Alaska
How to help shape the rules that govern hunting and fishing in Alaska
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – The Alaska Department of Fish and Game board process can be daunting to newcomers. Especially those learning the processes of how decisions are made at the Boards of Fisheries and the Board of Game, with the meetings coming up in the next few months, it could be helpful to learn how to navigate the process.
The Boards of Fisheries and Game are public panels made of seven members appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Alaska State Legislature. The duty of the boards is to pass all regulations for fisheries or game management based on each of the board’s respective fields.
“That leaves a lot of the less thorny subjects and the management to the department, not putting the department in the hard position of deciding who gets to catch the fish,” Board of Fisheries Executive Director Art Nelson said.
The Boards of Fish and Game considers each region of the state every three years, where new regulations are passed or failed for each region for each cycle.
“Public engagement is incredibly important to the work of the board, we have knowledge of fisheries, but it’s really the people that use the resource that are closest to the resource, live with the resource that know the most about it,” Board of Fisheries member Märit Carlson-Van Dort said.
The process of creating regulations for Fish and Game heavily stems from public input throughout, with four distinct steps.
The first step is to solicit proposals from the public, these proposals are the basis for regulations implemented by Fish and Game, whether it be for hunting or fishing.
“Anybody can submit a proposal to the Board of Fisheries,” Nelson said. “The proposal deadline closes in early April of each year.”
About 280 proposals were received this year, which is on par with previous years, Nelson said. These proposals will be filed into a proposal book that is available to the public in August and are published online.
From there, the second step is public input where government agencies, organizations and the public can provide written comments on proposals for as long as two weeks before regulatory meetings begin.
The third step consists of regulatory meetings, comprising a region of the state, where the board considers each proposal, and the public can testify before the board or through written comment.
“You show up to a meeting, and there’s 200 people there and, you know, the board members up at the table, and it can be really intimidating,” Nelson said. “But you just got to jump in and go with it.”
After spoken and written comments are presented, the board acts on each proposal, voting to either fail or pass each proposal with the possibility of making amendments to them.
The fourth step is the adoption of the regulations, which are filed with the Lieutenant Governor. Summaries of each board meeting are posted on ADF&G’s website after meetings.
If people want to get involved, they can also attend local advisory committee meetings to get familiar with local issues, Nelson said, to get a foot in the door before participating.
Carlson-Van Dort said she encourages those interested to contact individual board members through email, which is listed on ADF&G’s website, or to engage with them at meetings.
“The earlier people reach out to members and engage with members, the better, whether that’s having a cup of coffee, prior to a meeting, or, you know, during a lunch break,” Carlson-Van Dort said.
This year’s cycle of Board of Fisheries meetings will center around the Lower and Upper Cook Inlet Finfish and Kodiak Finfish areas, with the first meeting consisting of a work session on Oct., 13. The Board of Game will be covering the Western Arctic region, as well as the Interior and Eastern Arctic Regions, beginning with a work session on Jan., 25 of next year.
Copyright 2023 KTUU. All rights reserved.
Alaska
Alaska Man Reported Someone for AI CSAM, Then Got Arrested for the Same Thing
If you are going to contact the police and rat on someone for expressing their interest in child sexual abuse material (CSAM) to you, maybe it is not the best idea to have the same material on your own devices. Or to further consent to a search so law enforcement can gather more information. But that is allegedly what one Alaska man did. It landed him in police custody.
404 Media reported earlier this week on the man, Anthaney O’Connor, who ended up getting himself arrested after a police search of his devices allegedly revealed AI-generated child sexual abuse material (CSAM).
From 404:
According to newly filed charging documents, Anthaney O’Connor, reached out to law enforcement in August to alert them to an unidentified airman who shared child sexual abuse (CSAM) material with O’Connor. While investigating the crime, and with O’Connor’s consent, federal authorities searched his phone for additional information. A review of the electronics revealed that O’Connor allegedly offered to make virtual reality CSAM for the airman, according to the criminal complaint.
According to police, the unidentified airman shared with O’Connor an image he took of a child in a grocery store, and the two discussed how they could superimpose the minor into an explicit virtual reality world.
Law enforcement claims to have found at least six explicit, AI-generated CSAM images on O’Connor’s devices, which he said had been intentionally downloaded, along with several “real” ones that had been unintentionally mixed in. Through a search of O’Connor’s home, law enforcement uncovered a computer along with multiple hard drives hidden in a vent of the home; a review of the computer allegedly revealed a 41-second video of child rape.
In an interview with authorities, O’Connor said he regularly reported CSAM to internet service providers “but still was sexually gratified from the images and videos.” It is unclear why he decided to report the airman to law enforcement. Maybe he had a guilty conscience or maybe he truly believed his AI CSAM didn’t break the law.
AI image generators are typically trained using real photos; meaning pictures of children “generated” by AI are fundamentally based on real images. There is no way to separate the two. AI-based CSAM is not a victimless crime in that sense.
The first such arrest of someone for possessing AI-generated CSAM occurred just back in May when the FBI arrested a man for using Stable Diffusion to create “thousands of realistic images of prepubescent minors.”
Proponents of AI will say that it has always been possible to create explicit images of minors using Photoshop, but AI tools make it exponentially easier for anyone to do it. A recent report found that one in six Congresswomen have been targeted by AI-generated deepfake porn. Many products have guardrails to prevent the worst uses, similar to the way that printers do not allow photocopying of currency. Implementing hurdles at least prevents some of this behavior.
Alaska
Alaska agencies seized 317 pounds of drugs at Anchorage airport this year, nearly doubling 2023 • Alaska Beacon
Alaska officials seized more than 317 pounds of illegal drugs at the Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport in 2024, about a third of which was fentanyl, a synthetic narcotic responsible for an epidemic of overdose deaths, law enforcement authorities said Thursday.
The volume of dangerous drugs seized at the airport complex this year, 143,911 grams, was nearly twice the amount confiscated in 2023, continuing a trend of increasing volumes of drugs intercepted there in recent years.
The volume of fentanyl seized this year amounted to 23 million potentially fatal doses, authorities said. Other drugs seized included cocaine, heroin and methamphetamine, said Austin McDaniel, spokesperson for the Alaska State Troopers.
The seizures were conducted by 22 different federal, state and local law enforcement agencies that are partners in Alaska’s High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area Initiative, or HIDTA. The drugs were found in various airport operations, including cargo, parcel, mail and passenger-carry, the troopers said. The total also includes drugs intercepted at Merrill Field, the smaller airport operated by the Municipality of Anchorage, McDaniel said.
The volume of drugs seized at the Anchorage airport is generally a little over half of the statewide total, McDaniel said.
Anchorage’s international airport is one of the world’s busiest air cargo hubs. In 2023, it ranked fourth globally in the volume of cargo handled. The total cargo volume passing through Anchorage in 2023 was 3.4 million metric tons, placing the Alaska airport behind Hong Kong, Memphis and Shanghai, according to the trade organization Airports Council International.
The High-Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas program was created by Congress in 1988. The statewide Alaska initiative started in 2018 and is funded by the U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy, the troopers said.
Through that initiative, Alaska State Troopers and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service have stepped up identification and interception of drugs going through the mail. The troopers, officers with the Anchorage Airport Police and Fire Department and other agencies have increased their work at airport passenger terminals. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Alaska has also boosted its efforts to process search warrants targeting parcels sent through the mail, the troopers said.
“In 2024, our office assigned multiple attorneys to handle search warrants for U.S. Postal Service parcels suspected of containing illicit substances, quadrupling the number of search warrants processed compared to last year. Because of this prioritization and our strong partnership with the U.S. Postal Inspection Service and the Alaska State Troopers, parcel drug seizures have increased, preventing large quantities of dangerous drugs from reaching our communities,” S. Lane Tucker, U.S. attorney for the District of Alaska, said in a statement released by the troopers.
“Alaska’s local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies are committed to doing our part to address the high rate of drug trafficking and overdose incidents occurring across our great state,” Alaska State Trooper Col. Maurice Hughes said in the statement.
Alaska has been particularly hard-hit by the national fentanyl epidemic, bucking the national trend of decreasing overdose deaths.
Alaska last year had a record number of drug overdose deaths, the majority of which were connected to fentanyl. Fatal overdoses jumped by 44.5% from 2022 to 2023, with 357 recorded – with more than half involving fentanyl, according to the state Department of Health. It was, by far, the biggest increase of all states.
In contrast, overdose deaths nationwide declined by 3% from 2022 to 2023, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Fatal overdose totals continued to increase in Alaska through the first half of 2024, according to the latest data available, which totals deaths for the 12 months that ended in July.
Alaska had 405 reported overdose deaths for that 12-month period, a 40.63% increase over the total for the previous 12-month period, according to the CDC’s preliminary figures. Alaska’s rate of increase was the highest in the nation for the period, and Alaska was one of only three states in which reported overdose deaths increased during that 12-month period, according to the CDC. Nevada and Utah were the only other states with reported increases in overdose deaths, according to the data.
Nationally, the number of reported overdose deaths declined by 19.3% from July 2023 to July 2024, according to the CDC’s preliminary data.
Of Alaska’s reported overdose deaths from July 2023 to June 2024, 338 involved opioids, according to the Alaska Department of Health.
The high death toll in Alaska has spurred action beyond law enforcement. The Alaska Department of Health has partnered with other entities to boost prevention education, and a new state law requires schools to be supplied with overdose-reversal kits.
Alaska
Fort Wainwright opens Aquatic Center for servicemembers & families
FAIRBANKS, Alaska (KTUU) – Fort Wainwright opened a new $40 million aquatic center Thursday, which leaders say is intended to improve base quality of life.
“They can come in and do their physical fitness in the mornings, and they can come here and enjoy our beautiful pool with their families and friends during their recreation time. So it’s just like it’s just it gives them something to do in the long dark days during the winter here, and I believe it’s going to be greatly appreciated by the soldiers and our family here,” Ft. Wainwright Business & Recreation Chief Larry Watson said.
Families, soldiers, and political officials gathered at the new center on base to hear remarks from U.S. Army Garrison Alaska Fort Wainwright Garrison Commander Col. Jason Cole.
According to Cole, planning for the nearly 30,000-square-foot facility began in 2019.
Now open, the aquatic center offers lap swimming, a party room, and lessons, among other amenities.
Services at the aquatics center are free for active-duty military and children up to three years old.
Currently, lap swimming will be available from 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. Monday through Friday. Weekdays will also see open recreation swim from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Weekend hours will be noon to 8 p.m. on Saturdays and 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. on Sundays.
Access to the base is required for entry. More information about the center can be found here.
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Copyright 2024 KTUU. All rights reserved.
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