The family of a 16-year-old Cheyenne East High School soccer player will celebrate his life Saturday following a July 17 ATV crash on Elk Mountain with friends that left him with brain injuries in a Denver hospital ICU.
The parents of Rielly Jay Smith have been going through a ânightmareâ as they first experienced days of hope that their sonâs brain swelling might go down before learning from another specialist eight days later that he h ad essentially died seconds after his crash.
Brandon Smith characterized his son Rielly as a âjokester who always made everybody smile.â
âHe touched a lot of hearts and got his friends through some dark days,â Brandon Smith said.Â
He said Rielly was a âconfidentâ young man who was â100%â into soccer and played forward and striker. He loved the camaraderie and âfamilyâ he made on the team.
Brandon Smith said he and Rielly were talking about his dream to play soccer in college and try and get scholarships as his junior year approached.
Rielly had gone with three buddies for a camping trip on Elk Mountain at the family property of a friend. They started riding four-wheeler ATVs within 25 minutes after they arrived, said his mom, Kazia Smith.
She said he was supposed to be on one of the machines with his friend driving, but he ended up driving one himself without a helmet and was âdoing 45 mph and hit a drainage ditch with no helmet.â

âFreak Accidentâ
Brandon Smith said it was really a âfreak accidentâ because the drainage ditch was only on the road for a 15-mile stretch.Â
The ATV went into the ditch and Rielly hit his head on the handlebars, still holding on for 132 feet before falling off the machine.
Brandon Smith said the doctors told them that they did not know if a helmet would have saved their sonâs life because of the speed he was going when the crash happened, but he hopes that others take away the importance of always wearing a helmet when using ATVs, motorcycles and similar machines.
âAlways wear a helmet, even if it looks stupid,â he said. âYou just never know what could happen.â
The teen was flown by Wyoming Life Flight helicopter first to Casperâs Banner Wyoming Medical Center, where it was determined that he needed a second flight to Anschutz Medical Campus Childrenâs Hospital in Aurora, Colorado.
âWe were with him for a week in the ICU hoping that his brain swelling would go down and that he would be OK,â Kazia Smith said. âUnfortunately, we found out five days in that on impact he was gone.â
Brandon Smith said there had been multiple tests on their son at the Colorado hospital, then they got a second opinion from another neurosurgeon who informed them about their sonâs true state.Â
He characterized the medical expertise prior to the second opinion as ânot good.â
âThe doctors never really told us that on impact he was gone,â Brandon Smith said.
âWe were hoping for a miracle that the swelling would go down and that he would come back and be OK,â Kazia Smith added. âBut then a second opinion told us âabsolutely not,â he was gone in half a second.â
The parents on learning that information decided to take their son off life support July 25.
âIt was a nightmare,â Kazia Smith said.

Teen Sets Up GoFundMe
Riellyâs parents said in addition to soccer, their son loved camping, boating, fishing and was a 16-year-old who loved to hang out with his friends.
Riellyâs best friend Owen Knight started a GoFundMe page for the family to help with funeral and expected Life Flight costs. The couple are extremely thankful for the support that has been shown their family during the ordeal.
âHe made that for us without us even knowing about it,â Kazia Smith said. âItâs just been a godsend.â
Brandon Smith, who said he works for the state of Wyoming, said he understands his medical insurance probably will not cover the helicopter bills.Â
He does not yet know what they will be, only that they will be challenging for the familyâs finances. Kazia Smith is self-employed.
The couple said they were best friends in high school, had Rielly early in their marriage and believe that it was their son who brought their marriage back together during a really rocky time.Â
Rielly was joined by his sister, Kinzlee, 7, nine years after his birth.
Brandon Smith said a âcelebrationâ of Riellyâs life and not a âfuneralâ is planned for 2 p.m. Saturday at Beacon Hill Church in Cheyenne, 3411 Cleveland Ave. Itâs open for anyone who wants to come.
âItâs going to be as positive as possible,â Brandon Smith said. âBecause he was the most positive person, never negative, never upset.â
âHe was the life of the entire room wherever he went,â Kazia Smith added.
Both parents said their son was a teen with faith in Jesus Christ who wore a cross necklace with the verse Philippians 4:13 inscribed on it: âThrough Christ who strengthens me, I can do anything.â
âFor a 16-year-old boy to have that much faith as he has had is (helping) to keep us strong in our faith as well,â he said. âEven through this horrible situation.â
Dale Killingbeck can be reached at dale@cowboystatedaily.com.





