Cowboy State Daily Video Newscast: Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Tuesday's headlines include: * Shootout in Baggs * Data Centers Lower Electricity? * Stupid  Tourist Charges Bison Herd

MW
Mac Watson

June 09, 20269 min read

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It’s time to take a look at what’s happening around Wyoming for Tuesday, June 9th.  I’m Mac Watson

Before the Carbon County emergency services scanner went dark on Monday afternoon, law enforcement personnel described an active shooter incident and manhunt in Baggs. Cowboy State Daily’s Clair McFarland reports at least one law enforcement officer was injured and a trooper’s car was “shot up.”

“The man had emerged from a home in Baggs had fired a shot, and was trying to get into another apartment room in an apartment complex, and then he left that scene in a black truck. A trooper, a deputy, other law enforcement potentially started to converge. One officer reported that he was doing a traffic stop on the truck, and then we hear ‘Shots fired, shots fired!’ One deputy was taken to care after residents performed first aid, and then Trooper 132 as he was called on scanner traffic, said that his truck had been shot up.”

The public learned of the incident when Carbon County emergency services called for a shelter in place due to an active shooter situation.  As of Monday night, the status of the shooter was unconfirmed.

Read the full story HERE.

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A downed power line is believed responsible for the Raven Creek Fire which has burned 3,900 acres of land in northeast Wyoming. Cowboy State Daily’s Kolby Fedore reports that Weston County Fire Warden Daniel Tysdal said they're experiencing “late-summer fire weather conditions and fire behavior.”

“Fire Warden Tisdale said that the fire itself is not a major concern, it's just a warning for what's to come. They're dealing with severe drought conditions, and they're seeing late summer fire patterns, and it's just the beginning of June. As of Monday afternoon, the fire is 100% contained. It burned about 3800 acres. I did talk to a local rancher family, and I could just say that their ranch family was hit by it. No livestock were injured, just a lot of fence was burned, and they are praying for rain.”

The blaze was started just days after the nearby Shipwheel Fire was started by lightning and burned 456 acres in the same corner of the county.

Read the full story HERE.

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At a panel discussion on Saturday, Cheyenne leaders and industry officials said data centers are already helping stabilize electric rates and are opening new land for housing. But Cowboy State Daily’s Renee Jean reports that skeptics still aren’t buying it.

“This has actually happened here in Cheyenne. Meta paid like a million bucks to run three miles of water and sewer lines to its center, so that they can, you know, provide the domestic water. They're on a closed loop system, but they still have restrooms for the employees and water for the break rooms and that kind of thing, and so they spent a million bucks to bring that three miles to their data center. Well, where housing developments in that area were economically unfeasible. So, you've kind of opened up this whole new place where development can come in, like housing or shopping, whatever, retail businesses, and that kind of thing.”

Cheyenne LEADS Executive Director Betsey Hale tells Cowboy State Daily that Cheyenne has 10 data centers already operating, five under construction, and nine more announced or in planning stages. Another 36 data center companies or site selectors have expressed some level of interest in Cheyenne or Laramie County,

Read the full story HERE.

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Big Horn County Search and Rescue had to rescue two German tourists after Google Maps got their rented Jeep stuck on a backcountry road. Cowboy State Daily’s Andrew Rossi reports that a Wyoming tow truck driver put it bluntly, “If you're going to be in the Bighorns, don't trust Google.”

“In Wyoming, a Google Maps directive can lead you down a dirt track road or to a road that's closed or that's only seasonally, seasonably open or seasonally open, and that's what these German tourists found out. The tourists were visiting Medicine Wheel, and Google Maps gave them a shortcut to get the shell, and as they're going down that shortcut, they realized that their vehicle was not the kind that they would want for that particular road. They turned around, they tried to get back to where they started, and then they lost two of the tires because of a sharp rock. They didn't go there by accident. Google Maps told them that that was a viable route, and they trusted Google Maps to get them from point A to point B.”

The pair was evacuated by BCSAR volunteers on ATVs that evening, but their Jeep Compass was stuck in the mountains until the tires could be replaced.

Read the full story HERE.

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I’ll have more news from Cowboy State Daily right after this.

Cowboy State Daily News continues now….

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A Cody river guide said his raft was nearly sunk by an electric fence wire strung too low across a river in Park County, while he was out on a float with his girlfriend and her young son on Sunday. Cowboy State Daily’s Mark Heinz reports that Ryan Anue says the situation could have “gone bad fast.”

“They came across an electric wire that had been serving across the river, electric fencing wire, no big deal, they, you know, so they ducked into that, but then as soon as they popped up from under that one, they saw a second one was there, and the guy said that this one was kind of bowed down into the river a little bit, so they had to kind of go to one side, and when they did that, it caught on what they call a thigh brace, which is kind of like a metal brace that sticks up out of this inflatable raft. The guy said it was starting to drag the boat underwater, it was just total chaos.”

Everyone made it to safety, but as Ryan sees it, the manner in which the wire was strung over the river was hazardous and possibly illegal. He said that he reported it to the Park County Sheriff’s Office.

Read the full story HERE.

The State Land Board voted 3-2 Monday to pause its work to halt two controversial wind leases — until a court decides a major legal question on them. Cowboy State Daily’s Clair McFarland reports that Secretary of State Chuck Gray called it “irregular,” but Auditor Kristi Racines cast it as common sense.

“While the Wyoming Supreme Court decides a major legal question about one of the two similar leases, um, Secretary of State Chuck Gray and Superintendent Public Instruction Megan Degenfelder voted against it. Gray called the process irregular, but State Auditor Kristi Racines, who was among the three aye votes, along with the governor and the treasurer, said she basically cast it as a common sense move, like this isn't about being pro or anti win project, this is about giving the court some space rather than digging potentially a deeper hole, legal hole for ourselves.”

The board comprises Wyoming’s top five elected officials: Racines, Gray, Gov. Mark Gordon, Treasurer Curt Meier, and Superintendent of Public Instruction Megan Degenfelder.

Read the full story HERE.

Oklahoma resident Les Vandever says he is still stunned after seeing a man charging into a herd of bison in Yellowstone. Cowboy State Daily’s Andrew Rossi reports that Vandever says “It was a moment of unbelievable stupidity.”

“This couple was driving in their vehicle, they pulled over, look at some bears, and they saw someone hop out of another vehicle and charge at a herd of bison, because they were crossing the road, and this person decided that was a good way to get them moving the way that he wanted them to go, or it was just something stupid he did impulsively in the moment. But the photos and their license plate were given to a Yellowstone Ranger. Maybe this guy was trying to be a wide receiver for the Ohio State Buckeyes because he was wearing an Ohio State shirt at the time, so who knows what the thought process is that goes behind that.”

Vandever tells Cowboy State Daily that he got clear photographs of the individual’s face and the vehicle’s license plate, which he’s since shared with a Yellowstone ranger.

Read the full story HERE.

Wyoming's own Brandon Nimmo was honored by the Texas Rangers on Sunday with his own bobblehead night. Cowboy State Daily Columnist Bill Sniffin was in Texas for the game and came away with a rare item.

“They had these bobble heads, and they made such a deal, I don't know whether Brandon Nimmo really did want to be a bull rider or not, but they, according to the Texas Rangers, he did, and so they put him on a bucking horse, and then they had rodeo clowns all over the stadium, and promoting it, and it was really special, and of course, he had a good night at the plate. He had a double, scored a run, and he also had some great catches out in right field, and it was very.. I felt really darn proud to be there, and I was wearing my Wyoming gold Wyoming cowboy hat. it isn't very often that Wyoming is the center of the universe in baseball.” 

Bill also reports that Brandon's 90-year-old grandpa threw out the first pitch. 

Read the full story HERE.

And that’s today’s news. Get your free digital subscription to Wyoming's only statewide newspaper by hitting the Daily Newsletter button on Cowboy State Daily Dot Com - and you can watch this newscast every day by clicking Subscribe on our YouTube channel, or listen to us on your favorite podcast app.  Thanks for watching - I’m Mac Watson, for Cowboy State Daily.

Authors

MW

Mac Watson

Broadcast Media Director

Mac Watson is the Broadcast Media Director for Cowboy State Daily.