Is Doxxing Legal in Wyoming After the 2026 Framework Overhaul?

No, doxxing is illegal in Wyoming when it involves the malicious disclosure of another person’s private information with intent to harass, threaten, or incite violence. Wyoming lacks a standalone anti-doxxing statute, but prosecutors may pursue charges under harassment, stalking, or cyberbullying laws, particularly if the act crosses into criminal conduct. Local law enforcement agencies, including the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation, actively monitor digital harassment cases, and federal statutes like the Violence Against Women Act may apply in interstate scenarios.

Key Regulations for Doxxing in Wyoming

  • Wyoming Statute § 6-2-506 (Harassment): Prohibits repeated electronic communications intended to harass, alarm, or annoy another person, which may encompass doxxing if the intent is to intimidate.
  • Wyoming Statute § 6-2-508 (Stalking): Criminalizes conduct that places a victim in reasonable fear of bodily harm or death, a charge frequently levied in doxxing cases involving credible threats.
  • Wyoming Cyberbullying Law (Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 21-4-311): Applies to minors but sets a precedent for penalizing the dissemination of personal data to inflict emotional distress, a framework sometimes extended to adults in prosecutorial discretion.

Recent 2026 compliance guidance from the Wyoming Attorney General’s Office emphasizes the use of digital forensics in tracking doxxing perpetrators, urging victims to preserve evidence and report incidents to local sheriff’s departments or the Wyoming Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force. While no law explicitly labels doxxing as a standalone offense, its intersection with existing statutes ensures legal accountability for offenders.