
After three years of dealing with Ryan Funke as Sheriff, Mineral County said NO THANK YOU and fired him on Tuesday from his Sheriff job. Since Ryan Funke and his opponent, Ben Banks, both identify as Republicans, the primary WAS the election and this was the result:

The article continues by describing how quickly Funke went litigious after taking over for Sheriff, Mike Toth. We will soon see this isn’t the first time Ryan Funke has used a lawsuit to get what he wants from a local government entity.

Before I get to the knife-wielding man with the literal street name “Demon”, let’s review how Ryan Funke sued the city of Polson after a deck at the Diamond Horseshoe Bar and Grill that he was partying on collapsed.
Plaintiff Ryan Funke, one of the 80 people injured, contended the city shared negligence because it was responsible for approving the deck’s construction and subsequent inspections.
Lawyers for the city argued it bore no responsibility for the collapse.
The city acknowledged that an anonymous caller telephoned the city’s building department about 14 hours before the collapse occurred, warning that the deck was not safe.
The caller gave no details, and the city said that without specific information, officials could not act on the anonymous tip, even if they would have had time to do so.
A jury awarded Funke nearly $684,000 in damages, apportioning 95 percent of the negligence to building owner Bert Shultz and 5 percent to the city.
This nice little payout for Funke must have given him a taste for aggressive litigation because, once elected to replace Mike Toth, Funke got to business going to legal war against the Mineral County Attorney’s Office on numerous fronts, starting with the Writ of Mandumus saga, and continuing with litigation aimed at stopping “Brady” disclosures.
Back in January, when Judge Vannatta ended the Mandamus charade, hearings continued to determine how much the lawyers would get paid. Lance Jasper, from the influential Jasper family in Mineral County, essentially bitched and moaned in his best legalese about what he was owed until someone started cutting him checks:
Vanetta ordered that Jasper be paid $62,215.36 beyond the $113,740 he received under the settlement terms. The judge said the fees were appropriate for Jasper’s continued monitoring and enforcement of the settlement terms. The fees included $5,000 for Jasper hiring an attorney to represent him when he was deposed by the county attorney in the case regarding whether the county attorney was required to turn over information regarding past allegations against Funke and Deputy Micah Allard. Vanetta had earlier decided that allegations against Allard regarding employment disputes with the former sheriff, which led to his firing, did not have to be disclosed to defendants.
Ongoing is the suit by Allard against the county commissioners, Attorney’s Office, and County Attorney Deb Jackson and her Deputy Wally Congdon, alleging the county’s refusal to rehire him as a deputy under Funke and for defaming him. Jackson and Congdon are sued individually, attempting to make them personally liable. The county disqualified Vanetta from the case, and it was assigned to Judge John Larson. Allard has moved to disqualify Larson.
This excerpt is confusing to me, and not just because the Mineral Independent author, Bruce Moats, can’t spell Vannatta’s name correctly. What’s confusing me is the report that Vannatta was “disqualified” from the subsequent Micah Allard case. Interesting.
Another interesting fact that might have relevance to the legal situation I’m in is the fact Judge Vannatta was, himself, running for reelection this cycle in the “non-partisan” judicial election in which he had no opponent.

When I wrote this post criticizing the signature-gathering effort to “keep the courts non-partisan” in Montana it’s because a covertly partisan judge, like Shane Vannatta, is a VERY DANGEROUS thing to behold.
Here’s a reminder of what Judge Vannatta was forced to do last fall in order to maintain the illusion of judicial integrity:
Missoula County District Court Judge Shane Vannatta recused himself from hearing a lawsuit over a bill that says there are only two sexes, but he noted the “facts” in a move to disqualify him are “exceedingly thin.”
In a Sept. 25 court filing, Vannatta said he would withdraw from jurisdiction of the case “in the interest of preserving the public’s confidence in the impartiality of the judiciary.”
The case from which he withdrew is Perkins vs. State of Montana, over House Bill 121.
HB 121 restricts access to public restrooms and other facilities based on an individual’s sex assigned at birth.
The plaintiffs, including transgender and intersex Montanans, argue the restrictions violate their rights to equal protection, privacy and ability to pursue life’s basic necessities.
Supporters argue the bill adds protection and safety for women.
After years of watching a highly political judge referee a legal charade, only to weigh in RIGHT AS THE ELECTION WAS HEATING UP, Mineral County voters stepped up and did what Shane Vannatta REFUSED TO DO–they took action by casting votes to protect women, men AND children from the dangerous and well-documented incompetence of Ryan Funke and his predecessor, Mike Toth, when it comes to running investigations into deaths and alleged crimes, which is also known as DOING HIS FUCKING JOB.
If you’d like to review the evidence I’m using to make my non-legal case that voters did what Vannatta refused to do, exhibit A is a 14 minute video featuring Heather Boyes addressing Mineral County Commissioners:
And exhibit B is part of a comment, post-election, from the mother of Rebekah Barsotti, who is mentioned in the video clip above:

While the day might feel new in Mineral County, the problem of drugs and violence are certainly not, so I’d like to conclude today’s post with a little story about a guy named “Demon” who led local police on a “knife chase” from a casino near the homeless shelter a few days ago.

On May 29, 2026, at approximately 10:12 a.m., a Missoula Police Department officer was dispatched to the Magic Diamond Casino on W. Broadway Street for a report of an assault with a weapon. The reporting party, John Doe, told dispatch that a male he knew as Demon tried to stab him with a knife in the parking lot of the casino. Demon was later identified as 41-year-old Terrence Keplin.
The officer arrived on the scene and made contact with Doe, who reported that he had been traveling on foot when he noticed Keplin walking north on Burton Street. Keplin approached Doe and stated that Doe’s sister owed him money. Keplin then took a knife out of his waistband, started waving it at Doe, and demanded that Doe give him all of his stuff, or he was going to kill him. Doe described the knife as being a button-release switchblade with a black handle and a blade approximately six inches long.
When he saw Keplin had a knife, Doe started “booking it” towards the casino. Keplin started following Doe down the sidewalk and then into the casino. Once inside the casino, Keplin continued to follow Doe until an employee intervened by physically stepping in between them. Keplin then left the casino.
Since mugshots are no longer publicly shared by the Missoula County Sheriff’s Office, I decided to see if Demon has a Facebook page. Here’s what I found:

While some might find Terrence Keplin’s mean-looking mug on FB to be cause for concern, more concerning to me is the fact that I recognized someone on his “friends” page (a woman) who used to work at the Poverello Center. This is the side of drug culture our Homeless Industrial Complex doesn’t want you to see, but it’s the world judges and Sheriffs are DEEPLY enmeshed in.
I hope the Funke clique (some might say gang) gives the new Sheriff in town a chance to acclimate to the possibility that the main job at hand will now get the focus it deserves, because that’s clearly what the voters want.
Thanks for reading!


























































