A Sublette County man who fatally shot his friend July 11 in a Pinedale alleyway after a falling-out used reasonable force to preserve his life as the other man swung an animal trap at him, a special prosecutor has ruled.
The Sublette County Sheriffâs Office announced the decision Tuesday, about two weeks after special prosecutor and Natrona County District Attorney Dan Itzen issued it.
Craig Rice and Paul Browning were friends âfor a number of years,â says Itzenâs decision letter. âThey had a falling out over several different issues.â
But, Browning had Riceâs animal traps, and Rice had Browningâs free weights sets, the letter adds.
They arranged to return each otherâs property in the alley behind Riceâs business, in Pinedale, on July 11.
The town was bustling, as the exchange coincided with a summer rendezvous festival. Â
Browning asked a third man to help him make the exchange.
âHe also referred to Mr. Rice as a (expletive),â Itzen wrote.
Browningâs truck wouldnât start, so the third man used his truck to go to town with Browning.
On the way to town, Browning noted that he didnât bring a knife or gun âbecause he did not want trouble,â wrote Itzen.
At the alley, Browning grew upset because not all his weights were there.
According to the third man, Itzen wrote, Rice and Browning started arguing, with each accusing the other of being a liar and thief.
The third man could hear that Browning âwas upset and talking towards Mr. Rice.â Rice backed up and drew a gun, the letter says.
âMr. Rice shoots one time striking Mr. Browning in the chest,â Itzen added.
Rice noted that Browning held? one of the traps when he was shot.
Law enforcement arrived to find Browningâs body with one gunshot wound, and a trap next to the body, the prosecutor wrote.
Investigators collected the trap, which weighed about 2 pounds.
âRice after the shooting retreated into his office building,â wrote Itzen. âOnce inside he told individuals that he felt threatened as Mr. Browning advanced on him.â
The Interview
Investigators interviewed Rice, who described the âfinal confrontationâ as a rapid escalation once Browning saw the missing weights.
Browning called him a âmother***er,â according to Riceâs interview. He then picked up a trap, called him the expletive again and said, âIâm going to kill you,â Itzen related from that interview.
Browning held the trap by the chain end and bore what Rice reportedly characterized as ârage in the eyes.â
Rice told investigators that he pleaded, âPlease Paul donât, please, please.â
Rice retreated as Browning started to swing the trap at him from 4 feet away, Itzen wrote.
âRice describe (sic) that he was one hundred percent sure that Browning was going to kill him,â added the prosecutor. âAt that point Rice discharged the weapon.â
Reputation
Itzen said Browningâs âreputation within the communityâ is a factor in his analysis.
A person named Brian Kelly years prior described an attack in which Browning grabbed him by the throat, and he ended up with a cut on his throat, the letter says.
In June of this year, Itzen wrote, Browning was threatening to kill a utility worker for turning off his water, then said heâd kill law enforcement officers who responded.
Itzen listed a 2021 physical fight at the grocery store, and a road rage incident a woman described.
Legal Analysis
Itzen wrote that if he prosecuted this case and it advanced to trial, Rice would likely advance a self-defense claim, which would put the burden on the prosecutor to disprove the claim.
âGiven the facts as described above, the State could not meet that burden,â Itzen wrote.
Another question surfaces, of whether Riceâs conduct was reasonable.
State law says a person can return an attack with reasonable defensive force. It also says a person can use fatal self-defensive force when he has an âhonest belief,â rooted in either real or apparent danger, that he or another person faces âimminent peril of death or serious bodily injury.â
Itzen wrote: âGiven Mr. Browningâs statement of âIâm going to kill youââ and his advance with âan object that can cause serious injury or death after prolonged blows,â Riceâs defensive force was reasonable to preserve his life.
âAs such, at this time, the state declines to prosecute this matter,â Itzen concluded. âHowever, if new evidence comes to light, this decision can be reviewed.â
The Sublette County Sheriffâs Office responded to the shooting at 1 p.m. that Friday.
Sheriff KC Lehr told Cowboy State Daily at the time that self-defense was being investigated as a possible factor.
Rice did not return a request for comment left at his business Wednesday afternoon by publication.





