Laramie County Sheriff Brian Kozak is calling out an inflammatory social media post that incorrectly insinuates his departmentâs immigration task force was violating the rights of people in a Cheyenne home.
âThe task force in action. Terrorism in action,â states the post by Joseph Ramirez, a local activist who has helped organize a number of protests calling out President Donald Trump and recent U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) actions in other states.
The Sunday Facebook post is accompanied by three photos showing Laramie County Sheriffâs Office vehicles and deputies in front of a home in Cheyenne.
Ramirez added in a comment to his own post: âBS in action.â
In a Facebook video of his own posted Monday, Kozak said he felt compelled to respond.
âA citizen brought to my attention a post from a local activist named Joseph Ramirez, where he posted some pictures of deputies doing their job on the street,â Kozak said.
He then went on to say that the operation Ramirez posted about had nothing to do with immigration enforcement and that alleging it was âterrorism in actionâ isnât close to the truth.
âFolks, you know what the deputies were doing? They were recovering a stolen car,â the sheriff said. âThatâs what they were doing, because the day before they took a report from a woman who doesnât have any money to buy another car.â
He said the deputies âworked all night long to find her car and get it back to her.â
What Ramirez saw was the conclusion â that deputies had found the car and were processing it as evidence.
âThatâs what they were doing,â he said.
A call to a number listed for Ramirez triggers a message that the number has either been changed or is no longer in service.Â
A message to his social media asking for comment on the post and Kozakâs reaction wasnât responded to by the time this story was published.

âIntent Is To Inflameâ
While immigration and ICE enforcement is an emotionally charged issue now around the country, itâs not a good idea to assume thatâs whatâs happening when local agencies are doing their jobs, said Campbell County Undersheriff Quentin Reynolds.
Kozakâs office and other departments have agreements with ICE to help enforce federal immigration laws, but local agencies âare dedicating 99.9% of our time on investigating and prevention of other state statutes,â Reynolds said.
Posting photos out of context and insinuating ICE enforcement is happening is reckless and can inflame animosity against local officers, which could lead to unnecessary conflicts between residents and police, said Frank Groth, a retired career law enforcement officer who lives in Gillette.
âTo take a series of images and take them out of context â you canât say whether he did it deliberately or didnât do it deliberately â then moving that out into the public consciousness on social media, thatâs propaganda,â Groth said. âThe intent is to inflame. Nothing good can come with that.â
Immigration and ICE Â are "a polarizing topic, for sure, and this could cause problems in the future,â Kozak told Cowboy State Daily during a follow-up interview. âWe donât need to have some false perception of whatâs going on.â
The Task Force
The Laramie County Sheriffâs Office has an enforcement agreement with ICE and a 25-member task force that was sworn in last October.Â
The task force mainly deals with English proficiency and other issues with commercial vehicles and their drivers, Kozak said. It doesnât conduct immigration raids of homes or businesses.
âMy policy prohibits immigration sweeps,â he said during the swearing-in at the Wyoming Capitol. âIt does not allow deputies to enter private property, such as schools, churches, homes, businesses, or farms for the sole purpose of immigration enforcement.â
He said there is âzero toleranceâ of racial profiling or any of those types of sweeps.
To that end, Kozak has also promoted his agencyâs immigration-related enforcement with commercial trucks.Â
He said that thereâs a big difference between the ICE protests and violence happening in Minnesota and Cheyenne, Wyoming.
âRemember that we are in Wyoming,â he said. âWe are neighbors and we help each other, right? We donât need to stir up things that arenât true.â
The sheriff said he also noticed Ramirez advocating for donations to a local food pantry, a cause he said he and the sheriffâs office can get behind.
He ended his response with an offer to help, urging people to also drop off food donations for the food pantry at the LCSO.
Greg Johnson can be reached at greg@cowboystatedaily.com.





