With four months left in 2024, the number of suicides, fatal auto crashes and killings in Natrona County are âthrough the roof,â Coroner Jim Whipps reports.
Categorized as âunnatural deaths,â he told county commissioners this week that those types of deaths are already on pace to make this year one of the countyâs worst.
The overall number of deaths in the county through August this year are the same as 2023 â 94 â but âunnatural deaths are going through the roof.â
âThis has been an abnormal year, kind of a roller coaster ride when it comes to unnatural death,â he said. âUnnatural death in every form is going through the roof. I donât know why that is, but homicides, suicides, overdoses ⌠they are way above what would be average for us.â
Statistics through the end of August show 20 suicides, with five in August. He said in 2023 at the same point, suicides were at 22, but the last quarter of 2023 âeverything kind of dropped off the cliff for the rest of the year.â
âThis year is doesnât look like that is going to happen,â he said. âWe are on pace statistically to have another 2020-21 kind of record-setting year.â
Whipps said one of the âshockersâ for him is the number of deaths from âchronic alcoholismâ in younger people in their 20s and 30s. The county also has had 36 people die in various crashes and workplace incidents. Thatâs one less than in all of last year.
Along with alcohol contributing to the countyâs unnatural death toll are drugs and overdoses, Whipps said. So far with four months still left in 2024, those are âmore than we took in last year.â
A number of high-profile killing of Casper youth by other youth have made local and statewide headlines this year.
Whipps said he canât pinpoint exactly why the county is seeing higher death numbers, but in addition to 20 suicides and 36 accidents, there have been five homicides and one undetermined death so far in 2024.
In 2023, there were 27 suicides, three homicides and 37 accidents.
A surge in unnatural deaths doesnât seem to be limited to just Natrona County.
Also Up in Campbell County
In Campbell County in the northeast part of Wyoming, Coroner Paul Wallem said he has seen an increase in unnatural deaths in 36% of the cases heâs dealt. Thatâs up from the 33.3% in 2023 when he had 105 cases total.
So far there have been 31 unnatural deaths of 87 overall cases, even though suicides in his county are significantly lower this year than last. There were 20 suicide cases in 2023, and this year so far there have been five.
âThat maybe indicates how many accidental deaths weâve had,â he said, pointing out that despite so many fewer suicides, âWe are up 3%.â
Seven of Campbell Countyâs accidental deaths involve a July plane crash that killed three members of the Southern Gospel singing group The Nelons.
âAt the start of the year we were seeing a noticeable increase in vehicle crashes like I havenât seen in probably seven to 10 years,â he said. âThat has kind of normalized recently.â
Not Everywhere
In Park County, Coroner Cody Gortmaker said he is not seeing anything unusual for his tourist-heavy county.
âAccidental deaths go up this time of the year, he said, adding that suicides are down.
Carbon County Coroner Brittany Nyman said she is seeing less unnatural deaths compared to last year.
âWe havenât had any overdoses this year. Itâs a little quieter this year for us,â she said.
Nyman did not immediately have statistics to share.
In Laramie County, a coronerâs office spokesperson did not return a call for comment by publication time. However, the officeâs website shows as of July 15, the stateâs largest county had 41 unnatural deaths with 12 suicides, 25 accidents and four homicides. The website lists 21 cases as pending.
In 2023, Laramie County reported 20 suicides, 54 accidental deaths and five homicides.
Dale Killingbeck can be reached at dale@cowboystatedaily.com.