Tyler Boebert, the 20-year-old son of Rep. Lauren Boebert, is facing another child abuse charge after authorities say his two-year-old son wandered out of the congresswoman’s home in Windsor, Colorado.
A passerby spotted the toddler alone, secured him and called police. The child was not injured.
The Windsor Police Department filed a misdemeanor charge of child abuse without injury. Tyler, Boebert’s eldest son, is expected to go to trial in April 2026.
Second incident in less than a year
This is the second time in under a year that Tyler Boebert has been cited under similar circumstances.
In July 2025, he was charged after his toddler left the house unsupervised. At the time, Rep. Boebert described it as “a miscommunication on monitoring my young grandson” and called it a one-time incident.
Following the most recent citation, Boebert said she was “very frustrated” and again emphasized that the child was not harmed.
“A kind woman quickly and safely secured him, and authorities were called as a precaution,” she added.
The repeated nature of the allegations raises questions about supervision and responsibility. In both cases, authorities say the child was able to leave the home without an adult noticing in time.
Legal history and possible probation impact
The new charge could carry consequences beyond the misdemeanor itself.
In 2024, Tyler Boebert pleaded guilty to attempted identity theft and entered a deferred judgment agreement. Under that deal, he must avoid further legal trouble for a set period in order to have the felony cleared from his record.
It is not yet clear whether the latest child abuse charge could jeopardize that agreement.
His legal troubles stretch back several years. In 2022, he flipped his father’s SUV, injuring a passenger. In 2024, he was arrested on more than a dozen charges, including theft and identity document offenses. Most of those charges were dropped as part of the plea deal tied to the deferred judgment.
Political backdrop
Rep. Lauren Boebert, a Republican representing Colorado’s 4th Congressional District, has publicly addressed her son’s prior legal issues and defended him, while acknowledging her frustration.
So far, there has been no public indication that the latest charge will affect her political standing. But it places her family back in the spotlight as her son prepares for another court appearance.
For now, the case centers on a narrow question: whether a lapse in supervision rises to criminal child abuse. A judge or jury will ultimately decide that when the case goes to trial in April.
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:Looks to me like a chain link fence should be put around the exploring childs home.
Seems to me that Lauren should have custody of that child, not her son. Where is the child’s mother?
Her son is 20 years old, old enough to be considered an adult. That being the case HE is the one who isa responsible for the lad. I see no reason why Boebert should be blamed for any of this. It isn’t the first time and he promised, the LAST time, that it wouldn’t happen again. THere is where the problem lie, NOT with Rep. Lauren Boebert. Just looking for something to BLAME a Republican for, what?