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Shoshone County, plaintiff settle lawsuit tied to failed SCSO levy

JOSH McDONALD | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 41 minutes AGO
by JOSH McDONALD
Staff Writer | December 19, 2025 1:00 AM

WALLACE — A lawsuit over Shoshone County’s $2 million sheriff’s levy was dropped this month after both sides agreed to cover their own legal costs. 

The suit, filed in September by attorney Anthony Garcia on behalf of resident Matt Beehner, claimed the Shoshone Board of County Commissioners improperly approved a resolution allowing the county to pursue a two-year, $2 million override levy to address budget issues at the sheriff’s office on the November ballot.

The levy failed in November, securing only 44.07% of the votes needed to pass. 

On Dec. 4, the parties agreed to pay their own legal fees in exchange for the plaintiff filing a motion to dismiss, following a 2-1 vote by the commissioners. 

Before the Nov. 4 election, Shoshone County Prosecuting Attorney Ben Allen filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, which he believed a court would have granted. But the real debate centered on how much time and resources the county wanted to spend fighting a case where the central issue, the levy, had already been decided and failed. 

Allen said the only potential benefit for the county would have been to pursue dismissal in court and receive costs and legal fees.

“To proceed further with the litigation would have certainly expended even more time and without any absolute certainty that the county would ultimately be awarded fees and costs at the end of litigation,” Allen said. “Prior to the complainant proposing a stipulation to the BOCC, the county had expended a great deal of time preparing a defense for the county on this matter.” 

Commissioners Melissa Cowles and Jeff Zimmerman echoed concerns about additional costs and the possibility that a judge might side with them but not award fees. 

“We would be, in a sense, gambling on this decision,” Zimmerman said. “It would basically be a 50/50 on if we would incur those fees.” 

Zimmerman added that the county already faces a significant liability caseload. 

“I think those resources are stretched as they are,” he said. “My concern is strictly, can we do it? Can we afford it? Do we have the time and resources to do it?” 

Commissioner Dave Dose, a central figure in the original lawsuit, said he wanted the county to see the case through and try to recoup litigation costs, but he was outvoted. 

During the Dec. 4 meeting, Allen estimated the county had spent roughly $5,000, a figure Beehner accused Allen of inflating during a separate meeting a week later. 

Following the BOCC’s decision, Beehner spoke publicly about his choice to dismiss the lawsuit. 

“Eleven years I’ve been doing this, I’ve never sat through one of these before,” Beehner said. “I don’t want to go too far, but I thought we had a strong case. But it’s not worth following up on because all you’re going to get is a $250 fine. So it’s not worth us spending another $5,000 to $6,000 on.”

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