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‘Stranger danger’ jangles Anchorage

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REPORT OF LATEST ATTEMPTED ABDUCTION IS ‘UNFOUNDED’

Police now say that the report of an attempted abduction at Kasuun Elementary School is not true.

“After a thorough investigation by detectives, the report of this incident has been determined to be unfounded,” the police wrote this morning.

The incident was reported to have happened on Friday, when a group of friends were on the playground. Anchorage police reported it as an attempted child abduction and asked the community to be on the lookout for the suspect.

Kasuun is a mid-hillside neighborhood school, where children often play on the equipment.

The original report said that a group of girls reported being approached by man, who they said appeared intoxicated, and who was wearing a yellow zip-up jacket, red t-shirt with a blue circle on it, blue jeans, and a baseball cap that had a football team logo. The man grabbed and pulled at an arm of one of the girls. “When the group of girls began to scream,” police wrote, “the suspect released the girl’s arm and fled into a nearby wooded area on foot.”

SPENARD, KOTZEBUE CASES

The news reports of a possible child abductor at a local elementary school jangled the nerves of parents, especially coming one day after a drug-addled man invaded a daycare center in the Spenard neighborhood, where more than 100 children were present.

It took police an hour and a half to respond to that incident, and caused parents and the neighborhood to be alarmed at the slow response time and the low priority police seemed to place on child safety.

Anchorage residents have been up in arms over property crimes, but now are especially sensitive to the dangers posed to children.

[Read: Video of daycare intruder]

Meanwhile, in Kotzebue, a massive search has been underway for a 10-year-old girl who didn’t return home after going to a local playground. The girl has been missing since Thursday, when she was last seen at the Rainbow Park playground.

As many as 50 people and two Coast Guard helicopters have been involved in the search. Kotzebue is a small community of about 3,200 people, most of whom know each other. The Alaska State Troopers are coordinating the search.

Murkowski pressured by Natives to vote ‘no’ on Kavanaugh

Richard Peterson, Tlingit Haida Central Council president

JOHN STURGEON CASE IS KEY TO THEIR ARGUMENT

Native Alaskans are emerging as a pressure point on Sen. Lisa Murkowski, who may hold one of the key votes for the confirmation  of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Native activists have been seen filing into her Washington D.C. office the past two weeks. They told Huffington Post that climate change has already damaged the lives of Natives in Alaska and they’re concerned about Kavanaugh’s environmental record.

Specifically, one Alaska Native group has raised concerns about a major case pending before the Supreme Court: Sturgeon vs. Frost (National Park Service).

The court will take up the case of the non-Native moose hunter on Nov. 5, and Natives say that ruling in favor of public access to federal land would devastate their subsistence fishing.

In 2007, John Sturgeon was on his annual hunt on the Nations River in the Yukon-Charley National Preserve and was using a hovercraft to navigate the seasonally shallow waters when Park Service officials stopped him.

The Park Service maintains it has authority over the waterways that run through national parks, while outdoor advocates and the State of Alaska maintain that navigable waters are regulated by the State. Waterways in Alaska are considered transportation corridors all year long — by boat in summer and by snow machine in winter. Without access to waterways, most of Alaska would be inaccessible.

[Read: John Sturgeon case heading back to Supreme Court]

Heather Kendall-Miller, a Native rights attorney, said that a ruling in favor of Sturgeon and the State of Alaska’s rights, would be a “death knell” for Alaska Natives.

John Sturgeon moves his hovercraft downriver via skiff.

Kendall-Miller, who is with the Native Americans Rights Fund, also wrote that Kavanaugh would show no favor toward minority voters. In an op-ed in the Anchorage Daily News she wrote “American Indian and Alaska Native voters continue to encounter language barriers, enormous distances to polling places, purged voter rolls, and arbitrary changes in voter identification laws. Judge Kavanaugh’s track record shows little regard for minority voters.”

Alaska Natives were a key to Murkowski’s re-election, when she ran a successful write-in campaign against Joe Miller. There is little evidence that they encountered problems voting when they helped Murkowski become the first U.S. senator in more than 50 years to win an election with a write-in campaign. In fact, with Alaska’s absentee ballots, Permanent Fund automatic registration, and early voting locations, Alaska is a “no excuse” voting state.

Tlingit-Haida Central Council President Richard Peterson wrote to Murkowski and said that the 30,000 tribal members his organization represents would be endangered by Kavanaugh’s confirmation, “because of his erroneous views on indigenous rights and tribal sovereignty.

“We are concerned moving his nomination forward due to his unsound views and the potential injury that his misperceptions would wreak upon your Native Alaskan constituents, our Native Hawaiian friends and fellow indigenous peoples. I write to you, asking you to vote no, and oppose Kavanaugh’s nomination,” Peterson’s letter stated.

“We also write in support of Senator Tom Udall’s request for Judge Kavanaugh records on any Native American matters during his tenure at the White House. We hope, no beyond that, we implore that the Committee on the Judiciary will make available the entire record, so that the Senate can make an informed decision,” Peterson wrote.

Peterson said the Supreme Court has a disproportional impact on the lives of Native people and that his ruling on the Sturgeon case in support of states’ rights would be detrimental to Alaska Natives.

He used the same themes as Kendall-Miller, writing that voting rights, Natives, women, and the environment are threatened by Kavanaugh. Also, he raised concerns about the voting rights of people of color in South Carolina.

At least one person called into question who Tlingit-Haida Central Council was truly representing by jumping in the fray on the Kavanaugh nomination.

“CCTHITA has not represented Southeast (Alaska) for a very long time. Anchorage, Seattle, Portland, San Francisco out-vote the original Central Council by a long shot. … Civil Rights were jump started in Alaska in 1945, why is the ‘president’ of CCTHITA whining about ‘people of color’ in South Carolina? Why is CCTHITA arguing for ‘Obamacare’ ? Don’t understand. Are we as tribal members not covered under Indian Health Service? So I wonder, who is Richard actually ‘representing’?” wrote Randy Katzenmeyer, responding to the Peterson letter on Facebook.

Sen. Dan Sullivan has already announced he will vote in favor of Kavanaugh’s nomination, therefore the pressure to oppose the nominee has been focused nearly exclusively on Murkowski.

Recount for District 29 – Carpenter still wins primary

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BY 11 VOTES INSTEAD OF 12

The Division of Elections conducted a recount for the District 29 race, which had a 12-vote difference between Ben Carpenter and Wayne Ogle for the House seat being vacated by Rep. Mike Chenault.

Carpenter maintained his win, but by just 11 votes. Now the Republican Party nominee, he will face Shawn Butler, the Democrat nominee, in November.

The State Ballot Counting Review Board and officials at the Division of Elections recounted the votes, and the final tally is 1,374 votes for Carpenter and 1,363 votes for Ogle. Both candidates had observers watching the recount.

Carpenter is retiring this year from the Alaska National Guard, where he has served as a special staff officer in the commanding general’s office for organizational improvement and strategic communication. He served in the U.S. Army and Air Force and was deployed to Iraq, Afghanistan and Turkey.

He is a 1993 graduate of Nikiski High School and lives in Nikiski with his wife and children, where the family grows peonies for the ornamental flower market. Carpenter is co-owner of Cook Inlet Gardens and serves as the president of the Alaska Peony Market Cooperative, a trade association.

Video of daycare invasion suspect: “Help me, help me”

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WERE PARENTS RIGHT TO BE ALARMED?

A daycare center in Spenard with more than 100 children inside went into lock-down on Thursday after a man, who appeared to be drug-addled and acting erratically, entered the building.

Police were called but didn’t arrive for an hour and a half, so parents and staff stood guard, locking doors and windows.

In the Ring security camera footage posted by KTVA, the behavior that alarmed neighbors and the day-care center staff is apparent:

Neighbor Jessica Graham, who described the situation live on Facebook, called 911, but said the dispatcher told her no one was available to help.

“I have great appreciation for our police officers, but what good are they when there are none available when needed? This is COMPLETELY unacceptable. Something needs to be done about this because it could have ended a lot worse,” she wrote on Facebook on Thursday afternoon.

The scene unfolded at Faith Christian Community by Lake Hood, where the man climbed a roof, jumped onto the roof of a nearby greenhouse, falling through that roof, and eventually climbed a tree before falling 50 feet.

When police and medics arrived, Richard Bender was taken to the hospital for treatment. He has since been charged with criminal mischief, a Class A misdemeanor.

Walker team players drifting toward Begich?

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Gubernatorial candidate Mark Begich is looking for ways to distinguish himself from Gov. Bill Walker. They agree on so much — taxes, taxes, and taxes. But he’s found something that will get him a lot of votes: Supporting the Stand for Salmon initiative.

The governor’s former deputy press secretary, Jonathan Taylor, signaled his “like” that Begich is pro-Ballot Measure 1. Ballot Measure 1 would shut down Alaska’s resource development sector, but that’s what the greenies are hoping for.

Taylor is now working as the communications director for the Department of Public Safety. Is he looking for his next gig in the Begich Administration?

Dunleavy fundraisers starting to build

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Now that Alaskans are past the Primary Election, conservatives are getting off the fence and opening up their pocketbooks to help the Republican nominee Mike Dunleavy and his running mate Kevin Meyer. The two advanced from the Primary with strong support from their base of voters.

A fundraiser in Juneau tonight raised about $15,000 for the campaign, and was attended by more than 100 people at the Rie Munoz gallery.

It was the end of two days of campaign activity in Juneau for the two.  Their visit included a town hall meeting on crime problems and a debate with Gov. Bill Walker and former Sen. Mark Begich, hosted by the Juneau Chamber of Commerce.

Observers said that although the capital city is Walker-Begich territory, some of the biggest applauses during the noon debate were for Dunleavy, who vowed he would support a road to Juneau, and that he would not impose an income tax. Both Walker and Begich opposed the road, with Begich saying it required more study, and both Walker and Begich said more taxes were a certainty.

The debate was sold out in advance, forcing some people to stand outside the door at Centennial Hall. Observers said all three candidates landed their key messages and none made any unforced errors. Both Dunleavy and Meyer spent several hours visiting small business owners in downtown Juneau.

Document drop: GOP Chairman candid report on District 15 race

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BABCOCK SUPPORTS JAKE SLOAN, WRITE-IN CANDIDATE

Must Read Alaska got ahold a copy of a report written by Alaska Republican Party Chairman Tuckerman Babcock, which we understand was sent to the State Central Committee this evening.

In it, Babcock relays the party’s denunciation of Rep. Gabrielle LeDoux, and his full-throated support for one write-in candidate in November: Jake Sloan, the David who is taking on Goliath LeDoux.

REPORT TO THE STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEE

The race for State House District 15 was the most remarkable primary result of 2018.

Aaron Weaver, the Republican candidate, did not campaign.

He spent no money; no radio, no mailers, no signs, no social media, no forums and no door-to-door.

Gabrielle LeDoux, the incumbent, spent $73,000 plus.  She walked relentlessly door-to-door.  She had paid campaign staff (her legislative aides).  She hired a mysterious operative Charlie Chang.  We say mysterious because he is at once a Fresno California Democrat Party official and at the same time a registered Republican in District 15. She paid him $10,000 dollars to work the absentee vote and provided plane tickets for at least two trips to Alaska from California.

She lost on election day. She lost, despite spending $250 per vote to $0.

She “won” only after absentee ballots were counted.  She somehow managed to lose on election day, but win the absentee count by 81 percent.

The absentee ballots in District 15 are tainted by what appears to be pre-meditated, possibly criminal, fraud.

-Seven (7) dead people applied to vote absentee.

-At least two people have confessed to the Division of Elections that they did not vote an absentee ballot (but someone voted for them because ballots in their names were mailed in).

– Twenty-six (26)  “irregular” absentee ballots.  Those ballots were counted separately  — every one of the suspect absentee ballots were for LeDoux.

A KTVA reporter asked one owner of a Muldoon trailer how they could explain a half dozen registered voters at that address who did not live there.  The owner of the trailer answered, you have to ask “Gabrielle.”

An ADN reporter asked a different person at a different trailer in the trailer park, how could he explain the more than half a dozen phantom voters registered to vote at his home? The man replied that you just have to ask “Gabrielle”

This may turn into the worst election scandal in Alaska history.  The fraud looks bad enough that someone could go to jail — if law enforcement can pinpoint who is responsible.

Whomever is responsible; two people benefited.  Charlie Chang, who Ledoux hired and paid $10,000 and LeDoux herself who “coincidentally” received 100 percent of the suspect votes.

She lost on Primary election day despite spending $73,000 to $0.  Lost.  And that was before the scandal over irregular absentee ballots broke.  Gabrielle LeDoux is finished, politically.

There is a far-left, environmentalist, income tax, “Stand for Salmon” Democrat in the race who has never run for office before.

On the Republican side, Aaron Weaver decided to pass the baton to Jake Sloan. Jake Sloan is running an active write-in campaign and just in a few days has raised more than $4,000.  He is committed to run hard and many neighbors are clamoring for signs, and actually calling him to ask if they can join him going door to door in their neighborhood.  Unheard of.   East Anchorage is apparently very eager to replace the disgraced LeDoux.  We are committed to replacing LeDoux.

The final insult from LeDoux may have been the derogatory comment she made about the Hmong in her own District.  When asked by a KTVA reporter to explain why the owner of a trailer in Muldoon would say ask “Gabrielle” about phantom voters, Gabrielle LeDoux replied,

“I have no idea why she (homeowner Laura Chang) would say that, and I’m really not even sure, considering that so many of the Hmong people’s English is not truly excellent whether she truly understood the question,” LeDoux said in response.

Unfortunately for LeDoux, anyone can listen to the KTVA tape: Ms. Chang understood the question and answered clearly.  To save her own skin, Gabrielle would throw the Hmong under the bus.

There are many respectable individual Alaskans and PACs, including the Alaska Republican Party, that have supported LeDoux financially in the past.  However, I can assure you that Alaska Republican Party will not be associated as a donor going forward and in any way be possibly connected with the scandal that has engulfed Gabrielle LeDoux.

Shame on the New York Times

That the “official” who penned the whiny, anonymous New York Times hit piece about the Trump administration is a coward is undebatable. That the New York Times stooped as low as it has ever stooped in printing the piece also is undebatable.

In running the rambling, self-serving and fact-shy “resistance” piece, one of the nation’s largest, most prestigious news organizations allowed itself to be no better than the internet swamps where legions of anonymous commenters insult, backbite and hurl invective from the safety of their mothers’ basements.

The piece, “I Am Part of the Resistance Inside the Trump Administration,” is bad enough, but what The Times did is worse, allowing itself to be cast – now unquestionably in many minds – as squarely in the ranks of political Left’s relentless march on the Trump presidency. Now, it seems, the newspaper will allow anybody to say anything about Trump or his administration as long it is bad, and then protect their anonymity; that it will do anything – even abandon journalistic principles – to hurt the presidency.

Read more at the Anchorage Daily Planet:

http://www.anchoragedailyplanet.com/131520/same-on-the-times/

NPR looking for GOP women to remark on Stormy Daniels

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REPORTERS WANT TO HEAR FROM REPUBLICAN WOMEN WHO VOTED FOR TRUMP

NPR editors are working on a story: It’s about women who voted for Trump and how they feel about it now.

This is the kind of story that news organizations put in the queue as they head for the midterm elections. It’s not evidence of bias in itself, but bias is often shown by the premise of stories that are pursued. In this case, the media manufactured a crisis about Stormy Daniels, and now the media wants to know if it’s working.

The NPR questionnaire, now posted online, asks Trump-voting-women participants to explain, in their own words, their views of the president and then has just one question: “Has President Trump’s alleged affair with adult film star Stormy Daniels impacted your view of the president?”

Reporters want to know if those women are disenchanted with Trump and are regretting their votes. Will it help move them in November toward the Democrat candidates on midterm ballots?

All stories start with a premise in today’s post-New Journalism era. Reporters find the story they want to tell, and then find the people who will tell it.

Reporters could ask their friends or colleagues, but NPR reporters, and the entire Left, remain mystified that anyone would have voted for Trump in the first place, and they have no one in their spheres of influence who would have done such a thing. They have no one to ask and their friends in the liberal echo chamber are not of any help here.

Trump blew the minds of pollsters, pundits, and news purveyors, who expected Clinton to be carried on a throne to the White House by women voters.

To be sure, 54 percent of women overall who voted in the 2016 General Election went for Hillary Clinton, and 42 percent voted for Donald Trump. He is not wildly popular with the gals.

But it was black women who ended up voting for Hillary Clinton at higher rates than white women. 95 percent of voting black women with no college degree voted for Clinton, whereas 61 percent of white women with no college degree voted for Trump.

But those non-college listeners aren’t NPR’s target market. It’s the college-educated listener, the well-heeled donors that the taxpayer-funded broadcasting empire wants.

In that cohort, 51 percent of college-educated white women voted for Clinton, and 45 percent voted for Trump. Among college-educated black women, it was 92 percent for Clinton, and 6 percent for Trump.

Women in America who voted for Trump care about historic levels of prosperity, an unprecedented job market, national security, less intrusive government, judicial appointments, and tax cuts.

NPR appears to have just one concern for women who voted for Trump to focus on: Stormy Daniels.

You can take part in NPR’s story by sharing your thoughts with the news reporters here.