Court orders City of Kodiak to release documents related to alleged excessive use of force case

A Superior Court judge Tuesday sided with Kodiak Public Broadcasting Corporation and ordered the City of Kodiak to immediately comply with the state’s Public Records Act in a case of alleged excessive use of force by three Kodiak police officers. The order was handed down by Kodiak Judge Steve W. Cole.

KMXT public radio’s parent corporation sued when the city denied the station’s records request for details after an incident where three policemen handcuffed and pepper-sprayed Nick Pletnikoff as he was checking his family’s mailbox on Sept. 16. Pletnikoff, 28, is severely autistic.

Pletnikoff was not charged with any crime, but was left bloodied, bruised and according to his mother Judy, traumatized by his encounter with the KPD officers.

KMXT sought more information about the incident, including the identities of the three officers, as public outrage grew and the police blotter only documented the incident as “suspicious circumstances; all OK.”

In his order, Judge Cole flatly rejected the argument that a third-party investigation underway is an “enforcement action,” and therefore exempts the city from complying with the Alaska Public Records Act.

Judge Cole likewise rejected the city’s assertion that it did not want to invade the privacy of those involved in the incident. Cole points out that Pletnikoff’s name is well-known to the public and is a part of the public record, and any witnesses interviewed did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy since they likely consented to the interviews. Cole didn’t address whether the police officer’s identities should be private but wrote if the city had alleged that, it would not be a well-founded claim.

“(T)he city has not met its burden to show the disclosure request should be denied,” Cole wrote.

The judge has ordered the City of Kodiak to immediately comply with KMXT’s records request and to release to the station by Dec. 31 chest-cam videos recorded by the three KPD officers during their response to the Pletnikoff incident.

Assistant Kodiak City Manager Mike Tvenge said that the city fully intends to comply with the court order and hopes the information proves valuable to the community.

Sign up for The Signal

Top Alaska stories delivered to your inbox every week

Site notifications
Update notification options
Subscribe to notifications