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ABOUT MARSHALL KELLER

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Marshall’s life embodies service, hard work, and the Wyoming spirit of independence.

Raised in both Montana and Oregon, he joined the U.S. Navy in 1991 and went on to become a Navy SEAL, serving with SEAL Team Three. After completing his active military service, Marshall earned a degree in Geological Engineering with an emphasis in mining from Montana Tech University in Butte, MT in 2001.

Marshall met his wife, Natalya, in Tashkent, Uzbekistan in 2003 while working as a security contractor.

Marshall Keller has lived in Thermopolis with his family since 2020, where their two daughters attended school.

The youngest of Marshall’s three children is graduating from Hot Springs County High School this year.

 

His professional career took him across the West, working for mining operations in Idaho, Nevada, and Gillette, Wyoming.

 

In 2010, driven by his continued commitment to service, Marshall re‑enlisted in the Navy Reserves as a SEAL, mobilizing two more times before retiring in February 2025.

In 2017, he entered law school and obtained his law license in 2020. As a practicing attorney, he represents local municipalities.

 

Alongside his engineering and legal career, Marshall leased land to raise livestock. The wide-ranging work history gives him firsthand experience in both professional and manual labor, as well as the challenges faced by small businesses and by working in large corporations.

Marshall serves on the Hot Springs County School Board of Trustees, giving him awareness of the challenges facing our education system, our youth, and many of our struggling families in our District.

Marshall is a devoted outdoorsman and avid public‑land user who enjoys hunting, fishing, hiking, biking, and camping. His life experience—from mines to military service to ranching and law—has shaped his belief in limited big government, local decision‑making, and personal responsibility.

Marshall is a supporter of the right to life, the Second Amendment, free speech, the right to worship or not worship as we choose, private property rights, keeping public lands public for the people, and ensuring our local communities are given the resources they need to thrive. He believes the State should not micromanage local governments. State agencies need to be fiscally managed with a scalpel where needed, not arbitrarily slashed and burned at the expense of our citizens and rural communities. With deep roots in hard work and service, Marshall Keller is ready to bring real‑world experience and principled leadership to Wyoming House District 28.

A Lifetime of Service.
Local Control for Wyoming. 

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