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A January hearing in Juneau was a snapshot of how pretrial delays have affected Alaska courts: victims, witnesses and defendants are often waiting years for a resolution, and their lives are put on hold in the meantime.
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This is Alaska’s first fatal avalanche reported this season. It is also the country’s deadliest since February 2023.
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Mike Dunleavy has previously, and repeatedly, expressed frustration about the state’s nonpartisan process.
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A woman whose home was the subject of more than 100 police calls in 2018 had challenged the city's ordinance.
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Michael J. Heyman was appointed Friday and will serve as Alaska’s U.S. Attorney on an interim basis for 120 days.
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She is the third pedestrian fatally hit by a vehicle in Anchorage in under two weeks.
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Charges name the suspect as John Patea Jr., and say his bullet was not meant for Kikite Leu Fatu.
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An NPR investigation finds federal judges have enormous influence with few checks on their power. Law clerks and other judicial employees are vulnerable to mistreatment and have few job protections.
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Kikite Leu Fatu, 29, came to Anchorage from Hawaii, Samantha Fatu said. She was in a friend’s motorhome at Davis Park Monday when she was shot from outside the vehicle.
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A meeting between President Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy grew contentious, with Trump telling Zelenskyy, "You're not acting at all thankful" for U.S. support.
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Service members and recruits who are diagnosed with or treated for gender dysphoria are to be separated from the U.S. military in accordance with an executive order issued a month ago by President Trump.
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After a roughly five-hour standoff at the Midtown Hampton Inn last Friday morning, Anchorage police fatally shot a man they say held two adults and several children hostage.