When pro-wolf activists on the second annual Hogs For Hope ride arrived in Daniel, Wyoming, on Saturday morning, they were greeted by a large banner across the front of the Green River Bar declaring âCody Roberts Days.â
It was an in-your-face moment for this small town to those protesting Wyomingâs wolf management policies.
Daniel-area resident Roberts has been at the center of a worldwide controversy that exploded over reports that he ran over a wolf with a snowmobile and then captured the animal in February 2024.Â
He then reportedly kept the wolf alive for hours, taking it first to his home, and then to the Green River Bar to show it off before finally killing it behind the bar.Â
The groupâs run through town for the second time was, by all accounts, quiet and uneventful.Â
There were about eight motorcycles and perhaps 35 vehicles in the Hogs For Hope caravan, said Kristin Combs, one of the eventâs organizers.Â
The town was mostly empty, except for â15 or 20 people standing on the front porch of the Green River Bar,â added Combs, who is the executive director of Wyoming Wildlife Advocates.
Thatâs in contrast to the large crowd and raucous nature of the first Hogs For Hope rally May 26, 2024, in which there were harsh words exchanged, but nothing more. Â
Wyoming hunter Mitch Gilliam told Cowboy State Daily that he was among those gathered on the barâs porch Saturday.Â
He previously told Cowboy State Daily that he was planning a counter-demonstration to Hogs For Hope, which is led by Austin, Texas, dog trainer and social media influencer Jonas Black.Â
Gilliam said he wasnât sure why the crowd was smaller than heâd expected.Â
It might have been because some people had chosen to attend âNo Kingsâ rallies that day protesting current immigration policies, he said.Â
âWelcome To Cody Roberts Days"
The banner displayed atop the bar read âWelcome to Cody Roberts Daysâ across the top. Â
Then, âGod Bless Americaâ on the second line and âSupporting LOCAL Ranchersâ across the bottom.Â
It also included images of the Wyoming and United States flags.Â
Gilliam has voiced support for Roberts, saying that he was demonized by inaccurate accounts of what happened.
However, Gilliam said that he didnât put the banner on the bar and doesnât know who did.
âIt was already up when I got there,â he said. âI was indifferent about the banner.â
On Tuesday, nobody answered the phone number listed for the Green River Bar.Â
Black said the sign represented a âdoubling downâ of opposition to his determination to reform Wyomingâs predator management policy.Â
âThat sign, âCody Roberts Days,â was probably the dumbest shit they (Blackâs opponents) pulled,â Black said.Â
Death Threats Going Both WaysÂ
He added that he wore a bullet-proof vest while riding his motorcycle through Daniel because of numerous death threats that heâd gotten leading up to this yearâs Hogs For Hope rally.Â
Though much quieter than the 2024 event, Black said this year âwas way more crazy, because of the death threats.â
After the Daniel wolf story broke last year, other Wyoming men named Cody Roberts told Cowboy State Daily that they, too, had been getting death threats â prompted by worldwide outrage over the alleged events.Â
Wyomingâs âBad ReputationâÂ
Black said he plans to keep organizing yearly Hogs For Hope rallies to Daniel, to pay tribute to the slain wolf, which he dubbed âHope.âÂ
He also plans to keep raising money and pushing for reform to Wyomingâs predator management policy. The practice of running animals down with snowmobiles and other vehicles, commonly called âwhacking,â should be banned here, Black said.Â
This yearâs rally raised about $65,000 for litigation to end whacking, he said. Adding that in total, Hogs For Hope has raised about $200,000.Â
Combs said that failing to ban whacking has tainted Wyomingâs image.Â
âWyoming still has this bad reputation in the world right now,â she said.Â
More Legislation In the Works?
Daniel is in the Wyoming House district of Rep. Mike Schmid, R-La Barge.Â
He told Cowboy State Daily that he grew up in the Daniel area and âI know the Daniel Valley very well.â
Like Black and his supporters, Schmid wants to see whacking banned in Wyoming.Â
However, he said he thinks that Blackâs âkind of a grifterâ and he doesnât think that Hogs For Hope rallies are really helping the situation.Â
Schmid added that he doesnât agree with âattacking Cody Roberts and his family. Thatâs not going to get this behind us.â
The Legislature this year passed a measure, the âClean Kill Bill,â making it illegal to deliberately prolong the suffering of a predator instead of killing it as quickly as possible. Gov. Mark Gordon signed the measure into law.Â
Schmid introduced a bill to also ban whacking, which failed, as did his efforts to attach a whacking ban to the Clean Kill Bill.Â
But he hasnât given up, and said he wants to introduce a similar during the Legislatureâs 2026 session.Â
He stressed that any bill he brings would apply only to public land, not ranchersâ private property.Â
Schmid added that he doesnât want to ban hunters from using vehicles to locate or get to within shooting distance of predators on public land. He wants to ban only the use of them as âweaponsâ to run animals over.Â
Failing to ban whacking in Wyoming âwill continue to hurt us down the road, even cost us public access for hunting,â he said.
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.





