In a three-day operation called âTruck Around and Find Out,â the Laramie County Sheriffâs Office reports stopping 82 commercial trucks, arresting 32 illegal immigrants, and writing 51 tickets, Sheriff Brian Kozak said.
Itâs the agencyâs second commercial truck safety operation on Interstate 25 and U.S. Highway 85, both major trucking routes that run through the county, he said. The first, called âOperation Safe Haul,â was in November.
By doing targeted traffic enforcement at the countyâs borders with Colorado and ports of entry, deputies can identify commercial truck drivers who arenât following the rules, as well as other drivers who arenât safe around semis, Kozak said.
âOur traffic unit, which I have three full-time deputies assigned to traffic enforcement, they are looking for these violations every day,â the sheriff told Cowboy State Daily on Friday. âAnd they seem to be bringing in either unlicensed or undocumented truck drivers every other day.
âSo, itâs a continuing thing for us.â
He said this weekâs three-day traffic detail was a joint effort with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), but that it wasnât an ICE operation.
âThey brought in extra officers from Colorado to assist for these three days,â Kozak said. âWe actually had, most of the time, an ICE officer actually in a deputyâs vehicle with them. That way they can immediately check the immigration status through their computer system.â
The ICE agents were there because the countyâs continuing enforcement of commercial truck rules has shown that there is some overlap there, he said. And with a three-day operation like the one this Monday through Wednesday, it was more efficient to have ICE there rather than call the agency 32 times.
âThis is completely about safety,â Kozak added, and not doing ICEâs job. âWeâre seeing in Wyoming and throughout the country, these big trucks are causing crashes and people are dying.â

Acting For ICE?
Not everyone is convinced the operation was safety-focused and not a veiled ICE roundup of undocumented or suspect truckers.
In response to âTruck Around and Find Out,â the ACLU of Wyoming says in a statement to Cowboy State Daily that Kozak has a history of sending immigration-related messages.
âWe have repeatedly heard Sheriff Kozak say that the reason the Laramie County Sheriffâs Office is engaging in immigration enforcement is to focus on people who are a danger to the community,â the groupâs executive director, Libby Skarin, said in the statement.
âOnce again, his words arenât aligning with whatâs really happening,â she added.
She said that by turning over 32 truck drivers in the country illegally, the LCSO was basically acting as an arm of ICE.
âUsing Laramie County officers to carry out âshow-me-your-papersâ immigration enforcement erodes constitutional protections, undermines public safety and diverts limited local resources away from core law enforcement responsibilities,â Skarin said.

Crossover Issues
Kozak said the reality is, thereâs a lot of overlap between his focus on keeping the highways safe and immigration-related concerns, like undocumented drivers and operators who canât read English.
He said heâs seen drivers who are legal residents and have valid commercial driverâs licenses but still cause crashes because they canât read highway warnings â especially about wind in Wyoming.
âA lot of the blow-overs on our interstates are because the drivers canât read the signs, the regulatory signs that say, âHey, you know, if your truck does not meet a certain weight, you canât proceed,ââ Kozak said.Â
âA lot of those blow-overs are from drivers who donât understand English,â he added. âSo yeah, itâs a big safety risk.â
Overall, 177 traffic stops were made during âTruck Around and Find Out,â he said, adding that there are a lot of truckers âdoing it right.â
âI especially want to thank the truck drivers that were honking at our deputies, waving at them, stopping and thanking our deputies for helping them keep their industry safe and our roadways safe in Laramie County,â Kozak said in a video about the operation posted to the departmentâs Facebook page.
Something Kozak said that surprised him about this weekâs operation is how many of those 177 stops were for commercial trucks that sped past the ports of entry when they were required to stop.
At times, so many trucks were bypassing the ports âwe didnât have enough deputies to pull over the violators,â he said.
Kozak has said heâs not concerned about any criticism he may get for operations like this weekâs or having a mutual aid agreement with ICE.Â
If they help build a reputation that people shouldnât break the law in Laramie County, thatâs what he wants, he said in the video.
âSo hopefully, now the word is out that this is not the county that you want to âtruck around and find out,ââ he said. âAnd when I say, âtruck around,â I mean drive a truck undocumented, unlicensed and unsafe.â
Contact Greg Johnson at greg@cowboystatedaily.com
Greg Johnson can be reached at greg@cowboystatedaily.com.





