Monday, November 10, 2025
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A bridge too far: Dodge rams girder being transported on Dimond Blvd.

Anchorage Police officers responded to the intersection of Arctic Blvd. and W Dimond Blvd. regarding a bizarre hit-and-run collision on July 19. 

A semi-truck was turning eastbound onto Dimond Blvd., from southbound Arctic, while pulling a 150-foot concrete beam. There were several pilot cars on scene assisting with blocking traffic so the semi could safely turn through the intersection. The girder was being taken south to the bridge project near Portage on the Seward Highway.

27-year-old Dillon T. Hickman was driving eastbound on Dimond Blvd. in a white 2001 Dodge pickup truck. He drove past a pilot car and struck the rear half of the beam as the beam was being pulled through the intersection. Hickman and his adult female passenger both fled the scene on foot. Witnesses provided APD Dispatch with Hickman’s physical description and the direction he ran.

A responding day shift patrol officer saw Hickman walking on C Street near W 76th Avenue.  Upon contacting Hickman, the officer noticed signs of impairment. 

After administering Standardized Field Sobriety Tests, the officer charged Hickman with operating under the influence. Hickman was taken to the Anchorage Jail for further processing; he provided a breath sample that showed his breath alcohol content was more than two and a half times the legal limit.

Hickman was charged with OUI and leaving the scene of an accident. 

He was cited for no insurance, driving with a revoked license, and vehicle to be registered.  Probation officers remanded Hickman for a probation violation.

Hickman’s passenger was not located. She is not currently suspected of committing any crimes.

The girder only suffered scrapes and was not considered to be materially damaged.

Grassley closing in on corruption: Joe and Hunter Biden ‘coerced’ millions in bribes from Ukraine power company

By CASEY HARPER | THE CENTER SQUARE

President Joe Biden and his son Hunter “coerced” a several-million-dollar bribe from Burisma Holdings to protect the company and get a Ukrainian executive prosecutor investigating Burisma fired, a long-awaited FBI document made public Thursday alleges.

The document, which details the allegations of a trusted FBI informant, was released by U.S. Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.

The informant, referred to in the FBI document as a Confidential Human Source, or “CHS,” said that “Burisma hired the former President or Prime Minister of Poland to leverage his contacts in Europe for prospective oil and gas deals, and they hired Hunter Biden to ‘protect us, through his dad, from all kinds of problems.’”

Hunter Biden was a paid member of Burisma’s board.

Grassley, who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, released a copy of the FD-1023 document on Twitter, saying it shows an alleged “criminal bribe” between a Ukrainian energy executive and Joe Biden, who was vice president at the time.

Among the allegations made by the FBI informant was that Burisma had asked Hunter Biden to get his father to help see that Ukraine’s top prosecutor, Victor Shokin, was fired because he was investigating the firm for corruption and interfering with Burisma’s effort to buy a U.S. company.

“CHS asked why they (Burisma) needed to get CHS’s assistance regarding the purchase/merger of a US-based company when Biden was on their board,” the document says. “Pojarski replied that Hunter Biden was not smart, and they wanted to get additional counsel. The group then had a general conversation about whether the purchase/merger with a US company would be a good business decision.”

The two-page document from June 2020 appears to be an FBI document detailing a report from the informant, who said a Burisma executive told the informant he had recordings of conversations with the Bidens showing he was “coerced” into paying them.

“What did FBI do to investigate serious claims from FBIs own trusted source?” Grassley wrote on Twitter.

The document’s release comes a day after two IRS whistleblowers testified that foreign entities paid about $17 million to a network of companies connected to the Biden family and their business associates.

Ukrainian and Chinese entities are among those that made the payments, which the whistleblowers laid out alongside blockbuster claims that the president’s Department of Justice interfered with the investigation into Hunter Biden.

The whistleblowers, Supervisory Special Agent Gary Shapley and Criminal Investigator Joseph Ziegler, two IRS employees with a combined 27 experience years at the tax-collecting agency, testified before Congress about Hunter Biden’s alleged tax crimes.

“After foreign companies sent money to business associates’ companies, the Bidens then received incremental payments over time to different bank accounts,” House Oversight Chairman Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., said at the hearing. “These complicated financial transactions were used deliberately to conceal the source of the funds and total amounts.”

The president has repeatedly dismissed allegations related to overseas payments but has not yet responded to these latest revelations.

Is it a trans-eagle? A beagle?

An eagle-eyed photographer at Joint Base Elmendorf Richardson snapped a photo of a black bear curled up napping in a bald eagle’s nest on base. The photo was taken during an “eagle productivity survey,” led by Steve Lewis of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, in partnership with JBER Environmental Conservation.

Whether it’s a bear identifying as an eagle or an eagle identifying as a bear is anyone’s guess these days. It may be just a bear hoping for a little peace and quiet after a full day of fishing, figuring possession of the nest is nine-tenths of the law.

There’s no word on what happened to the eagles or if eggs had been poached by the bear before it took a nap. Alaska bald eagle nests are made from sticks and stalks, and other comfy furnishings like moss and lichen. They usually are 4-6 feet in diameter and 3 feet deep, although they are known to be even larger. Most bald eagles in Alaska have their eggs laid by April, and a clutch can be one to three eggs. Incubation is about 34-36 days, but rarely do all the eggs hatch at once, and it’s not uncommon for only one chick to survive. Seldom are the eggs or chicks left alone, as both male and female eagles incubate the eggs and tend to the fledglings.

Biologists estimate there are as many as 150,000 bald eagles in Alaska and about 100,000 black bears. (And at least one bear who identifies as an eagle.)

Photo Credit: Cayley Elsik, JBER Environmental Conservation

Trump document trial set for day before Georgia GOP primary

U.S. District Judge Aileen M. Cannon officially scheduled the federal trial for former President Donald Trump’s classified documents case for May 20, 2024, right in the heart of the election season.

The trial will start on the day before the Georgia Republican primary, which is likely to provide a big distraction for a key GOP state.

The case involves about 40 federal counts related to how Trump stores scores of classified documents following his departure from the White House. Allegations include his refusal to return the documents to federal officials upon their request, which led to a federal raid by 40 armed agents bearing military-grade weapons on his home at Mar-a-Lago in Florida.

Trump’s legal team has asked for a delay of the trial until after the November 2024 election. The Department of Justice prosecutors asked that it start as early as this coming December.

Mayor Bronson survey: Is Anchorage on right track, wrong track?

Anchorage Mayor Dave Bronson is broadcasting out a survey to gauge the concerns of Anchorage residents.

With just seven questions on it, it asks people to rank the biggest challenges facing Alaska’s biggest city and to say whether they think Anchorage is on the right or the wrong track. People are asked their views on how to address homeless issues.

Also, residents are asked a question sure to draw some interesting answers: “Have you ever attended or participated in an assembly meeting? If so, what was your experience?”

The survey, which is built by SurveyMonkey, can be found at this link.

Alaska Republicans launch ‘Peltola Files’ to track Mary’s anti-Alaska record

The Alaska Republican Party has a brand new feature on its website: The Peltola Files.

Those files are filling up with the different votes that Pelota has taken in her short time representing Alaska in the U.S. House of Representatives.

The web page “is designed to keep Alaska voters apprised of the leftist nature of Representative Mary Peltola’s votes in Congress,” says the party on its website.

“She is loyal to Joe Biden, Nancy Pelosi, and Hakeem Jeffries… not Alaska. To see how she voted against Alaskans’ interests, click on the files and check back weekly for updates and news on the race to reclaim our voice in Congress.”

The files start with her vote for Rep. Hakeem Jeffries for House Speaker — 15 times in January.

In March, she voted with Rep. Nancy Pelosi and Jeffries against the Parents Bill of Rights, which ensures parents have the spelled-out right to know what is in their children’s curricula at school.

In April, Peltola voted against strengthening the penalties for criminals in her own neighborhood of Washington, D.C., where crime is rampant. She also voted against sanctions for China. In May, she voted against securing the southern border.

In the “Defining Moments” file, there’s her endorsement of Joe Biden for president, pushing puberty blocker chemicals for kids, and her missing votes for the Strategic Production Act.

Peltola, who was endorsed by Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, has voted consistently with the members of the radical leftist Squad in the House. So far, the only Republican to challenge her is Nick Begich, who was also the first non-incumbent to file for the seat in 2022.

The Peltola Files are a start, but there are some holes, such as the fact that Peltola has missed 53 votes, making her the 12th biggest no-show among her House colleagues from either side of the aisle.

Check out all the Alaska Republican Party’s Peltola Files, which will be updated, at this link.

Report: Anchorage women and men have highest gender education gap

Anchorage may not make the top 20 cities in terms of higher education, but it’s not at the bottom, either, according to a study by WalletHub.

To determine where the most educated Americans live, WalletHub compared the 150 largest U.S. metropolitan statistical areas across 11 key metrics. The data set ranges from the share of adults aged 25 and older with a bachelor’s degree or higher to the racial education gap to the quality of the public-school system.

Ann Arbor, Mich. has the highest share of bachelor’s degree holders aged 25 and older, 57.20%, which is 3.8 times higher than in Visalia, CA, the metro area with the lowest at 15.20%.

Anchorage ranked 60th for having a population with college degrees, out of the 150 cities measured. No other Alaska cities were part of this study.

The most and least educated cities, according to WalletHub, are:

Most Educated Cities Least Educated Cities
1. Ann Arbor, MI141. Salinas, CA
2. San Jose, CA142. Corpus Christi, TX
3. Washington, DC143. Beaumont, TX
4. San Francisco, CA144. Hickory, NC
5. Madison, WI145. Stockton, CA
6. Durham, NC146. Modesto, CA
7. Boston, MA147. Bakersfield, CA
8. Raleigh, NC148. McAllen, TX
9. Seattle, WA149. Brownsville, TX
10. Austin, TX150. Visalia, CA

One thing sets Anchorage apart from the others: The Anchorage metro area has the highest gender education gap, with the share of female bachelor’s degree holders aged 25 and older at 23.25%t, compared with 18.64% for their male counterparts, a difference of 4.61% more women. 

For comparison, the national average for women with the same attributes is 21.03%, and it is 20.12% for their men counterparts.

El Paso, Texas metro area has the highest racial education gap, with the share of black bachelor’s degree holders aged 25 and older at 23.75 percent, compared with 20.78 percent for their white counterparts, a difference of 2.96 percent favoring black people.  

For comparison, the national average for black people with the same attributes is 15.07 percent, and it is 23.32 percent for their white counterparts.

To view the full report and your city’s rank, visit this WalletHub link.

Lisa Murkowski doubles down: She’d vote for Manchin over Trump or Biden

Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski told a PBS interviewer today that given the choice between President Joe Biden or former President Donald Trump, she would vote for West Virginia Democrat Sen. Joe Manchin for president.

“If it’s a match-up between Biden and Trump, I know exactly where I’d go. I would go with Joe Manchin,” Murkowski told Margaret Hoover, host of Firing Line.

“I am one who doesn’t like to use my vote for the lesser of two evils. I want to be proactive in who I think could do the job,” she said. Murkowski endorsed Democrat Mary Peltola for the House of Representatives in 2022.

Manchin, a centrist, has been for Democrats what Murkowski is for Republicans — an unreliable vote for their extreme platform.

Some have speculated that Manchin may run for president as a third-party and that rumor was given oxygen when he was featured at a town hall in New Hampshire, organized by No Labels, a new group pushing independent candidates.

Murkowski said people are hungry want a president who is “offering something in the middle.” She defended Alaska’s new open primary and ranked-choice voting general elections, saying she believes it is a model for other states to deliver results that are less partisan.

Murkowski’s idea of what it means to be less partisan may be at odds with the record of Peltola, who is extremely partisan, if she’s judged by her voting record, which is in line with radical House members of The Squad. Alaskans will be the judge in 2024, during the next congressional election.

Manchin appeared earlier this week at a town hall in New Hampshire that was sponsored by political organization No Labels, sparking conversation of a possible third-party bid for the West Virginia senator.

Manchin and Murkowski are considered allies in the Senate and have a close, collaborative relationship.

Hayden Ludwig: Dark money bought ranked-choice voting in Alaska. Will dark money keep it in 2024?

By HAYDEN LUDWIG | RESTORATION of AMERICA

Alaska may be a red state, but it won’t be for long if leftists get their way. In recent years the state has become one of the Left’s favorite “dark money” dumping grounds in an effort to give Democrats an unlikely edge in the Republican stronghold. 

It’s an old trick: If you can’t win the game, change the rules.

That’s the real story behind Alaskans for Better Elections (ABE), the lobbying group responsible for Ballot Measure 2, the 2020 initiative that enacted the state’s now-infamous ranked-choice voting system and supposedly exposed “dark money.” 

If you don’t understand ranked-choice voting, that’s the point. It’s a confusing, byzantine approach to balloting that unexpectedly gave Alaska its first Democratic congresswoman, Mary Peltola, in nearly 50 years—in a state that broke for Trump 53-43 percent in 2020—something the New York Times happily credits to the novel voting scheme.

Not that even Democrats can agree on the merits of ranked-choice voting. In fact, the D.C. Democratic Party voted against adopting ranked-choice voting in May because they feared it would “undermine the strength of Democrats” in the district. Democrats across the Potomac in Arlington County also gave the measure a shot—the first to do so anywhere in my own state, Virginia—only to quietly drop the scheme just last week. Why? Even the election board responsible for the experiment couldn’t explain how it worked.

But that’s no problem because Democrats already control Arlington and D.C. Ranked-choice voting was always meant to give them inroads into red states otherwise inaccessible to their candidates and ideas—like Alaska.

From Colorado with Cash

Pro-Measure 2 groups outspent conservatives nearly 12–1 in 2020 yet only won by less than 3,800 votes—a narrow triumph of “dark money” over… “dark money.”

How so? According to public disclosures, ABE is overwhelmingly funded by “progressive” mega-donors in New York, California, Colorado, Texas, Wisconsin—just about anywhere except for, you know, Alaska.

And ABE admits this, proudly calling its out-of-state contributors “philanthropists dedicated to addressing the most pressing problems facing the country”—as if Alaskans never held a fair election prior to enacting ranked-choice voting. So who are these donors? 

John Arnold is an Enron alumnus and hedge fund investor who made his billions trading so-called fossil fuels. Now he’s pumped at least $23 million into groups that want to tax people and businesses for using those CO2-emitting fuels. Not surprisingly, pro-carbon tax groups also supported Measure 2. Arnold’s “philanthropy,” the Houston-based Arnold Ventures, has cut checks to ABE since 2019; yet it’s structured as an LLC, not a nonprofit, so it doesn’t file public disclosures, the very definition of “dark money.”

Then there’s FairVote, the far-left group behind ranked-choice voting in Arlington County. FairVote also supports abolishing the Electoral College and automatic voter registration, two of the Left’s favorite election “reforms” du jour.

Kathryn and James (son of Rupert) Murdoch have pumped tens of millions of dollars into even more extreme “green” groups, such as the Environmental Defense Fund, which used $11 million from the pair’s philanthropy in 2019 to lobby against gas and oil production. Kathryn was a top donor to super PACs backing Hillary Clinton in 2016, and even directed the Clinton Foundation’s global warming initiative—whose contributions mysteriously sank after Hillary failed to clinch the presidency.

The New York pair’s money-funnel of choice: Unite America, a Denver-based group that pumped $3.7 million into ABE from 2019–2021. Unite America pretends to be a middle-of-the-road, “country over party” group but its board (which includes Kathryn) leans decidedly left. 

That board also includes Katherine Gehl, an ABE supporter based in Wisconsin. Gehl’s also on the board of New America, a “centrist” think tank led by ex-Obama administration officials and funded by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt. Centrist indeed; New America was behind “creation care,” a faux-biblical scheme to seduce Evangelicals into buying the Left’s global warming and split off from the Republican Party.

Besides Alaska, Unite America is behind ranked-choice voting campaigns in Pennsylvania, Virginia, Nevada, Arizona, Maine, Oklahoma, and dozens of municipalities; it also funds Bill Kristol’s NeverTrump group Defending Democracy Together (delightfully acronymed DDT).

The Left Strikes Back

Now ABE is turning its guns on conservative groups trying to roll back ranked-choice voting with a new ballot measure. This week, ABE filed a complaint against Preserve Democracy alleging campaign finance and lobbying violations. The complaints follow similar efforts to block signature-gathering campaign by a related conservative group, Alaskans for Honest Elections

It’s called lawfare—winning with legal miscellanea what you can’t in a fair fight—and the Left excels at it. 

But the complaints suggest that Alaska conservatives are onto something big in battling ranked-choice voting if they can gather enough signatures to get on the 2024 ballot. Americans across the country are waking up to the Left’s Big Money plots, and it’s got “progressives” running scared.

Of course, this is far from the first time D.C. “progressives” have bankrolled a campaign to fool Alaskans. In September, I reported on how D.C. groups—led by the $1.6 billion “dark money” lobbying machine created by Arabella Advisors—ran the campaign to block Alaska’s proposed constitutional convention

Their spin: Stop “outside special interest groups and dark money” from promoting their own agenda over that of Alaskans. Did they think no one would notice?

That group, Defend Our Constitution, and ABE both share a common board member in ex-attorney general Bruce Botelho (D). Both use the services of Ship Creek Group, the consultancy founded by John-Henry Heckendorn, a political operative whom liberal Politico once gushed over as “reviving progressivism” in Alaska with an article titled “How to Turn a Red State Purple (Democrats Not Required).”

In other words, it’s an out-of-state grift to get red Alaska to fall in line with blue states. Don’t let them buy you.

Hayden Ludwig is the director of research for Restoration of America.