Some quick context on what has been dubbed “Check Gate”.
On Feb. 9th, activist Rebecca Bextel, a Teton County GOP committeewoman and well-known fundraiser, made national headlines after she hand-delivered campaign contribution checks to several Wyoming state representatives on the floor of the House of Representatives after legislative business had adjourned for the day. This moment was captured in a widely circulated photograph that sparked significant debate and prompted both a legislative investigation and a separate criminal probe.
Importantly, at the time Bextel handed out these checks, there was no existing rule or law in Wyoming explicitly prohibiting the distribution or acceptance of lawful campaign contributions on the House floor. Meaning her actions did not technically violate any formal statutory or legislative provisions in force at that moment.
What the Investigation Focused On
On February 26, the Wyoming House Special Investigative Committee convened for a multi-hour hearing to examine the circumstances of the check distribution. Committee members heard testimony from Bextel herself and from several lawmakers who received contributions.
During this process:
- Bextel asserted under oath that her sole goal was to deliver contributions efficiently and lawfully on behalf of a Teton County donor, not to influence votes or legislative outcomes. She described the incident as a spontaneous action and denied any intent to coordinate quid pro quo arrangements.
- Multiple lawmakers who received checks testified that they did not interpret the event as bribery or misconduct, and several explicitly stated that they saw no expectation or instruction tied to legislative action when accepting the contributions.
- Some recipients noted that campaign contributions are a form of political speech and association, protected in many ways by law, and that accepting support from a volunteer fundraiser did not constitute improper behavior.
- After taking almost five hours of testimony, the committee went into a closed session to discuss the matter. A report on their findings is expected later this week.
Positive Interpretations of Bextel’s Actions
Even critics acknowledged aspects of the situation that support a more lenient or positive assessment of what happened:
✔️ No Clear Rule Violation at the Time
At the moment the checks were handed out, there was no explicit prohibition against accepting campaign contributions on the House floor, meaning Bextel was operating within the letter of existing campaign finance rules, not outside them.
✔️ Intent Was Lawful Fundraising, Not Bribery
Both Bextel and several lawmakers on the committee emphasized that there was no discussion of legislation or votes in tandem with the contributions. The lawmakers testified that they saw no linkage between the checks and any specific policy action, which supports the view that the act was a lawful donation delivery rather than a corrupt exchange.
✔️ Bextel Has a Track Record in Political Activism
Rebecca Bextel has long been active in Wyoming politics, especially around issues like housing mitigation fees and conservative policy causes. Her actions during this legislative session can be seen as an extension of her established political advocacy and grassroots fundraising efforts, not a sudden or hidden attempt at impropriety.
✔️ Prompt Rule Changes Suggest System, Not Individual, Was Outdated
In the wake of the investigation, both chambers of the Wyoming Legislature and the Governor moved to outlaw accepting campaign contributions on the floor going forward. A policy clarification that indicates the controversy exposed a gap or ambiguity in legislative rules rather than inherently illegal conduct by Bextel.
Final Thoughts
While the optics of handing out campaign checks in the Capitol drew intense scrutiny, the investigation unearthed nothing proving that Bextel’s actions violated existing laws or rules as they stood at the time. Testimony from herself and multiple legislators supports the interpretation that her intent was simply to serve as a lawful conduit for donor funds, something every political activist engages in during election cycles, rather than to coerce or manipulate legislative outcomes.
Rather than indicting Bextel, the episode ultimately highlighted a rule oversight that lawmakers are now addressing, and reaffirmed that campaign giving, even if unconventional in method, remains protected political participation unless specifically restricted by statute.
AntlersArch founder and the voice behind Teton Tattle.
Why was a fundraiser person even allowed on the floor of the Senate even after hours to hand out a supposed donation checks to our state representatives at all. this person should never have been allowed on the floor in the first place and handing out checks like their chiclets. Maybe in the future they should figure out that they could be no fundraising 30 days prior to to 30 days after the legislative session so as to make sure there are no undue proprietary ideologies