Casey Grove, Alaska Public Media - Anchorage

Casey Grove, Alaska Public Media - Anchorage
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Casey Grove is host of Alaska News Nightly, a general assignment reporter and an editor at Alaska Public Media. Reach him at cgrove@alaskapublic.org. Read more about Casey here
Goose Creek Prison. Photo by Ellen Lockyer, KSKA - Anchorage.

Former Alaska correctional officer sentenced for smuggling drugs and cellphones into prison

Angela Lincoln, 44, was arrested in November 2021 and shortly after pleaded guilty to one count each of conspiracy and bribery.

Alaska-based soldier and Florida-based wife admit to marrying for military benefits and US citizenship

Jacob Twork and Eddy Carolina Cruz both signed plea deals filed in federal court Tuesday in which they admitted to one felony count each of conspiracy to commit marriage fraud.
A gray-white wolf looks toward the camera from a snowy background.

Death of Alaska Zoo’s lone wolf, Windy, signals end to resident wolf pack’s reign

Windy was a gray female who came to the zoo in Anchorage in 2006, one of a half-dozen pups the Alaska Department of Fish and Game took from a predator control zone, where wolves were being hunted and trapped.

In first Alaska visit, French ambassador talks climate change, Russia and the case of the missing French sled dog

Ambassador Philippe Etienne has been meeting with state and local leaders and the local French community.
People walk on a construction area in fornt of some suburban houses and a snow covered mountain.

Anchorage’s huge development deal for Girdwood draws local ire over lack of affordable housing

That's not because Girdwood doesn't need more housing. Most there agree it does. But the city's plan to develop 60 acres near Glacier Creek into more than a hundred homes does not include any units cheaper than half a million dollars.

Anchorage floatplane crash sends 6 to hospital, including 2 seriously injured

The de Havilland DHC-2 Beaver's passengers were visitors from the Lower 48 flying with Regal Air, which offers flights to Katmai, famous for its bear viewing.
two people voting

Two Alaska governor candidates report big Outside donations. Another had more small in-state gifts

The amount of cash individuals can give to campaigns is unlimited this year, after an appeals court tossed out the relatively strict limits Alaska used to have.
The seal of the state of alaska as seen from below

Alaska Supreme Court tosses highest-ever sentence for vehicular homicide, in case of drunk driver who killed teens in 2013

In August of 2013, Stacey Graham, 40, swerved off a South Anchorage road, striking and killing Jordyn Durr and Brooke McPheters, both 15, as they were walking on a sidewalk next to the road.
an anchorage police car is parked in a parking lot

Woman faces murder charges in deaths of 2 Anchorage men

Bail was set for $1 million for Brianna Star Wassillie on Tuesday. Wassillie also faces a charge of misconduct involving a corpse.
A microscopic image shows a big orange circle with small blue circles around it.

Alaska’s fight against latest COVID wave helped by vaccines, prior infections and anti-virals

State epidemiologist Dr. Joe McLaughlin says antibodies from vaccinations and prior infections, plus anti-viral treatments, are helping stave off infections or minimizing serious illness.
People holding signs that say "Save our library" and "Judy needs to go!" stand shoulder to shoulder in front of a building.

Anchorage protesters want conservative deputy library director fired

About 30 people rallied against Judy Eledge, holding signs that said “Judy needs to go” and “Save our library,” while several speakers took turns detailing what they said was a hostile work environment and a non-inclusive library under Eledge’s conservative leadership.

This Alaskan engineer is helping NASA send humans back to the moon and, maybe, to Mars

Jessica Vos is originally from Anchorage and a Chugiak High School graduate. Now she's the Crew Systems Engineer for NASA's Orion Program, under the Artemis campaign.

Feds sue Copper Center fishing charter for $1M over 2019 wildfire

The lawsuit, filed Friday, says Grove's Salmon Charters and guide Joshua McDonald are responsible for negligently starting the Klutina River Fire in July of 2019 and liable for the roughly $1 million price tag on fighting it.
A wagon with a painted cardboard sign that says "Lost $ everything need cash" and two tents in the background

4 bears killed after getting into tents at Anchorage campground abruptly opened to homeless

Anchorage police reported the problem bears at Centennial Campground – a sow black bear with two cubs and a separate male black bear – and two state biologists killed them Tuesday, according to Fish and Game.

Alaska won’t see change after Supreme Court decision on state powers to prosecute crimes on tribal land

Alaska, like some 20 other states, already has federal approval from Congress granting such authority, so the decision itself won't have much affect in Alaska, says Lloyd Miller, an Anchorage-based lawyer and Indian law specialist with Sonosky Chambers.
firefighters outside near a dirt road

Alaska never saw large tundra fires like the East Fork Fire until climate change provided more fuel

The East Fork Fire in Western Alaska is the state's largest at the moment, estimated at more than 150,000 acres Thursday, and it's burning in a region where, just a couple decades ago, large fires would not have been expected.
A map, mostly of the Susitna Valley

Alaska road project pits conservative lodge owners against conservative state administration

According to the Anchorage Daily News, a coalition that includes lodge owners and other business people is spending $200,000 on a campaign to defeat the West Susitna Access Road.
Four people stand together smiling and posing for the camera in front of a multicolored background.

In Alaska visit, federal health department regional director sees challenges and innovation

It was Ingrid Ulrey's first visit to the state as HHS's Region 10 director, and she said she heard a lot about Alaska's unique, health-related challenges, which she hopes the federal health department — and funding through some of its grant programs -- can help with.
A black and white photo of children standing in front of a log cabin.

Boarding schools report documenting Native deaths, abuse and loss of culture is a good first step, advocates say

Many see the first volume of the Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative Report as just the beginning of the federal government's attempts to document the systemic and forced assimilation of Indigenous children at boarding schools.