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Greg Adler: Did government tamper with the official record?

By GREG ADLER

The coup de grace was when the Board of Equalization board members testified that the role and authority of the board is not to decide if the assessor did something “wrong,” “fraudulent,” “prejudicial,’ or “whatever you want.” 

The bountiful assessor knows property owners do not have the resources to fight City Hall within strict administrative laws, which impose 15-minute time presentations, crushing filing periods, and limited evidentiary rules. The City and Borough of Juneau uses the power of its offices as a cudgel, not a plowshare.

I received a “notice of assessed value” postcard, which showed the Behrends Bank building, which the Goldstein Improvement Company bought one month earlier, assessed at more than double what we paid for it. 

I called the assessor, thinking a phone call would clear up this mistake. I spoke with Michael Dahle, who gaslighted me. I spoke with then-Sen. Peter Micciche, president of the Alaska State Senate, who told me the City and Borough of Juneau was involved in a money grab.

If our testimony is erased in the videoconference tapes of the Board of Equalization hearings, that would violate our due process rights. What is there left to say about the assessor office?

Obstruction of Justice

In my first day of hearings, I had the following bathroom break testimony exchange during my presentation. It has been erased from the Board of Equalization’s videoconference tape and transcript. The exchange went, according to my recollection, as follows:

GREG ADLER: I need and request a bathroom break.

CHAIR: Bathroom breaks are not allowed.

GREG ADLER: I need a bathroom break.

CHAIR: You cannot go to the bathroom.

GREG ADLER: I really have to go.

CHAIR: If you take a bathroom break your 15-minute presentation time will continue to run.

GREG ADLER: I am not kidding I have to go to the bathroom.

CHAIR: You do not have to come back to the hearing.

GREG ADLER: What?

CHAIR: If you go the bathroom we will continue the hearing without you.

GREG ADLER: I have to go to the bathroom.

CHAIR: You do not have to come back. The board will render a decision without you.

GREG ADLER: You will what?

CHAIR: In fact, Mr. Adler, you do not have to be here for any hearings.  We will render decisions without you.

GREG ADLER: I have to go to the bathroom.

The City and Borough of Juneau has erased the bathroom break testimony and I assert they edited the Zoom transcripts by taking out testimony to try and make the time stamps match my 15-minute presentation at the five-minute mark.

There is a gap of 28.488 seconds.

I allege the gap exists because the bathroom break exchange between myself and the chair is erased on the videoconference tape and the transcripts, and the Zoom transcript has been tampered with and easily edited to cover up tampering with my presentation time.

The cover up erased the testimony of the chair to “minutes” from “five minutes.”

The cover up erased the entire testimony of the Municipal Clerk Di Cathcart, who said, “Five minutes.”

The CBJ Zoom transcript five-minute warning is given at about 4 minutes, 31 seconds because my Bathroom Break Exchange Testimony has been erased. My time was cut short.

The dog barking section of the transcript has also been erased. In it, the chair says “OK” to my request for the 15 minute time to be extended on account of a Board of Equalization member’s dog barking. Some 11 seconds have been erased from the official Zoom transcript. Additional testimony is tampered with on the transcript.

The gap total: 39 seconds

On June 24, 2024, City Clerk Cathcart confirmed the bathroom-break exchange took place.

At the start of the second day of Board of Equalization hearings, my motion and affidavit for reconsideration of Notice of Decisions by the Board of Equalization and a motion and affidavit to set aside the Notice of Decisions were presented.

My motions were based on these offenses:

The 15-minute hearing lacks due process.

The hearings are prejudiced and biased against the appellant.

By not permitting the appellant to take a bathroom break and permitting the hearing to continue without pause.

At the start of the second day of hearings, Deputy City Clerk Cathcart, recalling the bathroom-break testimony, felt it necessary to warn the Board of Equalization to maintain decorum.

She testified, making note of appellant’s rights, as follows: Check to see if anyone needs bio breaks, just a moment, or a short recess.

    The assessor and Board of Equalization have flipped the goodwill of City Hall and turned the grueling, time-constrained administrative law apparatus against the people of Juneau.

    This happened under watchful eye of the Deputy City Attorney, who did not advise or protest against the actions of the Board of Equalization chair, although he is both a participant and witness to the board’s proceedings.

    Who will be the first to come forward with the truth and break the City and Borough of Juneau’s cycle of tampering with government evidence?

    Greg Adler is a principal at Goldstein Improvement Co. His family has owned property and conducted business in Juneau since the 1880s. Adler and his family own a home on Pioneer Avenue in West Juneau.

    Knife-wielding man shot, killed outside GOP convention; Alaska delegation safe

    A mentally ill homeless man was shot and killed by police just outside the security perimeter of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee on Tuesday.

    In a scenario eerily similar to a police shooting in Juneau on Monday, the man, reported to be known by the neighborhood, was wielding two knives, swinging them at officers, when a police officer from Columbus, Ohio took him down.

    On Monday in Juneau, a well-known vagrant who lived in doorways downtown lunged at police with a knife and was shot and killed.

    Secret Service has explaining to do after Trump assassination attempt

    By CASEY HARPER | THE CENTER SQUARE

    The U.S. Secret Service is facing an array of tough questions, calls for accountability, firings and investigations this week as well as public feuding with local law enforcement.

    House Oversight Republicans launched an investigation into the U.S. Secret Service after the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump on Saturday. President Joe Biden has also asked for an independent review.

    While there are a myriad of questions, and information is still coming in, most agree that the Secret Service should be held accountable.

    “Whatever shortcomings there are, the Secret Service has to answer to that,” former head of the U.S. Secret Service and founding administrator of the Transportation Security Administration John Magaw told The Center Square. “After the Kennedy shooting, I never thought we’d make this mistake again.”

    The inquiry comes in the aftermath of an attempted assassination attempt against Trump at a Pennsylvania campaign rally on Saturday that left the president injured and the shooter and a rally attendee dead.

    Head of the Secret Service Kimberly Cheatle gave an interview to ABC News this week where she calledthe events of Saturday unacceptable and said “the buck stops” with her. She also appeared to attempt to shift blame to local law enforcement, who were reportedly responsible for the outer perimeter including a nearby building where the shooter fired from about 130 years away.

    “In this particular instance, we did share support for that particular site and that the Secret Service was responsible for the inner perimeter,” Cheatle told ABC News. “And then we sought assistance from our local counterparts for the outer perimeter. There was local police in that building – there was local police in the area that were responsible for the outer perimeter of the building.”

    Patrick Yoes, National President of the Fraternal Order of Police, released a statement taking issue with the Secret Service shifting blame to local police.

    “Whatever happened in Butler, this was not a failure of the local, State, or Federal officers on the ground who responded to the shots fired at former President Trump, they acted heroically and put their lives on the line to protect everyone else at the event. We must recognize that,” Yoes said. “This is a failure at the management or command level who failed to secure an obvious weakness in the security of this event.The shooter should never have had access to the roof from which he made his attack. Whether the plan or the execution failed will come to light, but in the meantime law enforcement still has a job to do.”

    Yoes defended the heroism of officers on the ground.

    “While reports and information is still being gathered and developed, a man was able to obtain a shooting perch with line of sight to former President Trump, a protectee of the United States Secret Service (USSS),” Yoes said. “It is the primary function of the USSS to provide for the protection and security on sites like the one in Butler, Pennsylvania.”

    The House investigation is one of multiple that aims to get to the bottom of what the Secret Service did wrong, what can be done better next time, and who is responsible for Trump’s near death experience.

    In particular, experts, former agents and others have pressed the Secret Service on a few key questions:

    How was the shooter able to get within about 130 yards of Trump, an easy shot for most trained shooters?

    Why was no officer on that rooftop?

    Why did law enforcement officials not react more quickly, especially after video appears to show that rally attendees saw the shooter minutes before Trump was shot?

    Why did it take so long to get Trump off stage after the shooting?

    Why were small women guarding Trump’s body since he is 6’3″?

    Did the Secret Service’s recent focus on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion become a distraction or lower the standards for officers?

    Critics have raised these questions and others after Saturday’s events.

    Many have called for Cheatle to resign, but Department of Homeland Security head Alejandro Mayorkas vehemently defended her this week at the White House press briefing, as The Center Square previously reported.

    Others have questioned whether local law enforcement should have a role in working with the Secret Service. Yoes pushed back on that concern.

    “Suggestions made in the media that suggest local agencies should play no role in assisting the USSS at events like the one in Butler simply do not know what they are talking about,” Yoes said in a statement.

    “Yet, in the wake of some of the anonymous comments from unknown officials, State and local agencies may wonder if they can rely on the Secret Service,” Yoes continued. “I am concerned that anonymous statements or media speculation could have a chilling effect on the ability of Federal, State, and local law enforcement to work together through what will certainly be a grueling campaign.”

    Nolan McKendry contributed to this report.

    Two Alaska Republican House districts endorse Nick Begich for Congress

    Two Alaska Republican district organizations have endorsed congressional candidate Nick Begich. The votes on the endorsements took place over the past 10 days.

    District 26 is Wasilla, which is represented in the Alaska House by House Speaker Cathy Tilton.

    District 34 is Fairbanks, which is represented in the Alaska House by Rep. Frank Tomaszewski.

    “Our districts represent the true grassroots of the conservative movement in our state. These are the volunteers who give their evenings and weekends to make calls, knock doors, put up signs, and do the heavy lifting. It’s an honor to have their support as we work together to restore Alaska’s representation in the House,” Begich said from inside the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee.

    Begich also has endorsements from Alaska Young Republicans, six of the seven Alaska Republican Women’s Clubs, the U.S. House Freedom Caucus, Sen. Mike Lee, Rep. Scott Perry, and Rep. Byron Donalds, who is in Donald Trump’s inner circle. Trump, at the request of the National Republican Congressional Committee and Gov. Mike Dunleavy, has endorsed Nancy Dahlstrom, creating a split in the party leadership, although the grassroots seems to be “sticking with Nick.”

    Biden relents: Kennedy gets Secret Service protection

    A year after repeated requests from independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., he now has Secret Service protection. President Joe Biden relented after the attempted assassination Saturday of Donald Trump at a rally in Butler, Penn. and Trump calling for Kennedy’s protection.

    Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas announced on Monday that the order came directly from Biden, a clear indication that Biden has been responsible for withholding such protection from the son of an assassinated presidential candidate, Robert F. Kennedy, and the nephew of an assassinated president, John F. Kennedy.

    “Thank you to President Biden for granting me Secret Service protection. And I am so grateful to Gavin deBecker & Associates for the last 15 months of my Presidential campaign,” Kennedy Jr. said in a post on X/Twitter. Kennedy has had to pay for his own protection, which may have been due to his perceived political threat to Biden’s presidency. Kennedy was a Democrat, but after being snubbed by the Democrat party, switched to independent.

    Also, it was observed at the Republican National Convention, Trump had been given increased Secret Service protection when he entered the Fiserve Forum arena in Milwaukee, Wis. on the first day of the Republican National Convention. He survived the assassination attempt and critics have said that the security detail that was assigned to him was less than prepared, and that some of the officers were demonstrably incompetent.

    Officers shoot, kill knife-wielding vagrant in downtown Juneau

    The Juneau Police Department was following up on an assault that occurred on July 14, when an officer contacted a downtown well-known homeless vagrant, 35-year-old Steven Kissack. The entire incident, involving JPD and an officer, was captured by people nearby on video and posted on social media. Various people in Juneau held a candlelight vigil for him.

    At the Juneau Assembly meeting, city manager Katie Koester called it a tragedy. Others said it was a tragedy the man had been enabled to live as he did for so long, camping on downtown Juneau sidewalks. He has a long criminal record involving trespass, illegal camping, and violation of conditions of release.

    Alaska Department of Public Safety provided an account: While trying to get Kissack to submit to an investigation, Kissack, , during the contact Kissack produced a knife and refused to follow orders from the officer. The Juneau Police Officer requested additional law enforcement officers in the area to respond for assistance, and a Juneau-based Alaska Wildlife Trooper and several JPD Officers responded to the scene.

    Officers negotiated with Kissack for several minutes encouraging him to drop the knife he was brandishing, however, he continued to refuse commands. Juneau Police Officers deployed less-lethal bean bag-style rounds to encourage Kissack to comply with the orders of the officers.

    Kissack soon charged officers while brandishing the knife. Multiple law enforcement officers discharged their weapons, striking Kissack. Several shots were fired. Despite lifesaving efforts by law enforcement on the scene and EMS, Kissack was declared deceased at a Juneau area hospital. No law enforcement officers or bystanders were injured. Kissack’s body will be sent to the State Medical Examiner’s Office for autopsy. His next of kin have been notified.

    The Juneau Police Officers who discharged their weapons have been placed on administrative leave. The Alaska Wildlife Trooper who discharged their weapon has been placed on 72 hours of administrative leave in accordance with DPS policy, and their names will be released in three days.

    The Alaska Bureau of Investigation is the lead investigating agency. Once their investigation is complete, it will be independently reviewed by the Alaska Office of Special Prosecutions to determine if the lethal use of force was justified.

    Video: Trump’s triumphant entrance in Milwaukee, as seen by Alaskans in the arena

    Former President Donald Trump entered the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin to a roaring welcome from the crowd of thousands of Republican delegates, only two days after barely surviving an assassin’s bullet in Pennsylvania.

    One of his ears was covered by a rectangular bandage as he entered Fiserv Forum on Monday, while people chanted “USA! USA!” and “Fight! Fight!” Hours earlier, he had received the official nomination from the party, after all state and territorial delegations announced their votes.

    Donald Trump and J.D. Vance react to the enthusiasm of the crowd in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Photo credit: Carmela Warfield, Alaska Republican Party chairwoman.

    “Our Alaskan delegation and the arena as a whole erupted when the President came into the building. It was truly a hero’s welcome. We have the energy, we have the enthusiasm, and we have the candidate to lead our country into the future,” said Alaska Republican Party Chairwoman Carmela Warfield, who leads the Alaska delegation.

    Nick Begich commented on how the arena was filled with emotion.

    “Donald Trump was very clearly emotionally affected by the overwhelming support of thousands from across the country. Here is a man who only two days prior survived an attempted assassination and who knows undeniably it was by divine providence alone that he is alive today. America supports Donald Trump. America needs Donald Trump and we are united behind him,” Begich said.

    Watch the scene in this video sent to Must Read Alaska by Nick Begich, candidate for Congress, who is in the arena:

    Nick Begich for Alaska posts best fundraising quarter ever, nearly all coming from small donors in Alaska

    Congressional candidate Nick Begich raised $311,000 in the second quarter of 2024, a 44% increase over his previous quarter and his best showing yet for the 2024 campaign.

    Overall, Begich’s campaign has raised about $919,000 with nearly 60% of it coming from Alaskans since he filed one year ago on July 13, 2023. Campaign money is used to help him travel around the state, connect with and listen to Alaskans, and pay for campaign expenses leading up to the Aug. 20 primary election.

    Nancy Dahlstrom, a Republican candidate who filed in November, has raised about $860,000 in all, with more than 80% of it coming from outside Alaska, mostly from Washington, D.C. political groups.

    But the fundraising behemoth in this campaign is incumbent Rep. Mary Peltola, who has raised some $2.4 million this quarter alone, primarily from Democrat groups outside Alaska, such as Planned Parenthood.

    It’s an example of how the Republican vote is being split and weakened in Alaska by having two Republican candidates in the race. Combined, Begich and Dahlstrom have raised an amount competitive with incumbent Peltola, but those who donate to Republican campaigns have held back because there is not certainty as to who will come out ahead in the primary, and with an open primary, the same candidates will be seen on the November ballot, unless one of the Republicans drop.

    At this point, polling shows Begich to be in a strong position to take on Peltola in November, but that when the ranked-choice voting scenario presents another challenge to Republicans, whereas Democrats only have one viable candidate.

    Nevertheless, momentum continues to build in the Begich campaign, and his fundraising efforts prove it. His latest financial report for the second quarter of 2024 is his best quarter yet — a sign that Alaskans continue to rally around his message. Over 5,000 donations were from small-dollar contributors, and he is the only candidate who can make this claim.

    “National Democrats and Outside special interests are determined to to keep this seat and continue to flood the state with money. But it’s clear who Alaskans want to represent them and I’m honored to have their support. When elected, it’s Alaskans I’ll represent,” said Begich. “I will not be a Representative who forgets where they come from or who they represent. Together we will move our state and nation forward, giving new hope and opportunities for future generations.”

    The primary is just five weeks away.

    Breaking: Trump picks J.D. Vance as vice presidential nominee

    Sen. J.D. Vance will be Donald Trump’s vice presidential nominee.

    Vance, age 39, was born and raised in Middletown, Ohio. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps in the Iraq War, graduated from The Ohio State University and Yale Law School.

    He wrote a bestselling book, Hillbilly Elegy, which was turned into a Netflix movie. He also started a business dedicated to growing jobs and opportunity in the Midwest.

    Vance launched his first campaign for Ohio’s Senate seat in 2021 and won after being endorsed by former President Donald Trump. He defeated Democratic nominee Tim Ryan in the general election.