One year ago, Troy Lake was on his second week in federal prison.Â
He spent seven months there, including his 65th birthday and 40th wedding anniversary, for deleting emissions systems from ailing diesel engines.Â
On Tuesday, Lake joined U.S. Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyoming, at President Donald Trump's State of the Union address in Washington, DC.Â
Thatâs after Lummis championed his cause â and Trump pardoned him Nov. 7.Â
Then Trumpâs U.S. Department of Justice announced in January that while diesel âdeleteâ mechanics may still face civil penalties, the federal department would stop pursuing criminal cases against them.Â
âYeah, Iâm excited,â Lake told Cowboy State Daily ahead of the presidentâs speech. âItâs just crazy how things like this are going.â
He said he didnât know how much heâd be able to garner interest in the cause of other small business owners like himself, though he hoped to do so.Â
He pointed to Lummisâ proposed legislation to free imprisoned delete mechanics and Alaska Republican U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivanâs bill to require the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to update its regulations to account for how diesel exhaust fluid (DEF) can make engines falter in cold weather.Â
Many diesel mechanics were prosecuted after the federal government tilted five years ago during the Biden administration from civil to criminal enforcement against them.Â
âMy biggest thing is obviously thanking Senator Lummis, and President Trump,â said Lake.Â
He said he felt badly accepting the invitation to the speech because he wanted recognition, rather, for âall the people who helped me get the pardon.âÂ

Picking Up Engines
Lake said Lummisâ senior communications advisor Joe Jackson called to invite him last Wednesday night.Â
He was supposed to go to Nevada to pick up four engines, and maybe a transmission, as part of rebuilding the business his criminal prosecution reduced to what his defense attorney once called âa shadow of its former self.âÂ
Not to worry, said Lake: Heâll pick up the engines next week.Â
âThrilledâ
Lummis told Cowboy State Daily in a statement Tuesday that she was âthrilledâ to welcome Lake to Washington, D.C.Â
âTroy is a hardworking American who was unfairly targeted by the Biden Justice Department, simply for maintaining diesel engines in school buses, ambulances and fire trucks to keep them operational in Wyomingâs harsh climate,â said Lummis. âPresident Trump made the right call in pardoning him.âÂ
Issuing the statement before the speech, Lummis said she and Lake were looking forward to it.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.






