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Win Gruening: Juneau Assembly’s Transparency Deficit Disorder

By WIN GRUENING

Controversies surrounding Juneau Assembly actions regarding property tax assessments and millage rates, efforts to build expensive public buildings rejected by voters, and spending tax money to influence municipal elections, have all left our city leaders unfazed.

Assembly members continue to ignore growing community concerns expressed at the voting booth and in public testimony.  For a group that normally conducts its business by covering all their bases, this seems almost reckless.  They have chosen to pursue their agenda with little, if any, public explanation.

The July 10 Assembly meeting provides another example of the lack of transparency that permeates recent decisions.  During that meeting, the following ordinances were among those up for public hearings:

  • Creating a Short-Term Rental Registration Program
  • Authorizing the Manager to Convey Approximately 11.5 Acres of Property Located at Pederson Hill to Tlingit Haida Regional Housing Authority for Less Than Fair Market Value
  • Authorizing the Issuance of General Obligation Bonds in the Principal Amount of Not to Exceed $27,000,000 to Finance Construction and Equipping of a New City Hall
  • Appropriating $8,100,000 to the Manager for the Purchase of the Juneau Bone and Joint Center Property

While testimony on these ordinances was not extremely heavy, it was passionate, almost uniformly against, and echoed opinions published recently in the Juneau Empire. Six Juneau residents who spoke about the City Hall ordinance opposed it strongly. No one testified in favor of it. Nevertheless, all the ordinances were approved unanimously.

During a break in the meeting, it was revealed that at least one Assembly member, probably more, had received emails from the public supporting approvals of some or all of the above ordinances. Traditionally, it has been standard practice to provide copies of these emails in the Assembly Packet, yet this was not done.

At a minimum, any email, texts, or letters constituting public testimony should be disclosed to the public.  If these communications are persuading Assembly members to vote unanimously in favor of ordinances, despite near-unanimous opposition during public hearings, it makes the necessity for this disclosure obvious. How else can the public openly address arguments being made for and against an issue?

With none of the people sending these emails showing up to testify at the public meeting, it leaves the impression they knew their presence was not necessary because the issue had essentially been decided in advance.

Non-disclosure of written communication to Assembly members, for or against any pending action, robs the public of the right to know who is influencing their elected officials. While it may not violate the Open Meetings Act, it certainly flouts the spirit of it.  

But that wasn’t the only example of the Assembly’s transparency deficit that night.

Toward the end of the meeting, long after most audience members had left, Mayor Beth Weldon made a surprise announcement nominating former Assembly member Loren Jones to fill the position of resigning member Carole Triem.

There was no discussion of the proposed appointment, and it was unanimously approved.

On its face, there is nothing wrong with filling a vacant Assembly seat, but, with only three regular meetings remaining before Juneau’s municipal election and the 10-day filing period for seats occurring just four days later, it seemed unusual, unnecessary, and possibly prejudicial. 

Jones, a 9-year Assembly veteran, who termed-out in 2020, presumably could keep the seat warm for the next occupant, but what if that happens to be him?  Neither Mayor Weldon nor Loren Jones have indicated whether he intends to run again for the seat.  If he does, the appointment will confer the huge advantage of incumbency to his campaign.

More than that, it raises the question of whether Assembly members agreed to the appointment in advance.

Given the Assembly’s record thus far, it’s not out of the question.

Why not some Juneau Empire opinion pieces from the Mayor or other Assembly members responding to published public concerns?  Justify Jones’ appointment, why communications with Assembly members aren’t being disclosed, and why it’s ethical to spend public money on political advocacy.

We hear a lot from the Juneau City Manager, but very little from the actual decision makers.

Transparency starts with communication and it’s best received earlier in the process, not later.

After retiring as the senior vice president in charge of business banking for Key Bank in Alaska, Win Gruening became a regular opinion page columnist for the Juneau Empire. He was born and raised in Juneau and graduated from the U.S. Air Force Academy in 1970. He is involved in various local and statewide organizations.

Downing: Alaskans are represented by Peltola and The Squad today, but can do better in 2024

By SUZANNE DOWNING

Rep. Mary Peltola continues to have support among left-leaning Lower 48 politicos after she emerged victorious in Alaska’s messy open-primary, ranked-choice general voting system in 2022.

Conservative Alaska voters, faced with a contentious field last year, awarded Peltola enough second-place votes to lock in her win.

As a candidate with low name recognition, Peltola committed to bipartisanship, saying she drew inspiration from the late Congressman Don Young. However, her voting record since November has revealed a different story. 

Peltola’s support for Rep. Hakeem Jeffries as House Speaker, casting 15 votes in his favor, was the first big item that raised eyebrows around the 49th state. 

She voted against the Strategic Production Response Act and justified her absence during the final vote by claiming she was unaware voting was about to occur.

Peltola voted against the censure of Rep. Adam Schiff, who was the unethical impeachment manager for Speaker Nancy Pelosi during the now-discredited “Russia collusion” attack on former President Donald Trump.

Recently, she joined most Democrats in opposing the National Defense Authorization Act. The rationale behind her “no” vote lies in her desire for culture-war earmarks to fund military transgender treatments and surgeries, as well as paying military women a month of leave for late-term abortions. Peltola has also supported transgender males’ participation in female athletic competitions.

She voted against H.R. 5, the Parents Bill of Rights, and has been advocating for a national railroad strike, urging Starbucks baristas to unionize, and encouraging pizza workers in Alaska to do the same.

Peltola’s consistent absence is notable: She has missed 16 times more votes than the median Democrat House member. In a House with 435 members, she is Number 12 for most missed votes.

While she participated in the women’s Congressional Softball game against journalists, she failed to show up for work the next day when almost all amendments to the National Defense Appropriations Act were voted on. Her inability to get out of bed deprives Alaskans of a voice in the House.

When she does vote, Peltola votes in line with Rep. Nancy Pelosi 84 percent of the time, Rep. Ilhan Omar 77 percent, and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez 78 percent. Keep in mind that 53 percent of Alaskans voted for Trump.

Nick Begich, a lifelong Republican who ran for Congress in 2022, has seen enough. He decided to run again after witnessing Peltola repeatedly vote against Alaska’s values. 

Although he faces the challenge of overcoming his relatives, who include well-known Democrats, Begich enjoys the continued support of his followers.

But Alaska’s unique method of selecting representatives, introduced with Ballot Measure 2 in 2020, deviates from the rest of the nation. It’s a tangled mess.

The open primary format eliminated the Republican Party of Alaska’s ability to independently choose its candidate for the general election. 

Instead, all candidates, whether clowns or statesmen, participate in the same primary ballot. In 2022, this resulted in a massive ballot with 48 candidates. 

The top four vote getters from the primary advance to the general election, where voters are then asked to rank the candidates in order of preference. If a voter’s preferred candidate loses, their vote is transferred to their next choice, granting them an opportunity to vote again. In this scheme, some voters get to vote more than once, while others’ votes are counted just one time.

Given the array of choices Alaskan voters had in November, which included three conservatives and one liberal candidate selected in the primary, it remains perplexing how a radical like Peltola emerged victorious. 

Supporters of ranked-choice voting had promised that the system would eliminate extremists, but this is not how it worked in real life. Alaskans ended up with a de facto member of The Squad.

Will it happen again?

Begich begins his campaign with a solid base of one quarter of the likely vote this time around. However, with less than a year remaining until the primary ballot is set in Alaska, a lot can happen with campaign hijinks, as we saw in 2022.

Last year, Begich garnered support from major conservative organizations like Americans for Prosperity and Freedom Works for America, as well as the endorsement of the Alaska Republican Party. 

And yet, the National Republican Congressional Committee is not structured to work well with the ranked-choice voting system, which in a state like Alaska all but guarantees the presence of multiple Republicans on a general election ballot.

This time around, the NRCC can and should focus on highlighting Peltola’s extreme positions to ensure that Alaskans can make a more informed decision in the upcoming 2024 primary and general elections.

For now, Alaskans are represented by a bait-and-switcher who holds some of the most mind-boggling positions in the history of the U.S. Congress. Alaska has the distinction of being the most conservative district in the country to be represented by a Democrat. We can do better.

National organizations like the NRCC, Freedom Works, Americans for Prosperity, and Club for Growth will be crucial in helping prevent a recurrence of 2022’s series of unfortunate events.

Suzanne Downing is publisher of Must Read Alaska.

International cycling body bans transgenders from women’s races

The world governing organization for competitive cycling has announced new rules that end the participation of transgender competitors in women’s cycling events under the group’s umbrella.

The Union Cycliste Internationale, formed in 1900 in Paris and now based in Switzerland, said the rule chance went into effect July 17, following a symposium in June to consider the conditions for including of transgender athletes in women’s cycling competitions.

The June meeting brought together transgender and regular gender athletes, experts from scientific, legal, and human rights fields, as well as sporting institutions. Participants were given the opportunity to present their positions on the controversial subject. The final decision was made July 5 by the group’s management committee.

Over the past couple of year, men who take hormones and now present as women have won numerous cycling races around the world, resulting in some women leaving the sport because of the unfairness of allowing competitors with distinct biological advantages.

Under the new rules, transgender athletes who have transitioned after male puberty will no longer be permitted to participate in women’s events across all categories in the various disciplines featured on the UCI international calendar.

However, for international masters events, which include races on the UCI Cycling for All International Calendar and UCI events such as the UCI Gran Fondo World Series, UCI Gran Fondo World Championships, UCI Gravel World Series, UCI Gravel World Championships, and UCI Masters World Championships, the men’s category will be renamed “Men/Open.” Trans athletes who do not meet the criteria for participation in women’s events will be allowed to compete in this category.

In Alaska, a public comment period is now open through July 21 for those who want to weigh in on new rules that are intended to protect girl competitors in Alaska schools. The new rules are being considered by the Alaska State Board of Education and Early Development.

Not all bike races fall under the umbrella of UCI, but it is the highest governing body for bike racing, issuing racing licenses to riders and enforcing disciplinary rules, such as bans against doping and what types of bike wheels can be used in different races. The UCI also manages the classification of races and how points are awarded in road, track, mountain biking, BMX, cyclocross and others, in both the amateur and professional categories. It is the management organization for the World Championships.

The UCI Management Committee said it based its decision on the current state of scientific knowledge, acknowledging that there is no confirmation that two years of gender-affirming hormone therapy, with a target plasma testosterone concentration of 2.5 nmol/L, is sufficient to eliminate the advantages conferred by male puberty’s effects on testosterone.

The committee also said it recognizes that considerable individual variability exists in response to gender hormone therapy, making it difficult to draw definitive conclusions regarding its effects. Other biomechanical factors, such as bone structure and arrangement in the limbs, may potentially provide lasting advantages to men who have undergone transgender treatments.

While recognizing the interests of transgender athletes being able to participate in competitions, the management committee concluded that it was necessary to prioritize the protection of the female category and ensure equal opportunities. The decision aims to maintain a level playing field for all competitors while considering the scientific uncertainties surrounding the effects of hormone treatment.

The FINA international swimming governing body took a different approach earlier this year, by ruling that transgenders who had already gone through male puberty may not compete in the women’s races, but the group left wiggle room for transgenders who block hormones to prevent them from going through male puberty. Doctors are increasingly giving hormones to underage youth to block puberty as the medical field embraces the ability of children to choose their gender through lifelong drugs and genital mutilation.

The UCI also announced it will initiate discussions with other international sporting bodies regarding the co-financing of a research program to study the physical performance changes in highly-trained athletes undergoing transitional hormone treatment. B

“The UCI fully respects and supports the right of individuals to choose the sex that corresponds to their gender identity, whatever sex they were assigned at birth. However, it has a duty to guarantee, above all, equal opportunities for all competitors in cycling competitions,” said UCI President David Lappartient.

MTG brings the receipts on Hunter Biden’s self-made sex tapes; she puts them in Congressional Record

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia brought a photo lineup into the House Oversight Committee’s IRS whistleblower hearing that is one for the ages.

It was a montage of photographs of President Joe Biden’s son, Hunter, naked, having sex with different women. The pictures were carefully blocked out in places to avoid showing the actual private parts of Hunter or the women’s faces.

The hearing was about a criminal case over at the Justice Department pertaining to Hunter Biden and his tax evasion problems.

“Before we begin, I would like to let the committee and everyone watching at home that parental discretion is advised,” Greene said before showing the poster boards. She then talked about Hunter Biden’s various sexual escapades with sex-trafficked women.

“If he was purchasing her a plane ticket for sex and traveling across state lines, do you believe that to be a violation of the Mann Act?” she asked the witness.  

The Mann Act is an anti-trafficking law that prohibits the transportation of “any woman or girl for the purpose of prostitution or debauchery, or for any other immoral purpose.” It has since been amended and expanded.

The description on one of the pictures said “Hunter recorded multiple sex tapes with a prostitute he paid for out of his law firm’s bank account.”

“This is evidence of Hunter Biden making pornography,” Greene said to the committee.

Rep. Jaime Raskin, a Democrat from Maryland, was horrified at the presentation, which has been condemned by Democrats like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and mainstream liberal media.

“Should we be displaying this, Mr. Chairman?” the ranking member Raskin asked.

“Frankly, I don’t care who you are in this country, no one deserves that. It is abuse. It is abusive,” Ocasio-Cortez said.

The photos were from the laptop that belonged to Hunter Biden but that was left abandoned at a Delaware computer shop in 2019. The MacBook Pro is now in the hands of the FBI, which has been investigating whether Hunter Biden reported income from his various and sundry business dealings.

The witnesses in the hearing, Joseph Ziegler and Gary Shapley, said Hunter indeed made inappropriate business deductions related to a sex club membership and escorts.

Sullivan pushes back against liberal media bias, woke Pentagon, and Democrats’ war on military readiness

The House has passed the National Defense Authorization Act last week, stripped of its worse Democrat culture war items. Today, Sen. Dan Sullivan of Alaska said he stands with the House Republicans who voted for the bill, without the bizarre Democrat amendments.

As someone in the military, Sullivan is concerned about the politicization of the military under Joe Biden. Sullivan made a Facebook video to vent about how the media has covered the NDAA and how media outlets have accused Republicans of a culture war, when in fact it is Democrats who are waging that war.

“I’m standing in front of the headquarters of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the VFW post headquarters here in Washington, D.C., a testament to the men and women in our country, in the military, who’ve kept us free for centuries. Now, some of you may have been reading recently in the mainstream media about how Republicans—particularly now, this time in the House, on the National Defense Authorization Act, which we are working on right now here in the U.S. Senate and in the House—have somehow inserted cultural issues and social issues into this bill,” he said.

Sullivan quoted a PBS story: “House Republicans add culture war issues to the traditionally bipartisan defense bill.”

Then he quoted one from The New York Times: “Hard right Presses Culture Wars on Defense Bill, Imperiling Passage.”

After that, Sullivan read the headline from the The Washington Post: “House Republicans Wage Woke Culture Wars with the Military.”

Sullivan said nothing could be further from the truth than what people are reading in the mainstream liberal media.

“Here’s the truth. Republicans aren’t inserting anything. What we are doing is pushing back against a Pentagon that has inserted these kinds of social issues, cultural issues into the military,” he said.

Sullivan, who has been a Marine Corps infantry officer for almost 30 years said he has never seen a Pentagon led by civilians who focus more on issues, social issues that have absolutely nothing to do with war fighting or lethality.

“Let me give you the mission of the Marine Corps Infantry: It is to locate, find, and destroy the enemies of America through fire and maneuver,” he said.

“The Pentagon right now is doing things that have nothing to do with this kind of war fighting ethos.

He gave examples of how he and other Republicans are pushing back, through their oversight role in Congress:

  • “The Secretary of the Navy is much more interested in climate change—he got his climate action plan out to the Congress about a year and a half ago—than he is in shipbuilding and war fighting and the requirement for him to have amphibious ships that can make sure Marines deploy around the world, none of which he is doing right now.”
  • “The Undersecretary of Defense for policy, the number three guy in the Pentagon, ended his confirmation hearing by saying one of his top priorities was ‘to stamp out systemic racism within the ranks.’ This is a guy who’s never served in the ranks. This is a guy, when I pressed him—do you have any data on besmirching the whole military as systemically racist?—he didn’t have that. The truth is, the U.S. military, while not perfect, is certainly one of the most exemplary civil rights organizations in American history.
  • The Biden administration’s Pentagon is paying active duty troops for transgender surgeries
    “when we don’t have enough money to address suicide prevention, particularly in places like Alaska, where the issue of suicide with our active duty troops is particularly acute. None of these things that the Biden Pentagon is doing have anything to do with war fighting,  have anything to do with lethality, or have anything to do with winning wars.” 

Sullivan defended the oversight role that Republicans are providing in the Armed Services Committee to get the Pentagon back on track, and focused on lethality and winning America’s wars.

Throughout the liberal media, including the Anchorage Daily News, reporters and editors have been accusing Republicans of waging a culture war. It has become the new dog whistle phrase to unite Democrats to the battle for forcing taxpayers to pay for transgender treatments and surgeries, providing them with sex hormones, and sexualizing them before they are old enough to know what is happening.

Shishaldin Volcano starts to quiet down

The recent eruption of Shishaldin Volcano has decreased in intensity, leading to a reduction in the Aviation Color Code and Volcano Alert Level.

According to current observations by the Alaska Volcano Observatory, the volcano is still emitting low-level ash below 10,000 feet above sea level, with ash drifting to the south. The Aviation Color Code has been downgraded to orange, and the Volcano Alert Level has been lowered to watch.

On Tuesday, a significant ash plume was detected, starting at approximately 7 am AKDT (15:00 UTC), reaching an altitude of around 30,000 feet above sea level.

By 9:30 am AKDT (17:30 UTC), satellite data revealed that the primary plume had detached, but residual low-level ash was still emanating. The detached plume remains visible between 60 and 280 miles away from the volcano. In response to this cloud, the National Weather Service has issued a SIGMET (Significant Meteorological Information) advisory.

Explosive eruptive activity can resume rapidly and with little warning. Previous eruptions of Shishaldin have produced minor to significant ash clouds. Consequently, the volcano is closely monitored using local seismic and infrasound sensors, web cameras, and a telemetered geodetic network.

While the local monitoring network is partially impaired, the Alaska Volcano Observatory is employing nearby geophysical networks, satellite data, and regional infrasound and lighting data to detect any signs of activity. AVO will continue to closely monitor the volcanic unrest at Shishaldin.

Hazard analysis reveals that there is a possibility of trace ashfall downwind of the volcano, while mud flows are likely to occur on all flanks, the observatory said.

Shishaldin Volcano is situated near the center of Unimak Island in the eastern Aleutian Islands. A visually striking, symmetric cone, it has a base diameter of approximately 10 miles. Its funnel-shaped summit crater measures 660 feet wide and typically emits a steam plume and occasional small amounts of ash.

Shishaldin is one of the most active volcanoes in the Aleutian volcanic arc, having experienced at least 54 episodes of unrest, including over 26 confirmed eruptions since 1824.

While most eruptions have been relatively small, the April-May 1999 event produced an ash column that reached a height of 45,000 ft above sea level.

As observers monitor the situation, residents and pilots are warned by the FAA to steer clear of the area through Aug. 14. Shishaldin is about 58 miles from the Cold Bay airport, which also serves King Cove and neighboring villages and towns.

Candidate Michael Humphrey says the Johnny the Walrus parade float was a statement in favor of all children

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Michael Humphrey, a candidate for Fairbanks North Star School Board, says that protecting children shouldn’t be controversial. During the Golden Days Parade last weekend, his gigantic float, which was of an inflated walrus complete with tusks, came complete with a sign with just one word: “Johnny.”

When the judges realized that Johnny is the star character in a book by Matt Walsh that asserts gender sanity, rather than gender ideology, one judge went into grievance mode. She took to Twitter to rant and rave that neither she nor the other judge would have have voted for the walrus had they had only known.

An offended person from Ester wrote a letter to the Fairbanks News-Miner, saying that such a float has no business in the Golden Days Parade.

Welcome to politics in 2023. But Michael Humphrey, the new candidate in his first run for elected office, is not backing down. He issued a statement explaining what he intended with the float:

“This Saturday I walked with my wife and six children in the Golden Days Parade. I displayed a giant inflatable walrus with a name tag that said “Johnny”. This float was based on a bestselling kids’ book by the same name that currently sits at almost 8,000 reviews and 4.9 stars on Amazon,” Humphrey wrote.

“There was no dog whistle here – no one was hiding the ball. One of the judges commented online after they learned about the story of Johnny the Walrus that they ‘had no idea’ and ‘both feel sick.’ It’s illuminating that the intent of the judges was not to award the best float, but merely the best float with which they agreed,” Humphrey continued.

‘If they can’t expect a political float to have a political message, there’s not a lot that can be done about that. Regardless, we all had a great time and received hundreds of compliments along the route.

“Since then, the float has proven to be controversial to some, and you may be asking yourself, ‘what is the point?’ The point is to illustrate the absurdity (or if you prefer, uncertainty) of gender ideology and ensure that it does not get taught in schools.

“It is commonsense to say that we should not create an environment where girls must endure boys who believe they are girls in their bathrooms and in their sports. Schools are a place where children should learn core subjects. They are not a place to be confronted with a new values propositions from positions of authority that could very likely contradict what they are being inculcated with by their parents.

“Are there children who believe that they are the sex or gender that is opposite of how they were born? Absolutely. However, one can be both sincere and wrong. It doesn’t make them evil or less deserving of respect, it just makes them sincerely wrong. This is the Christian view and the loving view. You don’t have to be religious to realize that it also happens to be the commonsense view.

“Radical gender theory making its way into the classroom is a fundamental issue for me in this campaign, but it takes more than that to serve on the school board. I also support creating more opportunities for parental involvement in school. Homeschooled kids generally outperform their peers in public schools because the parents of homeschoolers have more of a connection to and investment in the outcomes. By and large, homeschool parents are not professional educators. Most parents can’t afford to homeschool their kids, but there is something we can do to approximate the environment. Schools need to create more opportunities for parents to volunteer. Whether it’s for special events, lunchroom or recess duty, or perhaps curriculum review, etc., the more buy-in we can get from parents in their children’s education, the more outcomes will improve.

“Another key area of concern is targeted budget control. When it comes to reducing spending and balancing the budget, nothing should be off the table. There isn’t one key item to cut. There is no panacea enacted by a single hard choice in order to keep district spending within limits. There are hundreds of hard choices, each seemingly inconsequential on their own (i.e., CEC relocation) but adding up to real savings and meaningful realignments. Reducing administrators and allowing teacher salaries adjusted for cost of living to at least keep up with inflation should be the goal. Throw in the costs associated to reach the goal of smaller class sizes and maybe only hundreds of hard choices was a underestimation.

“The bottom line is, there is nothing ‘-phobic’ going on here. There is no exclusion of individuals or calls to discriminate. All parents’ first priority should be advocating to protect their children in the best ways they know how. Pointing out that schools should be a place of academic learning and not centers of indoctrination is not controversial to the overwhelming majority of people in the Borough,” Humphrey concluded.

Since word of his Johnny the Walrus parade entry spread around the country, the author of the best-selling “Johnny the Walrus” featured the humorous event on his podcast, and the story at Must Read Alaska has been ready by thousands of people around the world, featured on the Bongino Report, The Daily Wire, and several other outlets.

You can learn more about Michael Humphrey at his campaign website.

Homer jury convicts Anchor Point man for attempted murder of Trooper

After a seven-day trial, a Homer jury delivered a guilty verdict against 61-year-old Bret Herrick for an incident that took place on Aug. 23, 2021, in Anchor Point.

Herrick had been spotted outside the Warehouse Grocery Store in Anchor Point by an employee of the Alaska State Troopers.

The trooper recognized Herrick, who had active arrest warrants against him. Aware that Herrick was known to carry weapons and was prohibited by court-ordered conditions of release from possessing any, Alaska State Troopers responded to the scene to apprehend him.

Upon the trooper’s arrival at the Warehouse, an attempt was made to place Herrick under arrest. However, he resisted and attempted to flee.

During the struggle, Herrick drew a concealed pistol and fired five shots, striking the Trooper Bruce Brueggeman. He then turned his weapon toward a second trooper, who was just arriving at the scene. Herrick managed to escape into the nearby woods.

Sergeant Daniel Cox ran over to help Trooper Brueggeman. Cox handed a tourniquet to a bystander and instructed him to place it on the trooper’s arm. Cox then radioed for emergency medical personnel, supplied details on how they could arrive safely, and gave updates on Brueggemann’s condition. The downed trooper was transported to the hospital and eventually airlifted to a trauma center.

Herrick was apprehended after an all-night manhunt.

The following day, an emergency room doctor informed the Alaska State Troopers that had a tourniquet not been placed on Trooper Brueggemann’s arm, he would have died.

In addition to the attempted murder charge, the jury found Herrick guilty on all other counts brought against him, including three counts of assault in the first degree, one count of assault in the third degree for raising his weapon towards the second trooper, escape in the second degree, resisting arrest, and two counts of violating conditions of release by possessing a firearm and a bayonet, both of which violated the court’s conditions ordering him to refrain from possessing weapons.

“I would like to extend my deepest gratitude to the relentless efforts of our Alaska State Trooper Investigators, law enforcement officers, prosecutors, and all those involved in the emergency response and investigation that led to this conviction,” said Alaska Department of Public Safety Commissioner James Cockrell. “Their unwavering commitment to justice has ensured this perpetrator will be held accountable for his actions. Since Trooper Brueggeman was shot, we have witnessed a remarkable outpouring of support from our community members has been truly humbling. The unwavering support and solidarity shown by Alaskans during these trying times have been a beacon of hope for all of us. Let this conviction be a testament to our determination to uphold the rule of law, protect those who protect us, and ensure that acts of violence against law enforcement will not go unpunished,” said

Herrick’s sentencing has been scheduled for Nov. 1. The severity of the crimes committed carries potential penalties of 7 to 99 years for the attempted murder charge. He could face up to five years for assault in the third degree, up to 10 years for escape in the second degree, and a maximum of 90 days for each violation of the conditions of release convictions.

Back in 2013, Herrick had a similar encounter with law enforcement. Herrick pleaded guilty to resisting arrest and two counts of fourth-degree assault, after fighting with Alaska State Troopers who were arresting him for a previous crimes relating to bursting into a home on East Skyline Drive, threatening people in the home, and forcing someone to drive to an ATM to withdraw money.

The 2013 altercation with Troopers also took place outside a store in Anchor Point, and, like the incident in 2021, Herrick was also identified by a Trooper who just happened to be at the store to get a snack.

In the 2013 incident, Herrick pulled no weapon. He was sentenced to 1,080 days in jail, with 860 suspended, leaving him with just 220 days to serve. But with an adjusted sentence, he was quickly released from Wildwood Pretrial Facility in Kenai.

Federal judge rules Oregon’s strictest-ever gun law is constitutional

U.S. District Court Judge Karin Immergut ruled that Oregon’s new, stringent gun safety regulations are, indeed, constitutional. The new law is considered the strictest gun control law in the country.

Passed by voter initiative with Ballot Measure 114, it won with the slimmest of margins — 50.6% of the vote. The law bans large-capacity magazines and requires gun permits for all firearms and a federal background check.

Also, anyone already in possession of a large-capacity firearm is prohibited from taking it outside their home for any reason, unless going to a shooting range for practice, or for shooting competitions or hunting.

In her 122-page written order, Judge Immergut wrote that Oregon’s new law aligns with “the nation’s history and tradition of regulating uniquely dangerous features of weapons and firearms to protect public safety.”

After the law was contested by Second Amendment groups, including the National Shooting Sports Foundation, a state court judge had temporarily blocked it from going into effect. Judge Immergut’s ruling lifts that injunction.

Immergut wrote that large capacity magazines “are not commonly used for self-defense and are, therefore, not protected by the Second Amendment.”

She wrote that the Second Amendment permits the government to ensure that only law-abiding and responsible citizens can possess firearms.

This ruling will likely be appealed to the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. If it makes it to the Supreme Court, the more conservative justices have found dozens of gun-control laws unconstitutional with New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen, which was decided in 2022. 

The Bruen ruling means that lower courts must consider traditions that date back to the nation’s revolutionary founding when judging whether firearms limitations are constitutional.

Also in Oregon last week, Democrat Gov. Tina Kotek signed a law banning homemade guns, which some call “ghost guns.”

The governor signed House Bill 2005, which bans the manufacture, possession, and sale of any firearm without a serial number from a commercial manufacturer, or unfinished frames and receivers, including guns created with 3-D printers that are not made of nonmetal substances.