The former Wyoming state lawmaker being sued over claims of sexual misconduct he reportedly leveled at a Wyoming investor is now asking to pull a news outlet into the lawsuit.Â
Reid Rasner, who ran an unsuccessful bid for U.S. Senate in 2024 and voiced a wish earlier this year to buy social media platform TikTok, sued former state Sen. Anthony Bouchard in July.Â
Rasner is accusing Bouchard of defaming him by posting Facebook comments that said Rasner had a âstudent sexual abuse recordâ at Casper College.Â
Rasner in an amended complaint also alleged that Bouchard âcontinued his attacksâ on Rasnerâs reputation by posting a link to a WyoFile story, which was a republication of a South Dakota Searchlight story casting doubt on Rasnerâs claims of significant wealth.Â
In response, Bouchard on Dec. 12 filed a third-party complaint against WyoFile, calling for it to defend itself from liability alongside him.
WyoFileâs executive editor told Cowboy State Daily the outlet didnât defame anyone, and Bouchardâs attempt to share potential liability with WyoFile is âabsurd.â Â
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The Searchlight
The South Dakota Searchlight story WyoFile republished questions whether Rasner has enough wealth to support his reported $47.45 billion bid to buy social media platform TikTok.
It says that â(Rasnerâs) background offers no definitive proof to support that descriptor (of billionaire).âÂ
âInstead,â it continues, âdisclosures filed during his Senate campaign show a self-employed financial adviser who owns some real estate, sells used goods on eBay for a sizable portion of his income, and is more than $1 million in debt due to a loan he received from a family trust.â
The story also quotes state House Appropriations Chair John Bear, R-Gillette, dismissing Rasnerâs reported TikTok bid as a âpublicity stunt.â
Rasnerâs complaint called the news story âa dubious article seeking to discredit Mr. Rasnerâs efforts to purchase TikTokâ and said Bouchard endorsed the story on social media âTo promote false narratives about Mr. Rasner.â
In a blanket reference to a series of Bouchard posts altogether â including the re-posting of the story â the complaint says Bouchard âknew or should have knownâ his posts were false.Â
Rasner did not file suit against WyoFile or the South Dakota Searchlight, however. Â
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Bouchard Beckons WyoFile
Bouchard in past filings derided Rasnerâs laments about the WyoFile story as an affront to the First Amendment.
He reiterated that stance in a Dec. 12 filing by his attorney Seth âTurtleâ Johnson of Saratoga-based Slow and Steady Law Office, writing, âIf posting a link on social media to a third partyâs article without any commentary or additional words can establish (an at-first-glance) claim for defamation per se, defamation and tortious interference, then the First Amendment is in dire straits in Wyoming.âÂ
But Bouchard also called for WyoFile to defend itself alongside him in the defamation suit.Â
If Rasner seeks to hold Bouchard liable for claims based on the WyoFile story, says Johnsonâs filing, then Bouchard âseeks indemnification from WyoFileâ for its speech.Â
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WyoFile Stands By Its WorkÂ
Matthew Copeland, executive editor of WyoFile, rebutted Rasnerâs claims against the news story and criticized Bouchardâs legal maneuver as a deflection.
âWyoFile hasnât defamed anyone,â wrote Copeland in a Wednesday email to Cowboy State Daily. âWe stand by our work.â
Whether Bouchard has defamed anyone âis a matter for the court to decide,â he added.
âThe notion, however, that WyoFile is somehow responsible for Anthony Bouchardâs speech is absurd,â wrote Copeland, âand frankly an affront to the idea of personal responsibility.â
A piece by WyoFile columnist Rod Miller also surfaced in Bouchardâs third-party complaint against the news outlet.Â
Miller in a Dec. 3 column on the defamation case wrote that âThe judicial outcome of that soap opera is pending, and popcorn futures are up to the limit in anticipation.â
Millerâs columns are not news, but opinion.Â
The South Dakota Searchlight, contacted via the reporter who wrote the WyoFile piece, declined Thursday to comment.Â
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Rasner Says Bouchard âPointing Fingersâ
Rasnerâs team in a Wednesday press release said Bouchardâs filing reflects that he âhas begun pointing fingers at others in an apparent attempt to avoid responsibility for his own defamatory statements.â
Bouchardâs third-party complaint âtargeting WyoFile,â the release continues, âdoes nothing to change the central fact of the case: the false and damaging allegations were made by Bouchard himself.â
Rasner is quoted in the statement, saying, âThe truth is very simple⌠Anthony Bouchard wrote the posts. Anthony Bouchard published the accusations. And Anthony Bouchard chose to accuse me of criminal conduct that never happened. Now that heâs facing real consequences, heâs trying to shift blame to anyone else he can.â
The press release says Rasnerâs lawsuit is based on Bouchardâs words, posts and comments that âdid not originate with a news outlet.â
âDragging others into this doesnât erase what he said,â Rasner said. âIt doesnât change the posts.
It doesnât change the damage. And it doesnât change accountability.â
Rasner emphasized that he seeks to restore his reputation, and his legal team will now begin issuing subpoenas and taking sworn testimony âto uncover the full scope of how these false accusations were made, repeated, and weaponized.â
Bouchard did not respond by publication to a text message request for comment.
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More About The Sex Claims
Regarding Bouchardâs alleged comments about Rasnerâs âsex abuse recordâ at Casper College, the school in an Oct. 31 filing denied ever receiving a report of sexual misconduct regarding Rasner, and said Casper College has a âzero toleranceâ policy for such acts.Â
Bouchardâs friend Austin Jennings, conversely, told the court in August that he heard of Rasner committing sexual misconduct during or prior to 2010 and repeated the account to Bouchard.Â
Judge Benjamin Kirven ruled Nov. 26 that Rasnerâs claims against Bouchard are viable enough to progress to the evidence-swapping, or discovery phase of the case.Â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





