CASPER â A 26-year-old Casper woman faces five criminal charges for allegedly shooting at a woman who said sheâd had an affair and was pregnant by the husband of a friend.
Sheâs accused of ignoring her boyfriendâs advice that it âwas not their fightâ and confronting the other woman.
Rylie Nichole Woolson waived her preliminary hearing in Casper Circuit Court on Thursday and faces two counts of aggravated assault and battery, two counts of reckless endangering, and a battery charge in Natrona County District Court.
Court records show that Casper Police officers were called to apartments in the 700 block of South Walsh Street at 10:23 a.m. on May 29 following a call from a woman reporting she had been shot at.
Officers learned the 25-year-old woman making the complaint and another 38-year-old woman, apparently hit by a bullet fragment, had been in the communal yard of the apartment complex.
The shooter had left the scene in a black truck with her boyfriend and several children.
The arrest affidavit states the younger woman had been in a dating relationship with the older womanâs husband and had shown up to return some of his property and collect some of hers.
The 25-year-old told the 38-year-old that she was pregnant as a result of the relationship.
âA verbal altercation occurred between (the two women) in the communal yard of the apartment complex,â the affidavit states.
Woolson, a friend of the older woman, then âcame out her apartment and pulled a gun onâ the 25-year-old woman.
Confrontation
The confrontation ended and then Woolson went back to her apartment, reappeared, and âfired a round over the side of the railing, at the ground, causing (the 38-year-old woman) to be struck on the left bicep, by shrapnel from the bullet,â the affidavit states.
An interview of the younger woman stated that she had been told by her boyfriend that he was divorced, but recently learned that he was married and intended to stay with his wife.
She told police she went to the apartment complex to end the relationship and collect some of her property and give back some of his when she met his wife.
The 38-year-old allegedly asked Woolsonâs boyfriend if her husband had ever mentioned he was going to divorce her.
âHe then went to ask Woolson about it,â the 25-year-old told police.
Woolson then appeared and told the woman that being âpregnant was a bad look for herâ and then returned to her apartment.
Woolson reappeared with a handgun and pointed it at the 25-year-oldâs head and face area, the affidavit states.
The woman said she grabbed both of Woolsonâs arms and tried to move the gun away from herself and struggled with the gun.
The 25-year-old woman ârecalled feeling the gun pressed against her own stomach, heard a click noise and believed (Woolson) pulled the trigger,â the affidavit states.
âAnother Clipâ
The 25-year-oldâs ex-boyfriend and Woolsonâs boyfriend intervened, and Woolsonâs boyfriend ejected the magazine from the gun, the affidavit says.
Woolson told them that she had âanother clipâ upstairs and returned to the apartment with the gun.
The younger woman told police she did not see Woolson shoot, but heard a loud bang and the wife of her ex-boyfriend immediately said âowâ and grabbed her arm, the affidavit states.
After the shooting, the 25-year-old told police she heard Woolson say, âI told you I was going to shoot you.â
She said she then saw Woolson carry a small child out of the apartment while still holding the pistol.
In an interview with police, the 38-year-old wife said she was upset after learning about her husbandâs affair and walked away toward Woolsonâs apartment. She said Woolson came out and told the 25-year-old woman that she âshe needed to leave and was disrespectful.â
The wife told police that she and the woman began talking and âheard a popâ and was unsure if it was a gunshot. She said she did not see Woolson with a weapon but was struck by something in the arm.
The womanâs husband also told police that he had been outside of his apartment with his ex-girlfriend and wife when Woolson came down and told his ex-girlfriend that she needed to leave.
He told Woolson that she did not have to leave and that she was on public property, the affidavit states. The man said he saw something in Woolsonâs hand but was unsure if it was gun, and that his ex-girlfriend and Woolson âgrappled.â
He told police he pulled Woolson off his ex-girlfriend and that Woolsonâs boyfriend helped and Woolson returned to her apartment.
Shortly afterward, he ârecalled his ears ringing for an unknown reason, but rationalized that it may have been a gunshot that caused his ears to ring,â the affidavit states.
Woolsonâs 24-year-old boyfriend told police that Woolson had filed a protection order against him, but he had been at her apartment that day to help her babysit five children.
One of the children mentioned that the 38-year-old woman was outside talking to someone and it âthrew up a red flag with (Woolson),â he said.
âScared For His Lifeâ
He told police Woolson went out of the apartment and he heard a scuffle and went down and to find the husband of Woolsonâs friend trying to get a gun away from Woolson.
He then followed Woolson back to the apartment.
âHe told her to stop, that it wasnât their fight,â the affidavit states. â(Woolson) said something to the effect of, âFine, I have another clip.â (Woolson) went to the room, grabbed another clip, inserted it into the gun and racked the slide.
â(Her boyfriend) got out of her way, and admitted he was scared for his life.â
The boyfriend told police Woolson walked out of the apartment pointed the gun at the ground and told the 25-year-old woman âyou need to leaveâ and fired, the affidavit states. He was âfreaking out.â
Woolson then brought the children to a truck and had the gun in her waistband. Once in the truck, she put the gun in the side door panel.
He drove her and the children to his motherâs house and hid the gun in a shoebox.
On the way back to Casper, he said they were pulled over by police. He told police all the children were in the apartment on the couch and did not see Woolson fire the weapon, the affidavit states.
Woolson told police that she was told by her boyfriend that her friend, the 38-year-old woman, needed her. She said she saw her friend âshakingâ and mad, so she went down and told the 25-year-old woman to leave.
When she didnât, Woolson said she returned to her apartment, got her pistol and said she was at the top of the apartment stairs when the 25-year-old walked at her.Â
Woolson said she âfired a warning shot into the airâ and was told by her boyfriend she could not do that and that they needed to leave.
When confronted about how her version differed from those of the other witnesses, she admitted that in an attempt to âscareâ the 25-year-old she got her handgun and when told by her boyfriend it was not their fight, threatened to call the police on him and have him arrested for violating the protection order.
The affidavit states that she admitted initially taking the gun outside, but that it didnât have a magazine in it. She denied pointing it at anyone.
âShouldnât Haveâ Fired
Woolson later told the investigator that when she said she had âanother clipâ she was referring to the loaded one on her bed, and that her boyfriend was holding all the other magazines to the weapon.
She admitted firing the gun into the ground to get the 25-year-old woman to leave.
â(Woolson) confirmed that the argument had nothing to do with her, that she only interjected herself as (the 38-year-old wife) was her friend and would want a friend to do the same for her,â the affidavit states.
She also told police that the 25-year-old was disturbing âher familyâs peace and property.â
The affidavit says Woolson told police she âshouldnât haveâ fired the gun and was willing not to own a gun after the events that occurred.
She also filled out a timeline of the events for the investigator and then tried to âgrab and crumple up the written statementâ out of a detectiveâs hand, the affidavit states.
Court records show Woolson is free on a $25,000 cash or surety bond.
Both the aggravated assault and battery charges carry a penalty of up to 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine.
Both reckless endangering charges are misdemeanors punishable by up to a year in jail. The battery charge carries a potential penalty of up to six months in jail and a $750 fine.
Dale Killingbeck can be reached at dale@cowboystatedaily.com.





