkel sued Colling, the county and former Albany County Sheriff David OâMalley in 2020.
Two years later, the parties had reached a settlement agreement, but it was confidential.
Then in August 2023, the Wyoming Supreme Court ruled in a different case that settlement agreements involving public money are public records.
Pressed by the media, Albany County turned to its local district court for clarity.
District Court Judge Misha Westby dismissed the countyâs request for clarity because the judicial process was not followed according to Wyoming public-records law.
The countyâs new sheriff, Aaron Appelhans, released the settlement publicly Friday after receiving âno clarificationâ from the court and after Hinkel announced via her attorney that she wanted the settlement to be made public.
Hinkel was Ramirez's wrongful death representative in the lawsuit.
Her attorneys, Noah Drew, Alicia Evans and Roy Jacobson Jr. of the Spence Law Firm, could not be reached Friday evening for comment.
What It Says
Appelhans noted in a press release he dispatched along with the settlement that nobody in the lawsuit admitted any liability or wrongdoing.
The payment was a gesture to end the lawsuit, the settlement indicates. It reads: âThis Agreement is a good faith compromise ⌠to avoid the delay, inconvenience, expense and uncertainty of further litigation.â
Appelhansâ statement says there was âno legal basisâ for Hinkelâs earlier allegations that body camera footage of the incident had been tampered with.
The sheriffâs office also agreed to continue its crisis intervention training for deputies, though agreeing to do so did not create new liabilities for the department, the settlement says.
The parties were to pay their own attorneys' fees, the settlement says.
âUnarmed Yet Confrontationalâ
Video footage showing the death of Robbie Ramirez revealed he was âunarmed yet confrontational in the moments before he was fatally shot,â the Laramie Boomerang reported 10 days after Ramirezâs death.
The Boomerang reporter had viewed Collingsâ body cam footage, the story reports, adding that, âColling unsuccessfully tried to deploy his Taser before drawing his gun and firing multiple shots at close range.â
Ramirez had fled from Collingâs traffic stop, then blocked the deputyâs Taser electrodes.
Collingâs camera âappears to show a scuffle between the two before the video cuts out,â the Boomerang reported. The officerâs dash-cam video showed Ramirez advancing toward Colling, who reportedly walked backward while firing multiple shots at close range.
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Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.




