Alaska
Judge allows convicted man to stay on Alaska House ballot
A judge has ruled that a man serving a 20-year prison sentence can remain on Alaska’s general election ballot for the state’s only U.S. House seat.
The decision was handed down on Tuesday by State Superior Court Judge Ian Wheeles, who rejected efforts by the Alaska Democratic Party to remove the candidate, Eric Hafner, from the race.
Hafner, who pleaded guilty in 2022 to threatening police officers, judges, and others in New Jersey, has no apparent ties to Alaska. Despite this, he is running as a Democrat in a contest dominated by incumbent Democratic U.S. Rep. Mary Peltola and Republican challenger Nick Begich.
Hafner’s candidacy has sparked concern within his own party, which argued in court that his presence could undermine their efforts to secure Peltola’s reelection.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
In their request to remove Hafner from the ballot, the Alaska Democratic Party’s attorneys claimed that state election officials had made an error in allowing him to run and argued he does not meet the constitutional requirements to serve in Congress.
They also expressed concerns that his candidacy could confuse voters and disrupt the party’s electoral strategy. “Presenting voters with a candidate, putatively a Democrat, who Plaintiffs do not support and who would not be entitled to serve if elected, is problematic,” party attorneys David Fox and Thomas Amodio stated.
House members are constitutionally required to be at least 25 years old, a U.S. citizen for at least seven years and an inhabitant of the state in which they’re running when elected. Four of the 12 candidates in Alaska’s House primary, including Hafner, listed out-of-state campaign addresses.
Kent Nishimura/Getty Images
Hafner originally finished sixth in the primary, securing just 467 votes. However, due to the withdrawal of two higher-ranking Republicans, he was placed on the general election ballot.
Alaska’s open primary system allows the top four vote-getters to advance to the general election, regardless of party affiliation. Rep. Mary Peltola, who is seeking reelection, remains the dominant candidate in the race. Along with Begich, the two received the lion’s share of the vote in the primary.
Hafner’s inclusion on the ballot has sparked debate about the integrity of Alaska’s election process and raised questions about how voters will respond to a candidate who is currently behind bars. Despite his lack of ties to Alaska and his criminal record, Hafner will remain on the ballot, as Judge Wheeles ruled that there was no legal basis to remove him, leaving the voters of Alaska to decide his fate in the upcoming election.
This article includes reporting from The Associated Press
Alaska
“Ask For A Warrant” Alaska Airlines Privacy Poster Angers Trump Supporters, Sparks Political Firestorm – Live and Let’s Fly
A new Alaska Airlines poster reminding employees to verify law-enforcement requests with a subpoena or warrant has touched off political outrage online, particularly among Trump-aligned commentators who view it as an act of resistance against police or federal officers.
A poster photographed inside an Alaska Airlines workspace has gone viral for its explicit instruction to employees: “If a law enforcement officer or government official asks you for guest information, don’t comply. Ask for a subpoena or warrant to verify.”
The poster, which features branding for Alaska, Hawaiian, and Horizon, emphasizes that front-line staff should not release customer data without proper legal authority, and should immediately notify a supervisor if approached. It also provides an email address for directing non-urgent government inquiries to Alaska’s legal department.
The policy itself is not new. Airlines routinely instruct employees to require legal process before turning over passenger records; in fact, this mirrors standard privacy practices across the aviation and hospitality industries. What is new is the political reaction.
The image was circulated widely by accounts supportive of President Trump, including retired Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Buzz Patterson, who suggested the poster represented an anti-law enforcement stance and was an example of woke corporate behavior. Commenters echoed that sentiment, accusing Alaska Airlines of “interfering with police,” “coddling criminals,” and “undermining authorities.” Some went further, suggesting the airline was preparing to obstruct possible immigration-related enforcement in a direct attack against the Trump administration.
That framing ignores the underlying reality: airlines do not have discretion to hand over passenger information when asked verbally by an officer. Without a subpoena or warrant, such disclosure is generally prohibited by the carrier’s own data privacy polices. Still, the optics of a cartoon police officer being told “ask why” before complying struck a nerve among social-media users predisposed to perceive corporate privacy protocols as political virtue signaling.
Sadly, even routine legal-compliance signage can become a partisan lightning rod in today’s environment.
Why This Policy Is Actually Aligned With Longstanding Conservative Principles
The criticism from some conservative commentators is ironic, because the principle behind Alaska’s poster…skepticism of government intrusion without due process…is traditionally a hallmark of the American political right.
Conservatives have historically championed:
- Limiting government power
- Requiring warrants for searches and data seizures
- Protecting private property and personal information
- Resisting unlawful or extrajudicial demands from bureaucrats or federal agencies
In that light, Alaska’s policy is not anti-police but pro-rule-of-law: if the government wants access to passenger records, it must obtain a warrant or subpoena, which is precisely how the legal system is designed to function. The alternative (handing over passenger data whenever asked) would be far more troubling to anyone concerned about surveillance, political targeting, or abuse of authority.
Put differently, the procedure that some have framed as “insubordination” is actually a safeguard that conservatives have defended for decades. It protects passengers from overreach, protects employees from liability, and protects law enforcement by ensuring evidence is gathered through proper channels.
In a polarized climate, even basic privacy compliance is easily misunderstood. But Alaska’s stance is neither radical nor new. It is simply the lawful, time-tested requirement that government power be exercised transparently and with judicial oversight.
CONCLUSION
In the end, Alaska Airlines’ poster is less a political statement than a reminder that customer data cannot be handed over on demand. Insisting on subpoenas and warrants aligns with long-standing conservative concerns about government overreach and due process. Whatever one’s politics, requiring proper legal authority before disclosing passenger information should be seen as a common-sense protection for both travelers and front-line employees.
Alaska
Avalanches reported in Turnagain Pass area as avalanche concern is high in part of Southcentral
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – Avalanches have been reported in the Turnagain Pass area as avalanche danger Sunday is high in the that area and considerable in the Summit Lake area, according to the Chugach National Forest Avalanche Center.
North American Public Avalanche Danger scale has five levels: low, moderate, considerable, high and extreme.
Andrew Schauer, the center’s lead forecaster, said there were multiple avalanches in Turnagain Pass between Friday and Saturday.
“This included large natural and human-triggered avalanches on the motorized and non-motorized zones at Turnagain Pass. Some avalanches were over 1,000′ wide. One skier was caught and carried in one of these, but luckily nobody was buried or injured. We’re concerned that we’ll see similar activity following this storm,” he said.
He said the snowpack has “multiple, buried weak layers deeper in the snowpack,” which causes a weak foundation for the snow above.
“Right now, it’s stormy, there’s a lot of wind, it’s raining and snowing. And it’s pretty obvious that the avalanche danger is elevated. But what catches people off guard is that, even in the breaks between storms right now, because we have that weak foundation, it’s still going to be dangerous avalanche conditions,” Schauer said Sunday morning.
He said the Chugach National Forest Avalanche Center recommends when the danger is high like it is right now, people stay out of the mountains.
He said it’s tricky when the concern is moderate or considerable, levels two and three on the five-part scale.
“The clues are a lot less subtle. It’s also when the snowpack is a little bit more stubborn. So, a bunch of people can get away with getting into steep avalanche terrain without having anything bad happen. And then, one person just pulls the unlucky card and ends up triggering an avalanche,” he said.
He said that’s when those who choose to be in the field need to rely on assessments of the snowpack in front of you.
“We can give people some clues to where the most dangerous conditions might be. But ultimately, that’s a really hard assessment to make. And so, the one thing that people can always do to avoid avalanche danger is to just avoid those steep slopes and run out zones,” Schauer said.
He said he urges people to check the conditions before going out because they change quickly.
And he recommends anyone who does go into any kind of avalanche terrain in the winter to carry a basic rescue kit with an avalanche beacon, rescue shovel and probe, and that you know how to use them.
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