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Dr. Ryan Cole, pioneer in early Covid treatment, now threatened by Washington state over medical license

An Idaho doctor who came to Anchorage with a group of other physicians in 2021 to talk about early treatment protocols for Covid-19 is now being threatened by the State of Washington, which has taken the first steps to pulling his license to practice in Washington.

Dr. Ryan Cole lives in Boise, Idaho and is a licensed pathologist who advocates against Covid vaccines, and favors of early treatment protocols for Covid, and the use of ivermectin. He was part of the Alaska Early Treatment Alliance lineup of doctors who spoke to over 1,200 interested Alaskans in October, 2021. The event was sponsored by the Alaska Covid Alliance and featured other physicians who do not toe the line on Covid, such as Dr. Robert Malone, who was banned from Twitter under that company’s previous management for espousing objections to the Covid policies being pushed by the government. Malone was one of the inventors of the mRNA vaccine technology used in the Covid vaccines that are generally in use today.

For over six months, a licensing oversight board in the State of Washington has been considering disciplinary action against Dr. Cole, and now, the Washington Medical Commission has officially accused Cole of making misleading statements about Covid-19 and treating patients “beneath the standard of care.”

Cole is on the Ada County, Idaho Central District Board of Health. He is licensed as a physician and surgeon in the state of Washington. In 2021, a group of doctors filed complaints with the Washington Medical Commission, which now says that enforcement action is pending against Cole.

“The statement of charges alleges that Dr. Cole made numerous false and misleading statements related to COVID-19 and treated patients with COVID-19 or seeking to prevent getting COVID-19 in a manner that was beneath the standard of care,” the commission said on its website.

Doctors in Alaska made similar accusations against Alaska doctors who dared to question the party line on Covid.

Cole is accused of making statements in public that the Washington Medical Commission believes are false concerning the use of ivermectin to treat Covid, the effectiveness (or ineffectiveness) of masks, and what the the commission says were statements that were “harmful and dangerous to individual patients, generated mistrust in the medical profession and in public health, and had a widespread negative impact on the health and well-being of our communities.”

The commission also accuses Cole of presenting himself as a “highly trained physician.” Among statements the commission attributes to Dr. Cole, which the commission believes are false and dangerous to public heath:

  • Covid is a completely survivable virus for most people that are not in elderly, high-risk categories
  • Children survive Covid at 100%
  • Asymptomatic spread of Covid is infinitesimally small
  • Ivermectin is a known antiviral medication
  • Ivermectin decreased Covid death by 68-90% and acquisition by 86-88%
  • 100% of world ivermectin trials have shown benefit
  • The Covid vaccination is “an experimental biological gene therapy immune-modulatory invention” and “a fake vaccine … the clot shot, needle rape.=”
  • mRNA trials in mammals have led to autoimmune disease
  • 50% of health care workers are not getting the Covid-19 vaccination
  • The Covid vaccine has cause more deaths than Covid and has killed children
  • The Covid vaccination only reduced the risk of getting Covid by 1%
  • Natural immunity against Covid is better than the vaccine
  • The Covid vaccine has a spike protein that is a toxin that crosses the blood brain barrier
  • The vaccination can cause cancer and infertility

The commission also says Cole was providing negligent care to four patients to prevent or treat Covid-19 infections by prescribing “medications that are not indicated for a COVID-19 infection.” The commission says Cole didn’t properly document justification for using ivermectin or perform a physical exam of the patients. The commission accuses him of not obtaining “appropriate informed consent” from his patients to use ivermectin.

Cole has been hounded by the State of Washington, where he has been licensed to practice since 2007. Medical boards in others states received complaints about him but the Idaho Board of Medicine did not pursue an investigation over his publicly expressed opinions on Covid, and other states where complaints were lodged also took no action. Only Washington State has decided to try to pull his license to practice.

Smoking gun! Records show teachers, librarians collaborate to get graphic, instructional gay lit. to kids

Anchorage schools quietly removed one controversial gay sex instruction book from elementary schools after a parent activist read a passage of it out loud at a school board meeting in the fall, causing much blushing on the school board.

The activist’s read-aloud upset School Board Chair Margo Bellamy when he read salacious passages from “This Book is Gay,” and when he asked the board why the book is found in so many elementary school libraries.

Without fanfare and without using the district’s own written process, the book was removed from the libraries of all but one school in the district.

“If there’s nothing wrong with the book, why was it removed? If there is something wrong with the book, why is it still in Bartlett?” the parent asked the board at the last school board meeting, putting it on the public record that “This Book is Gay” was removed without the process.

In the past, the former superintendent asked for the book “Gender Queer” to be reviewed for appropriateness and it was removed from libraries, with Superintendent Deena Bishop explaining the matter to the school board.

The book has since been moved to the public library, according to a note from Superintendent Deena Bishop.

“As I shared with you in my reply, I have asked for a review of this book. Yesterday, a final report of this review and a meeting with all librarians took place. I will share the update to you now. I am recommending this book not be in circulation in our libraries. We had found one copy and will remove it from circulation,” she wrote at the time.

“It will be available to the general public via the Muni’s local public libraries; however, students will not have access via the shared resources process for an electronic or hardback copy. Thank you for your feedback on this book. It is an adult novel, and while many adult authors such as Stephen King and Jody Picoult, are appropriate for our teen readers, our assessment is that this one is not appropriate for our school libraries,” Bishop wrote.

Watch the parent get shut down for reading to the School Board from a book that is still in the school libraries.

Through a public records request, the parent activist found that, although the graphic gay-sex book “Gender Queer” is now out, teachers and librarians in the district have been collaborating to get more of these instructional books in kids’ hands.

From the book “Gender Queer,” which has been removed from schools after parents’ complaints.

“They tried to say all copies removed from system but a teacher at Steller is using ‘This Book is Gay,’ and ‘Beyond Magenta’ as required reading,” he said.

The evidence is clear from emails that the books were indeed being fast-tracked at Steller. The trove of email communications that has been uncovered included a note from a school librarian, saying that she would work quickly to get more gay-agenda books to the teacher, adding, “If I act fast you could use them.”

“Beyond Magenta,” which the parent activist also read aloud at a school board meeting, is said to be nonfiction, and has passages describing a six-year-old having sex with adults and how much he enjoyed it. The book glorifies pedophilia and criminal abuse of children. There are passages that glorify sex transition surgery, and the book celebrates what is called “gender-fuck” clothing, and binding, a practice that can damage a female’s breast tissue. The English Language Arts teacher, Ashley Vanhemert, is pursuing getting this and other books into her class for her course on censorship.

The parent activist also found that a librarian advocated for leaving the book, “This Book is Gay,” in school libraries. In it, there are detailed instructions on how boys can meet grown men through telephone “grindr” app for sex hookups, and the book has testimonials of 16-year-old losing virginity to a 30-year-old married man.

The librarian notes that it was shocking for her to hear it read out loud by the parent at the meeting, but it should be kept in schools because it has positive reviews from the School Library Journal and Booklist, and is recommended for 8th grade through 12 grade. She said it “is filled with factual information.”

In another exchange, a librarian explained her indignation that the parent activist had read a passage from “This Book is Gay” out loud at a school board meeting. (The parent was shut down by Board President Bellamy, although he had not used his allotted public testimony time.) The librarian said it deprived people of their right to not hear it.

In one email, an educator says that “This Book is Gay” is indeed graphic, but then she pointed out that there are passages in the Bible about both sodomy and sexual behavior. “This is such a slippery slope,” she said, indicating that the Bible promotes deviance:

In various exchanges, the librarian says to a teacher that “This Book is Gay” should be kept in the library. But in another exchange, a concerned parent who reached out about the book is told the book is not in the stacks, when it clearly has been in the stacks at Polaris, the school in question:

Study: Teens getting more asthma in states with legalized pot, but Biden is planning to lift federal control on it

While the Biden Administration has threatened regulate out of existence home gas cooking stoves due, to a perceived link to childhood asthma, there’s another curious connection with the breathing condition that affects so many: States that have legalized cannabis are seeing more children’s asthma, according to a university study.

Researchers at the City University of New York examined data from the National Survey on Children’s Health from 2011 to 2019. They found a reduction in childhood asthma in 2011-2012 and 2018-2019, but predominantly in states with no cannabis legalization.

The rate of childhood asthma rose among teenagers, particularly among non-Hispanic youth in states with recreational legalization in 2018-2019, compared to 2011-2012. The increase was small, but statistically significant.

“The findings suggest that state-level cannabis policy may have an impacts on children’s respiratory health,” study author Renee Goodwin said.

“Exposure to secondhand smoke is a key risk factor for asthma among children. This study offers a critical first step in identifying a key children’s health concern emerging in the context of rapid, ongoing changes in cannabis policy that are unaccompanied by clinical or public health guidelines for parents,” said Goodwin, who is an adjunct associate professor at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, said,

Read the study summary at this CUNY link.

Alaska has had legal recreational marijuana laws on and off since the 1970s, but in 2014, voters passed an initiative to allow commercial growth, manufacture, sales, and regulation of cannabis. A 2020 study by the Alaska Department of Health revealed that 86% of cannabis users in Alaska were smoking it, as opposed to using edibles or tinctures of the plant.

Before Alaska’s law went into effect in 2015, the CDC reported that 44,865 Alaskans were diagnosed with asthma, 8.1% of the population.

By 2020, CDC data showed over 48,000 Alaskans were diagnosed with asthma, nearly 8.9% of the population. That is close to a 1% increase in asthma, a statistic that mirrors what the CUNY study found in states where cannabis has been legalized.

Colorado legalized weed in 2014, the year it also reported an 8.4% asthma rate. By 2020, that rate had jumped to 9.6%.

Meanwhile, while the Biden Administration seeks to remove gas stoves from homes, it is also working on an initiative to legalize cannabis at the federal level.

In October, during an announcement about his pardon of all federal convictions relating to simple pot possession, President Biden said he is going to work on declassifying cannabis as a drug covered by the Controlled Substances Act: “Third, “I am asking the Secretary of Health and Human Services and the Attorney General to initiate the administrative process to review expeditiously how marijuana is scheduled under federal law.  Federal law currently classifies marijuana in Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act, the classification meant for the most dangerous substances.  This is the same schedule as for heroin and LSD, and even higher than the classification of fentanyl and methamphetamine – the drugs that are driving our overdose epidemic.”

There’s support from Congress that could make Biden’s plans more likely. In a letter to Biden in December, 2022, lawmakers — mostly Democrat — noted that 21 states had already decriminalized adult use of marijuana, and 37 states have medical marijuana licensing. Congressman Don Young, who died in March of 2022, was a leader in the movement to legalize pot and was a founding member of the Congressional Cannabis Caucus, which has been a registered caucus of Congress since 2017.

Alaska Airlines to hire 3,500 new workers in 2023

While Google announced it is laying off 12,000 workers worldwide, many of them on the West Coast, Alaska Airlines has announced plans to hire more than 3,500 new employees this year. That would increase the 23,000 strong Alaska Airlines workforce by over 15%.

“As we continue to grow and bring dozens of new airplanes into our fleet, we need thousands of people to join the Alaska family,” the airlines said online.

The company, based in Seattle, is looking for maintenance technicians, contact center agents, flight attendants, pilots, customer service agents, and software engineers. Most of the jobs are based in Seattle or Portland, with more up and down the West Coast.

Some of the jobs have benefits like the ability to work from home and flexibility of schedules are also available with some roles. Many of the positions do not require previous airline experience. The openings will be posted at careers.alaskaair.com throughout the year. In Alaska at present, there are various jobs open in Anchorage, Fairbanks, Sitka, King Salmon, Juneau, and Nome and nearly all of them have $1,000 or more signing bonuses.

Win Gruening: Juneau Assembly review of dock proposal raises questions of conflict

By WIN GRUENING

At a Dec. 19 Committee of the Whole work session, Juneau City Manager Rorie Watt requested the Assembly approve an appropriation for $200,000 (subsequently raised to $300,000) for a study of the optimal location of a cruise ship dock at the downtown subport property.  That request will be up for comment and approval at the next regular Juneau Assembly meeting on January 30.

The redundant study, according to the request, will aid the city in taking the planning lead for any new dock plans and is in “the best interests of the port, Juneau and the cruise ship industry.”

In fact, it’s only in the best interests of a few naysayers.

While the request is couched in general terms to advance dock planning for Juneau’s port, it’s unquestionably targeting Huna Totem Corporation’s cruise ship dock proposal (Aak’w Landing) located on the downtown waterfront.

The action raises serious questions of conflict about the city’s role in approving portions of that project. It doesn’t appear that anyone knows what the study will eventually cost or how detailed it will be. But it will likely delay development by giving city staff a vehicle to micro-manage every aspect of the private investment and perhaps eventually kill it.

It wouldn’t be the first time that has happened.  In 2019, the Archipelago Project was hailed as a model public-private partnership.  It would have transformed an unimproved gravel lot on the South Franklin waterfront into 20,000 square feet of prime commercial space. It addressed ways to manage cruise passenger congestion while adding revenue to property and sales tax coffers. Eventually it was shelved over stalled negotiations regarding the excessive number of required parking spaces. It was a giant opportunity lost and this premier downtown property still sits vacant today.

It seems as if the Assembly is more inclined to meddle rather than limit their primary role to general oversight and, in this case, approving the tidelands lease. As long as this project (or any project) complies with existing zoning regulations and municipal ordinances, the expectation should be that permits would be granted.

With this project, the perception is exactly opposite. City staff have publicly stated their preference that all docks on the waterfront be owned and controlled by the borough. 

Therein lies the conflict.  

Tourism Manager, Alix Pierce, formally recommended to the Assembly that the Manager “enter into discussions with the owners of the private docks to create a pathway to municipal management of the waterfront. Methods that should be explored include dock acquisition (friendly or even adversarial) or other creative methods.” (emphasis added).

The city is still smarting from losing the bid for the subport property in 2019 after placing dead last out of five bidders. Pressured by anti-cruise activists to reject the dock project, assembly members recently voted to delay adopting cruise ship tourism policy objectives recommended by the Visitor Industry Task Force (VITF) to allow more public comment. The report recommendations have been endlessly debated for several years and include limiting the number of large cruise ships, reducing congestion, electrifying docks, mitigating emissions, and allowing CBJ input on ship scheduling.

Delaying action, dreaming up duplicative studies, and perhaps levying unnecessary requirements that the city deems beneficial will be cheered by some as an opportunity to slow-roll the project, hoping it becomes unfeasible, allowing the city to ultimately take control or ownership of the property.

The Assembly’s anxiety about major city waterfront development is understandable but that should not interfere with evaluating and approving private projects like this.  There will be ample opportunities along the way to review plans and suggest modifications. Unfortunately, the default position at the city seems to be “how can we throttle this project back?”

Aak’w Landing has the potential to attract an estimated $150 million in private investment when all phases are complete.  It supports the goals listed in the VITF Report. Second-guessing by the city at this early stage is inappropriate.

If city leaders continue to brainstorm ways to obstruct this venture, the community of Juneau risks losing a privately funded world-class development that furthers the Assembly’s stated goal of assuring Juneau has a vibrant, diverse, local economy.

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.

Reasons for ballot rejection: Signatures, postmarks

Win Gruening: Judging our judges, balancing the judicial selection process

Win Gruening: Juneau Christmas, past and present

Mayor’s Office says deputy chief of staff ‘no longer working’ for him, but there’s another side of story

Mayor Dave Bronson’s office issued a statement Friday afternoon saying Brice Wilbanks, his former 23-year-old deputy chief of staff, is no longer employed with the municipality of Anchorage. Wilbanks was Bronson’s campaign manager during his run for office in 2021, and was one of his closest allies until a few days ago.

“Mr. Wilbanks is no longer employed. Mayor Bronson takes these allegations very serious and does not condone what has been alleged. Which is why in order to avoid any potential conflict it has been referred to the Alaska Department of Law. The Mayor remains committed to working on behalf of the nearly 300,000 people of Anchorage,” the statement from the Mayor’s Office said.

The “these allegation” portion seems to refer, without saying so precisely, to statements made by the city’s Ombudsman Darrel Hess, who has accused someone — an unnamed person — of reviewing security videos to find out who had been entering the Ombudsman’s office, where whistleblower complaints are taken.

Former Municipal Manager Amy Demboski is one person who had gone into the Ombudsman’s Office as she was building a case against people in the Bronson Administration concerning improper contracts. If Wilbanks had been reviewing security tapes, he may have been within his right as deputy chief of staff to do so. Cameras at City Hall do not point exactly to the door of the Ombudsman’s Office. But this would become a matter contested in court — whether those tapes were being used to intimidate employees from being whistleblowers.

Hess has referred his concerns to the city prosecutor, who has subsequently referred the case to the Anchorage District Attorney’s Office (State Department of Law) for possible legal action for what Hess describes as a “breach of duty, misconduct, or illegal activity by Municipal personnel.”

At this point, the allegations all go one way, with Wilbanks having to fend for himself legally. Wilbanks is not speaking to the media about the dust-up but his attorneys have sent a letter saying that Hess acted inappropriately and that Wilbanks was denied due process. Wilbanks’ attorneys, Phil Weidner and Lisa Rosano, are asking that he be reinstated and put on administrative leave.

What is unclear is how Wilbanks’ name was released to the mainstream media and bloggers, which are generally using all forces available to run a campaign against the mayor. Since the Ombudsman did not name Wilbanks directly in his memo, the information spilled out in some other way, which may also become actionable in court, since it is a personnel matter.

It appears that Wilbanks may be joining former Municipal Manager Amy Demboski in a wrongful discharge action against Bronson, if only to restore his reputation.

Names to know: Murkowski staffs up with five new hires

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski announced that she is growing her staff with these changes:

Promotions:

Angela Ramponi is being promoted from senior policy advisor to the position of legislative director. Angela has managed Sen. Murkowski’s healthcare portfolio for the past four years, advancing the senator’s priorities as a senior member of the Senate HELP and Appropriations committees. Angela also covered many state and local government issues and played a key role in drafting the bipartisan infrastructure law. Prior to joining Murkowski’s office, she acted as legislative liaison and policy analyst for the Alaska Department of Commerce, Community and Economic Development. She holds a master of public health from the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice. She graduated magna cum laude from Brown University with a bachelor of arts in Public Health and Biology. Angela grew up in Soldotna.

Mike Songer joins Senator Murkowski’s D.C. office as the new National Security Advisor after serving as Murkowski’s Pprofessional staff member of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs. Mike worked in the office of the late U.S. Congressman Don Young as his Senior Legislative Assistant and Defense Policy Advisor before joining the Indian Affairs Committee. He served in the USAF, including deployments to Afghanistan and Iraq, followed by a term serving as a Hill Vets fellow. He holds a master of business administration in Aerospace and Defense from the University of Tennessee.

New Staff: 

Emma Ashlock joins Senator Murkowski’s D.C. office as an Intern. Emma is from Anchorage and graduated from Alaska Middle College School. She earned a bachelors in Politics Science from the University of Alaska – Fairbanks. She previously served as summer intern in Senator Murkowski’s D.C. office in 2018. Emma will assist with Arctic policy research and correspondence until July 2023.

Major Robert Bruce joins Senator Murkowski’s office as the new United States Air Force (USAF) Fellow. His most recent assignment was serving as a fellow for the office of the Air Force Reserve Legislative Affairs with duty at the U.S. Department of State where he coordinated legislative activity and correspondence between the State Department and members of Congress. After enlisting in the Air Force in 1998, he graduated in 2007 from Southern Illinois University with a Bachelor of Science in Education and then later commissioned.  He has served in a variety of tactical and staff level positions and most recently served as the Commander of the Force Support Squadron at Travis AFB.

Gabe Crabtree joins Murkowski’s Anchorage office as a staff assistant. Gabe grew up in Anchorage where he graduated from Grace Christian School. Prior to joining Murkowski’s office, Gabe worked on Murkowski’s 2022 campaign team. 

Doson Nguyen joins Murkowski’s D.C. office as the new HillVets fellow. Doson has a bachelor of science from the University of North Dakota and is currently working on completing his juris doctorate from the University of Akron School of Law. Doson served as a judicial extern at the US Court of Federal Claims in D.C. prior to joining Murkowski’s office. He previously served as a fellow at the Center for Intellectual Property Law and Technology as well as a student director at the Akron Law Alumni Association. He is a former combat medic in the U.S. Army and a medical sectionleader with the National Guard from 2010-2018.

Aaron Stuvland, PhD, joins the office as American Political Science Association congressional fellow. Dr. Stuvland will support Murkowski’s Energy and Lands team. Dr. Stuvland teaches political science at the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University. He previously taught in the Connecticut State Community College system and served as the managing editor for Congress and the Presidency at American University. He earned a PhD and MA in Political Science from George Mason University and a BA in Political Science from Northwest Nazarene University.

“As we kick off a new Congress, I’m proud to announce these changes to my growing team as I continue my work to represent all Alaskans. These individuals each bring unique skills, experience, and knowledge to the table, which will help us better serve the unique needs, challenges, and opportunities that we face in our state. I look forward to all the good work we have ahead and benefits it will bring Alaska,”  Murkowski said.

Dunleavy appoints Jude Pate to AK Supreme Court

Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy appointed Superior Court Judge Jude Pate of Sitka to the Alaska Supreme Court. Judge Pate was selected from a list of individuals nominated by the Alaska Judicial Council.

Pate has been an Alaska resident for 29 years and has practiced law for 28 years. He graduated from Lewis & Clark Northwestern School of Law in 1993 and is currently a superior court judge in Sitka. Judge Pate fills the vacancy created by Chief Justice Dan Winfree’s retirement.

Pate was appointed to the Superior Court by Alaska Governor Bill Walker, who served one term as Alaska’s 11th governor. Pate was born in Nuremberg, Germany, to a U.S. Army family. He was raised in Kansas and in Europe and moved to Sitka in 1993 after graduating from law school. He worked as the legal counsel for the Sitka Tribe of Alaska, and also was in private practice. Pate served as an assistant public defender in Sitka for 12 years.

The Alaska Judicial Council in December forwarded to Gov. Mike Dunleavy its four nominees for the vacancy.

The lawyers selected by the council were Anchorage Superior Court Judge Dani Crosby, Department of Law attorney Kate Demarest, Fairbanks attorney Aimee Oravec, and Pate.

Dani Crosby: An Alaska resident for more than 36 years who has practiced law for more than 26 years, she graduated from Gonzaga University School of Law in 1996 and is a Superior Court judge in Anchorage.

Kate Demarest: An Alaska resident for over 12 years who has practiced law for 14 years, she graduated from the University of Minnesota Law School in 2008 and is a senior assistant attorney general in the Opinions, Appeals, and Ethics section at the Department of Law in Anchorage.

Aimee A. Oravec: An Alaska resident for over 23 years who has practiced law for 24 years, she graduated from Washington University in St. Louis School of Law in 1998 and is currently general counsel for Doyon Utilities, LLC.

Jude Pate: An Alaska resident for over 29 years, he has practiced law for more than 28 years. Pate graduated from Lewis and Clark Northwestern School of Law in 1993 and is a superior court judge in Sitka.

The council voted unanimously for Oravec and Crosby. Pate and Demarest were advanced with a 5-1 vote, with member Kristie Babcock voting no on Demarest and member Geraldine Simon voting no on Pate.

The Alaska Judicial Council is a commission created by the Alaska Constitution comprised of three Alaska Bar Association attorneys, three non-attorneys, and the Chief Justice of the Alaska Supreme Court. The governor is required by law to choose a justice from the names the council forwards to him.

USA Today: Rep. George Santos and Mary Peltola have something in common — resumes that don’t hold up

USA Today looked into the claims of congressional members to see if Rep. George Santos was the only one who has embellished his resume What it found out was that Rep. Mary Peltola also has stretched her educational credentials, when she reported she had four years of college, when her alma mater can only account for two.

“One of the discrepancies was Rep. Mary Sattler Peltola, D-Alaska, whose congressional biography states she attended the University of Northern Colorado from 1991 to 1994. The university confirmed her attendance, but only from 1991 to spring 1993. And it added in an email, “’our records reflect that no entity has requested this information except for you, today.'”

That’s an educational embellishment of at least 25% or even 50%. If she started in the fall of 1991 and left in the spring of 1993, it’s really just a two-year attendance. Peltola’s office did not respond to requests for comment, USA Today wrote.

When she was in the Alaska House, Peltola’s official education biography was more expansive on the Legislature’s website, as published in in 2008, but she still said she attended University of Northern Colorado for from 1991-94:

Education: 
University of Northern Colorado, 1991-94 
University of Alaska Fairbanks, 1994-95 
University of Alaska Southeast, 1995-97 
University of Alaska Anchorage, 1997-98

Rep. Santos, a Republican from Long Island, NY, claimed to have degrees from Baruch College and New York University, neither of which have a record of Santos earning any degree – a fact only publicized after he was elected in November, the newspaper reported.

The reporter checked 93 freshmen elected in 2022, and all of their credentials held up to scrutiny, except for those of Santos, Peltola, and Troy Carter of Louisiana. Educational background checks for 91 out of 93 freshman members held up, in most cases for all of their cited degrees. About a dozen universities did not respond and the two discrepancies that emerged both were minor compared to Santos’ embellishment.

“Rep. Troy Carter, D-Louisiana, stated on his congressional website that he earned a Master of Business Administration from Holy Cross University, which in 2021 said Carter earned a Master of Science in Management, “a degree that typically takes less time to complete than an MBA.”

About a dozen of the newspaper’s background queries yielded no response from the corresponding universities.