A Casper mother of two was killed Friday night when a wrong-way driver hit the Toyota SUV she was driving, authorities and the womanâs family say.
Mandy Butler, 43, was driving a Toyota SUV the correct direction when a Nissan passenger car driving the wrong direction along the 5300 block of CY Avenue in Casper shortly after 9 p.m. Friday.
Thatâs according to statement the Casper Police Department released Monday, which doesnât identify Mandy Butler or her father Randy, and interviews with family members who did.
Casper PD also declined to say which vehicle was the victim vehicle, saying it refrains from identifying victim vehicles until the coroner has identified victims. Mandy's family confirmed she was in the SUV.Â
Officers arrived that night to find Butler and her father critically injured. They were both taken to Banner Wyoming Medical Center, where Mandy succumbed to her injuries, the statement says.
The driver of the wrong-way vehicle, an adult, was taken to the hospital with serious, non-life-threatening injuries, the statement says.
Initial evidence showed that the wrong-way vehicle collided head-on with the victim vehicle, says the statement. Â
âThe influence of alcohol is being investigated as a contributing factor,â says the statement.

Waiting For Surgery
Randy Butler is in the intensive care unit in Casper with numerous family members nearby, his son Dude Butler, who is Mandyâs older brother, told Cowboy State Daily on Monday.
Doctors are preparing to fuse Randyâs spine together in at least two places, said Dude.Â
Theyâd hoped to do so Monday, but had to deal first with internal bleeding from his shattered femur, the son added.
âTheyâre going to try to repair that today,â said Dude. âIf they can get that taken care of, theyâre going to do the back surgery tomorrow.â
Medical professionals often keep Randy unconscious and using a breathing tube, but he has been awake for short stints and has been able to nod and make eye contact with his loved ones, said Dude.
Doctors expect more surgeries, including a later one for Randyâs fractured hip, the son added.
Randy can move his feet and feel his legs, said Dude. âAnd so the initial spine paralysis could have been much worse,â he noted.
Mandyâs young sons are âinsanely saddenedâ but âsurrounded by a village with a lot of love,â said Dude.
He said he didnât want to speak at length about the crash: âI donât want to dip into the anger too much â but thatâs there.â
Giving Sight To Two People
Gathered in the hospital Monday, the family sent a collective statement about Mandy to Cowboy State Daily via email.
âMandy was kind, loving, and endlessly forgiving. She was a bright light in every room she entered,â the statement says. âWith her big heart and bubbly spirit, she had a gift for making others laugh, even in the hardest of times.Â
"As a devoted mother to two young boys, they were the center of her world, and she loved them beyond measure.â
To Mandyâs family and friends, the statement continues, she was a source of warmth, joy and comfort â âher motherâs âsunshine girl.â
Mandyâs eyes have been donated, giving two people the gift of sight, the statement says.
In that way, âher generous spirit lives on.â
The statement concludes: âMandy was deeply loved and will be profoundly missed.â
Mandyâs friend Donny Espinoza gave a tearful interview in which he recalled her turning his life around 11 years ago when they both lived in Grand Junction, Colorado.
Heâd hit a low point and she took him in, Espinoza said. They were just friends and never intimate, and she helped him get sober and into rehab.
Heâs been sober for more than a decade and runs a roofing business, said Espinoza.
âLife 100% changed. And I believe part of that is because of the kindness Mandy showed me throughout the years,â he said.
He added, through tears, âI canât believe sheâs gone.â
Espinoza characterized Mandyâs family as a big, loving, caring network, to him and to others.
Mandy saw the best in people, âshe gravitated people,â he said. âIâm going to really miss her â a lot.â
Second Crash
Officers continued their investigation into the night.
At about 2 a.m. Saturday, a Natrona County Sheriffâs Office vehicle ended its pursuit of a reported impaired driver near the intersection of Wyoming boulevard and CY Avenue, the statement says.
The vehicle sped on toward the crash investigation scene and hit an unoccupied Casper Police Department truck, according to the statement and a photograph of the truck.
The driver, a juvenile, sustained serious injuries and was taken to the hospital, the statement adds.
âNo officers or bystanders were injured,â it says.
Because of multiple agenciesâ involvement in that collision, the Wyoming Highway Patrol is investigating it.
âThe Casper Police Department extends our sincere gratitude to the many agencies that assisted during these incidents, including the CasperâNatrona County Public Safety Communications Center, the Natrona County Sheriffâs Office, the Wyoming Highway Patrol, Banner Wyoming Medical Center, and Casper Fire-EMS,â the CPD statement says. âWe also wish to express our deepest condolences to the family and loved ones of the deceased.Â
"This tragedy is a devastating reminder of the dangers and irreversible consequences of impaired driving.â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





