Utahâs worst drunk drivers who want to skirt a new state law that bans them from buying alcohol shouldnât try to get around that by crossing into Wyoming to get their booze.
Thatâs the message bars and liquor stores in Evanston just across the border want Utahns to hear.
âIf Utah says you canât buy alcohol because youâre too bad of a drunk driver, then weâre not going to sell to you either,â said Kim Bateman, who owns Discount Liquor in Evanston, which bills itself as the âlargest seller of alcohol in southwest Wyoming.â
Not only that, but she also owns most of the other retail liquor outlets in the town, including Spirits of Red Mountain, Border Beverage, and Cowboy Joeâs Liquor Barn.
Along with local bar owners, Bateman said she expects to start seeing more people from Utah trying to buy their liquor just across the border, similar to Colorado residents who drive up Interstate 25 to get fireworks that are banned in that state.
Thatâs because Utah â already considered to have the strictest drunk driving laws in the nation â has a new law that went into effect Jan. 1, banning anyone convicted of whatâs considered an âextremeâ DUI from buying alcohol anywhere in the state.
Any blood alcohol content measurement for a driver of 0.160% or greater is considered âextremeâ under the new law, called the Interdicted Persons Amendment, or House Bill 437.
Thatâs more than three times the legal limit in Utah, which has the lowest intoxicated threshold in the U.S. at 0.05%.

A Step Beyond
Most other states have laws that restrict drunk drivers from operating vehicles while intoxicated, like restricting access to alcohol, taking driverâs licenses, or requiring interlock devices on vehicles.
Utahâs approach of banning people from buying alcohol altogether seems to be a first.
To keep track of those âextremeâ drunk drivers, Utah will issue new driverâs licenses or official state IDs that say âNO ALCOHOL SALEâ in all capital letters in a red banner right over a personâs photo.
That should make it easy for retail liquor stores or bars to enforce the new law, Bateman said.
âThatâs if Utah does their job,â she said, adding that itâs not on her or other business owners in Wyoming to identify those scofflaws for Utah.
âIf they show us a driverâs license is âno alcoholâ on it, weâre definitely going to honor that,â Bateman said. âWe take that very seriously. For us to be respected as alcohol sellers, we have to police it on our end.
âIf Utah does their job and flag that license, then we are going to honor that.â
Wyoming Doesnât Have To Do Anything
While Bateman and two bars in Evanston contacted by Cowboy State Daily said they will absolutely not sell to Utahâs worst drunk drivers, theyâre not obligated to recognize that stateâs alcohol ban, said Mike Moser, executive director for the Wyoming State Liquor Association.
âThatâs a Utah law, not a Wyoming law,â he said. âThat would be a retailer choice, but I can see that (Batemanâs take) as being prudent.
âOur retailers are very cautious with stuff like that,â Moser added. âWeâre very careful, because we own liquor licenses that are very hard to get. We tend to err on the side of caution on things like that.â
While Moser said he or his organization would never tell an individual business what it should or shouldnât do, heâs not surprised they donât see Utahâs new law as a way to cash in.
âYouâre not going to pay the mortgage off that customer,â he said. âI wouldnât tell them what to do, but I applaud them for doing that.â
Itâs the same for the Wyoming Highway Patrol, which said it intends to continue to aggressively enforce Wyomingâs DUI laws.
âWe will enforce Wyoming and federal laws the best of our abilities,â said WHP spokesman Aaron Brown when asked about the new Utah law. If Utah residents âcome into Wyoming and happen to come to Wyoming to buy alcohol, then go back into Utah, thatâs the risk theyâre taking.â
Enforcing the no-sell rule will be a little easier in Utah because retail liquor stores there are state-operated, Moser said.

About Responsibility
Bateman agrees with Moser, saying that each business owner has to make his or her own decisions, but that anyone who cares about promoting responsible behavior with and around alcohol would deny those flagged Utah IDs.
âWe see on a day-to-day basis a lot of people in Utah who are customers of ours, and we appreciate the business we get,â she said. âOur payroll gets met from the folks in Utah, and most of them are all good people and theyâre responsible people.â
While itâs legal for her to sell alcohol to Utahâs âextremeâ drunk drivers, Bateman said she couldnât morally justify doing so.
âIf I had a child that was killed by a drunk driver, Iâd be devastated and your family would be devastated,â she said. âI donât knock the Utah rule, I really donât.â
She added that Wyoming does âa really great jobâ enforcing drunk driving laws and flagging problem drivers.
âThe bottom line is we donât want to sell to someone whoâs going to go out and hurt somebody,â Bateman said. âYouâre always going to get some that fall through the cracks, but itâs not from not paying attention.â
Greg Johnson can be reached at greg@cowboystatedaily.com.




