Photos posted by federal agencies in recent days indicate immigration enforcement may be ramping up in Alaska, a state ...
The Alaska Department of Law argues that the approval for the Chin’an Gaming Hall threatens the state’s jurisdiction over ...
An Alaskan is someone physically present in the state who intends to remain permanently and make a home here, the Alaska Supreme Court concluded in a split opinion published Friday. Residency can ...
Arguing that it faces a potentially catastrophic situation that could result in a shortfall of natural gas this winter, Southcentral Alaska's natural gas utility asked a judge on Friday for a swift ...
The jury section began Monday in the murder trial of a man accused of killing the property manager of an apartment complex ...
The decision does not prevent a notice-and-cure system from being established through the legislative process ANCHORAGE — On ...
Their total bill is now approaching a quarter-million dollars after a failed effort during the 2024 campaign season.
DNA evidence corroborating the crime. Yet in Alaska’s slow-motion court system, it took more than seven years for the case against Fred Tom Hurley III to finally go to trial, in December.
The State of Alaska filed a lawsuit on Tuesday against the Native Village of Eklutna and others for violating the Alaska Native Allotment Act.
The lawsuit targeted a now-defunct moratorium on drilling in the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.