Four young men are charged with burglarizing a Sheridan, Wyoming, gas station after at least one of them posted evidence of the crime to Snapchat.
Kadin Koch and Kolby Quay McDougall, both about 18; Brinden Joseph Reiff, 22;Â and Julian Patino, 21, each face one count of felony burglary, punishable by up to 10 years in prison and $10,000 in fines.
Patino faces another potential three years in prison and $3,000 in fines on a second charge of helping to cover the crime up.
Kochâs case rose to the felony-level Sheridan County District Court on Monday. Reiffâs did the same Sept. 24.
McDougallâs case rose to the same court in July and is now set for a Dec. 22 trial.
Patinoâs case is still in the lower, Sheridan Circuit Court. He was scheduled for a preliminary hearing this week, but itâs unclear if that hearing happened.
Blaring
The investigation started with a burglar alarm but Snapchat stories and conversations powered it through to court, an evidentiary affidavit by Sheridan County Sheriffâs Deputy Boot Hill shows.
Deputies responded to a blaring burglar alarm at the Big Horn Y gas station on Coffeen Avenue in Sheridan at 2:39 the morning of June 17, the affidavit says.
Two deputies arrived and found signs of forcible entry at the front door. Authorities contacted the business owner and reviewed video surveillance footage, the affidavit says.
Video surveillance shows three people wearing âhoodie-type apparelâ and face coverings reaching the property from the direction of Highway 332 and walking âin a clandestine mannerâ toward the shopâs south side, trying several doors and finally breaching the front door, wrote Hill.
They scooped alcoholic drinks like Twisted Tea, tequila and Jack Danielâs Tennessee whiskey into a green military surplus duffel bag, the affidavit says.
The Party
During the same shift, deputies responded to the Welch Recreation area to investigate a report underage drinking around a bonfire. They found no one there, but several alcohol containers in the parking area and in the smoldering fire, the document says.
After leaving the area, Deputy Austin Boreczky overheard an officer on the radio making contact with several people at the Circle K gas station on Brundage Lane in Sheridan for a minor-in-possession of alcohol investigation.
The officer later told Boreczky that the people he contacted told him they were at the Welch Rec party, says the affidavit.
âYeah We Robbed Itâ
The next day, Hill obtained the data of a Snapchat conversation between McDougall and a female. McDougallâs profile photo was a âstoryâ picture of three males in Buffalo, Wyoming, the affidavit says.
âBye shithole,â wrote McDougall, according to Hillâs copy of the conversation.
âWhere ya going,â asks the female.
âTexas,â he answers.
The female jabs McDougall for not saying goodbye, in Hillâs copy of the conversation.
âI couldnât say bye to my mom or dad donât worry,â says McDougall.
âWhy,â asks the female.
âCause we running,â he answers. âYk the bighorn y.â
She does know the Bighorn Y, she answers.
âUmmm yeah we robbed it,â says McDougall, reportedly.
âYour (sic) so stupid,â she answers.
âWhoâs all going?â she asks.
âMe and the two on my story,â says McDougall.
âYou are so dumb,â the female reiterates.
The other two men on the story photo were Reiff and Koch, the affidavit says.
At The Sheriffâs Office
McDougallâs father said he didnât know where the young man was as of June 18, but by June 20, Hill was able to meet with McDougall at the sheriffâs office, the affidavit says.
McDougall said Patino drove the four youths to the store but didnât enter the store with them. The group went to Story, then back to Sheridan later, Hill wrote.
Earlier on the night of the alleged burglary, a female rode past the store with three of the males to help them scope it out and make sure no one was there, said McDougall.
More Snapchat
Hill obtained search warrants for McDougallâs, Kochâs and Reiffâs Snapchat accounts. In them he saw a photograph of the three, plus Patino, posing with âan assortment of alcohol,â Hill wrote.
The photo bore a timestamp of 3:01 a.m., June 17. McDougall, Koch and Reiff were wearing the same clothing as the people captured on the surveillance video, the affidavit says.
The alcohol bottles matched those shown on the video too, added Hill.
The photo bore location data for Story, Wyoming.
In the Snapchat accounts (the affidavit doesnât say which), Hill saw a video clip of Patino, Reiff and two masked people in a vehicle, he wrote. The masks matched those shown on the video, reportedly.
That video clip bore a timestamp of 2:25 a.m. mountain daylight time â moments before the alarm sounded.
Another video, time-stamped 2:39 a.m., showed several bottles of alcohol consistent with those stolen, wrote Hill.
Kochâs SnapChat also divulged his location, showing it near the Big Horn Y store at 2:59 a.m., says the affidavit.
Hill found Reiff at the Johnson County Detention Center on July 11, and interviewed him there. Reiff admitted to entering the store with McDougall and Koch, the deputy wrote.
âI didnât think we were actually going to do it,â said Reiff. âWe were circling the building, and I was like, âYouâre just being dumb.â The next thing you know those two grabbed the door.â
Burn Those
Hill obtained another Snapchat conversation, between Koch and Patino, the affidavit says.
âYou got a pic of the alcohol?â asks Patino.
âNo not without us,â says Koch, in the copy of the conversation Hill documented.
âDonât be telling people tho g (sic),â adds Koch.
âHavenât told anyone,â says Patino, reportedly.
âBurn those hoodies and the bag,â says Koch, in the copy. âExcept for the suicidal boys one.â
âThe bag too?â asks Patino.
âYeah,â says Koch, in the document. âGet rid of any evidence.â
âOkay bet,â says Patino.
âWe all together still,â says Koch. âJust keep it on the dl.â
âYessir,â says Patino.
Patino suggest that he not use his own car for a while.
Koch says the car is probably fine, in the copy of the conversation.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.