CASPER â A 21-year-old Cheyenne man pleaded guilty Tuesday in Natrona County District Court to shooting a 16-year-old boy in the head as they played âquick drawâ with loaded firearms on Motherâs Day.
Sebastian A.K. Belden entered a plea deal with the Natrona County District Attorneyâs office that had him plead guilty to one charge of aggravated assault and battery while a second similar charge was dropped.
Both charges stem from a pair of incidents on May 11, 2025, in Casper.Â
The first involved the actual shooting, which caused serious injury, while the second charge involved threatening to use a âdrawn deadly weapon,â according to court documents.
Belden stood beside his attorney, Dylan Rosalez, in a green top and orange jail bottoms as Rosalez outlined the plea deal to Judge Kerri Johnson.Â
Johnson asked Belden if he understood the agreement and the potential penalty for the remaining charge against him.
âYes, your honor,â Belden said.Â
The judge then asked him how he would plead and Belden said guilty.
The judge asked him to explain what happened and if he caused âserious bodily injury to T.C.â the 16-year-old.
Beldenâs reply was hard to discern in the courtroom.
âWere you pointing the firearm at him in a reckless manner?â the judge asked.
âYes, your honor,â Belden replied.
âQuick Drawâ
Natrona County Chief Deputy District Attorney Blaine Nelson asked the court to consider adding information from two pages in the Natrona County Sheriffâs Office affidavit to the guilty plea record
The affidavit outlines Belden and the teen playing âquick drawâ with loaded weapons to further establish his ârecklessnessâ with the firearm.
The affidavit reveals that Belden told police he and the teen made it a habit of pointing firearms at each other.Â
âBelden described the behavior as through it was a game of âquick draw,ââ the affidavit states. âBelden agreed the description was accurate.â
The judge agreed to take the plea deal under advisement pending the result of a pre-sentence investigation.
Rosalez asked the judge to consider amending Beldenâs $50,000 cash or surety bond to a personal recognizance bond of the same amount.
âHis criminal history is very minimal, and he has friends in Casper he could stay with,â Rosalez said. âHe has significant remorse for what happened here.
"He is not the same person he was.â
Nelson argued that the bond was appropriate due to the nature of the charge and the facts surrounding the incident.Â
He again pointed to Belden and the teen playing âquick drawâ with loaded weapons and the fact that Belden bought the gun for the teen.
Nelson also said Beldenâs ties to the community were not strong after his move to Cheyenne and there was no record provided of the friends he could stay with.
The judge agreed with Nelson.
âI would find that the bond that is set is appropriate,â she said.
She ordered a pre-sentence investigation.
911 Call
The case against Belden stems from a 911 call on May 11 at 7:06 p.m. about a 16-year-old boy having been shot in the head.Â
Casper Police were responding to a separate shooting and asked Natrona County Sheriffâs Office deputies to go to the scene.
When they arrived at a home on the corner of First Street and South Washington, they found the teen with a single gunshot wound to the left side of his forehead, above the left eye, and an exit wound behind the teenâs left ear.
The police affidavit states deputies found a loaded handgun belonging to the teen with a round in the chamber.Â
They found Beldenâs firearm in the yard where he had tossed it. It was loaded and had a round in the chamber.
Initially, Belden told a Natrona County Sheriffâs Office investigator that the shooting was a âone-in-a-million-fluke kind of thing because the safety on my gun was on.â
âI didnât even know I had a live round in the chamber,â Belden told the investigator.
Witnesses, including Beldenâs fiancĂ©e, told police both Belden and the teen had weapons that afternoon, and that Belden frequently took his Taurus G3 9 mm from his waistband and pointed it at the teenâs head.
âDuring most of those incidents, (his fiancĂ©e) told Belden to put the firearm away,â the affidavit states.
Belden eventually confessed in a May 21 follow-up interview with authorities that he pulled the weapon from his waistband, pointed it at the teen, manipulated the safety lever to âmake sure nothing bad happened.â
He agreed with an investigator that the only way it could have gone off was that âhis finger was on the trigger,â according to the affidavit.
The teen was treated at Banner Wyoming Medical Center and then flown to Childrenâs Hospital Colorado in Denver.
During interviews with Beldenâs fiancĂ©e and forensic interviews with 12-year-old and 14-year-old minor girls who had witnessed the shooting, investigators were told that Belden asked them to lie to law enforcement and tell them he tripped over something, and that is what caused his weapon to go off.
No Animosity
All three of the females told investigators that there was no animosity between the pair, and Beldenâs fiancĂ©e told deputies that he had bought a SCCY handgun for the 16-year-old.
Investigators found the purchase forms for both of the weapons on March 28 and April 16.
The affidavit states that a video at the store where the SCCY handgun was bought showed Beldenâs fiancĂ©e and the teen were with him.
Belden also wrote an apology letter to the teenâs family and a representative of his delivered the letter to the Casper Police Department, asking it to be given to the teenâs family.
The letter was given to the Natrona County Sheriffâs Office, the affidavit states.
âThe note expressed regret and remorse on behalf of Belden for hurting (the teen),â the affidavit states. âThe note also indicated that the shooting was a âterrible accidentâ and asked for the (teenâs) familyâs forgiveness.â
The aggravated assault and battery charge carries a potential penalty of up to 10 years in prison.
Dale Killingbeck can be reached at dale@cowboystatedaily.com.





