Wyoming Homicide Charges: What You Are Facing and What We Can Do
If you or someone you love has been charged with homicide in Wyoming, the next decisions you make will define everything that follows. Law enforcement has been building its case since the moment the incident occurred. Prosecutors have resources, investigators, and expert witnesses already in motion. You need an attorney who has been in a Wyoming courtroom on serious felony cases — and who is prepared to fight, not just negotiate.
Murder vs. Manslaughter — How Wyoming Law Defines the Difference
Wyoming law distinguishes between homicide charges based on intent and mental state. First degree murder requires premeditation and deliberate intent — the prosecution must prove you planned the killing. Second degree murder involves reckless conduct showing extreme indifference to human life, without premeditation. Voluntary manslaughter occurs in the heat of passion, provoked by circumstances that would cause a reasonable person to lose self-control. Involuntary manslaughter involves criminal negligence resulting in death — without intent to kill. Each charge has a different evidentiary burden and a different defense strategy.
Penalties for Homicide in Wyoming
First degree murder in Wyoming carries life in prison — or death. Wyoming is one of fewer than 30 states that still has an active death penalty statute. Second degree murder carries 20 years to life. Voluntary manslaughter carries up to 20 years. Involuntary manslaughter carries up to 10 years. These are the starting points — aggravating factors including prior criminal history, the identity of the victim, or the manner of the offense can increase sentences significantly.
The First 48 Hours After a Homicide Arrest
Physical evidence is being collected. Witnesses are being interviewed. Surveillance footage is being pulled. The prosecution is building its narrative right now. Every hour that passes without an attorney on your case is an hour the state has an uncontested head start. If you are a suspect — even if you haven’t been charged yet — you need legal representation immediately. Do not speak to law enforcement without an attorney present. Anything you say will be used against you, and what seems like cooperating can actually harm your case significantly.
How We Build a Homicide Defense in Wyoming
A strong homicide defense starts with an independent investigation — our own, separate from law enforcement’s. We examine the physical evidence, identify forensic issues, review the chain of custody, interview witnesses, and look for inconsistencies in the prosecution’s account. Self-defense is one of the most powerful defenses in Wyoming homicide cases. Under Wyoming’s Castle Doctrine, you have the right to use force — including deadly force — to defend yourself in your home without a duty to retreat. Defense of others follows similar principles. Beyond self-defense, we challenge intent, challenge forensic evidence, and in appropriate cases, challenge the mental state at the time of the offense.
We Take These Cases to Trial
Not every attorney takes homicide cases to trial. We do. When the facts support a trial strategy, we are prepared to stand before a Wyoming jury and fight for you. We have the courtroom experience, the forensic resources, and the trial team to mount a complete defense in the most serious cases Wyoming prosecutors bring.
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Related Charges We Also Defend

Why Clients in Wyoming and South Dakota Choose Just Criminal Law
Our attorneys spent years working for the state before switching sides. We know exactly how prosecutors build cases and exactly where to find the holes.
We do not split our focus between practice areas. Every attorney, every resource, every minute is focused on one thing: your criminal defense.
We know the courts, the judges, and the prosecutors across Wyoming and western South Dakota. Local familiarity shapes strategy and strategy shapes outcomes.
Servicios de traduccion en espanol disponibles. Every client fully understands their case, their options, and their rights.
Real Results for Wyoming & South Dakota Clients
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OtherSuppression Appeal — Wyoming Supreme CourtDistrict Court denied motion to suppress. Wyoming Supreme Court accepted certiorari on appeal.
Barney v. State of Wyoming — Wyoming Supreme Court
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CASE DISMISSEDReckless Endangering / Domestic Battery / Child Endangering — WyomingClient charged with reckless endangering, domestic battery, and child endangering. All charges dismissed.
State v. Quezada-Lopez — Wyoming Circuit Court
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CASE DISMISSEDDUI / DWUI — WyomingClient charged with DUI. State unable to lay foundation for the breath test. Case dismissed.
State v. Von Olnhausen — Wyoming Circuit Court
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CASE DISMISSEDFelony Child Abuse — WyomingClient charged with accessory after the fact and aggravated child abuse — a felony. State unable to meet its burden of proof at preliminary hearing. Felony count dismissed.
State v. Bullinger — Wyoming District Court

Charged with a crime in Wyoming? Time is critical.
The sooner you have an attorney, the more options you have.
What Clients Say About Just Criminal Law
Frequently Asked Questions About Homicide Charges in Wyoming
Wyoming Criminal Defense — Communities We Serve
We are based in Gillette, Wyoming, and serve clients across the state and into western South Dakota. Our team knows the local courts, prosecutors, and judges in every community we serve — and that local knowledge makes a real difference in criminal defense.

- Deadwood
- Sturgis (Rally)
- Custer County
- Lawrence County
- Meade County
- Pennington County
We provide on-call criminal defense for Rally-related arrests including DUI, drug charges, weapons offenses, and assault. Call us 24/7 during Rally week.

