After eight days of deliberation, the jury in a sexual assault trial against a former Juneau chiropractor returned a verdict of not guilty on two counts, and hung jury on 12 others on Thursday.
Health
Should Alaskans be able to sue over SNAP delays? State, citing Supreme Court, says no.
The Department of Law says the court’s 6-3 decision in Medina v. Planned Parenthood means only the federal government can enforce laws governing the food assistance program.
Alaska vowed to resolve murders of Indigenous people. Now it refuses to provide their names.
When the nonprofit Data for Indigenous Justice filed public records requests with the Alaska Department of Public Safety concerning cases it had investigated, the state rejected them.
Jury continues to deliberate in sexual assault trial against former Juneau chiropractor
As of Friday afternoon, the jurors had yet to return a verdict.
Federal trial begins alleging Alaska OCS is failing children in foster care
The class action lawsuit alleges the state has placed foster kids at risk and seeks system-wide reforms.
Alaska medical board seeks to restrict abortion, transgender medical care
A proposed regulation could result in punishments for medical providers who give gender-affirming care to young Alaskans.





