CODY â An SUV driven by a suspected drunk driver plowed through the front of the Cody Firearms Experience on Saturday night, severing a gas line in the process.
Itâs a miracle the place didnât go up in an explosion, owner Paul Brock told Cowboy State Daily on Monday, describing the incident as his business âdodging a bullet.â
âEverythingâs cleaned up, there was no damage that affected our business, the restaurant next door wasnât affected and the building didnât explode,â he told Cowboy State Daily. âEverything ran as smooth as it could.â
And Brock wasnât being hyperbolic about the lack of an explosion.
Plenty Of Fuel, No Fire
Brock got the call that an SUV had driven through the front of his business at 10:35 p.m. Saturday. And that wasnât even the worst of it.
âHe hit a gas main that was right outside (the building) and sheared it off,â he said. âSo, it was pumping natural gas into the building.â
His building is home to a number of unique, historic and high-caliber weapons, along with ammunition.
By the time Brock got there, the Cody Fire Department informed him that there was a 50% concentration of natural gas inside the building, which was âat an explosion level.â
âThey told me that's the highest they've ever seen inside a building without it blowing up,â he said. âI have seen the destructive force of gas explosions, so that was a little tense.â
Firefighters quickly entered the building and shut off the gas. Then, they opened all the doors and used multiple fans to ventilate it so it was safe to enter.
The SUV's impact caused tremendous structural damage. Fortunately, the damage was concentrated in a small classroom in a connected but separate structure next to the main building.
A steel gate that stretched across the front was destroyed, and one of the supports of the wooden awning out front was dislodged, causing it to sag. But there wasnât as much interior damage as Brock feared.
âWe had 15,000 brochures sitting (along the wall),â he said. âThey got scattered out through the room. We had three to four employees that stayed throughout the night. By 9 a.m. next morning, it was back to serviceable.â
Juan Carlos Cancino-Cisneros, 30, was arrested on suspicion of felony property destruction and misdemeanor reckless endangering, reckless driving and DUI. His bond was set at $25,000.
Community Support
Brock wasnât too perturbed by the aftermath of a vehicle driving through the building. He and his staff were already repairing and cleaning up when calls of assistance started to pour in.
âI got here at 9 a.m. and proceeded with sourcing lumber and things like that which you can't get on a Sunday,â he said. âPeople from the community started calling and saying, âHey, I got OSB. I've got two-by-fours. Iâll bring my Bobcat over.â By 3 p.m., everything was finished up.â
An insurance adjuster is compiling an estimate for the damage, but the Cody Firearms Experience is proceeding with business as usual. Brock said the incident reaffirmed his affection for the Cody community, which has been immensely helpful and immediately there to help however it could.
âThey got everything running in less than a day,â he said. âI know most of the people on the fire department on the gas company, and they were all here helping to get things going. They stayed up the entire time. This is why I love Cody.â
Andrew Rossi can be reached at arossi@cowboystatedaily.com.









