Associated Press

Judge sentences couple investigated after boy overdoses

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — A Palmer man and woman investigated for drug dealing after a teenager died of an overdose at their home will serve federal prison terms.

U.S. District Judge Sharon Gleason on Thursday sentenced 41-year-old Tod Rodolph to 12 years in prison and fined him $30,000. Gleason sentenced 36-year-old Jessica Hopkins to six years, six months in prison.

The Drug Enforcement Administration launched an investigation in January 2016 after a 17-year-old boy died of a methamphetamine overdose at their home.

Prosecutors say other teens woke up Rodolph when the boy was stricken but that Rodolph did not call for medical help or drive the boy to a hospital because he did not want police contact.

Prosecutors say evidence did not indicate that Rodolph or Hopkins supplied the methamphetamine that killed the boy.

Salmon fishing predictions look bleak for Cook Inlet

KENAI, Alaska (AP) — The Alaska Department of Fish and Game’s commercial sockeye salmon outlook this year is predicting Upper Cook Inlet fishermen will have their lowest harvest in the past 15 years.

The Peninsula Clarion reported earlier this week that the outlook predicts a total run of 4 million fish to all stream systems in the inlet.

Commercial fishermen are projected to harvest about 1.7 million fish.

The outlook shows Kenai River predictions are not matching the levels reached throughout the past 10 years. The river is projected to see 2.2 million fish, which is nearly 40 percent below its 10-year average of 3.6 million.

Last year’s total harvest by all groups was about 3.3 million fish. The outlook prediction had been 5.3 million.

Ex-Alaska senator works on Permanent Fund repeal plan

ANCHORAGE — A former state senator is preparing to fight back against a bill that would restructure the Alaska Permanent Fund and reduce the dividends Alaskans receive from the oil-wealth fund each year.

Both houses of the Legislature have passed a version of Gov. Bill Walker’s plan to use some of the fund’s income to pay off the state’s multibillion-dollar deficit, The Alaska Journal of Commerce reports.

If Walker signs off on such a bill, former Republican Senate President Clem Tillion said he’ll work to repeal it.

Tillion said he’s already getting financial commitments to back the effort.

He’s confident he’ll get the 30,000 signatures needed to put the repeal question before voters on the August 2018 primary ballot should the bill pass.

Walker says restructuring the fund “is a cornerstone of any solution” to Alaska’s budget problems.

Kenai River bank at popular fishing spot to get restored

KENAI, Alaska (AP) — A heavily trafficked stretch of the Kenai River’s southern bank is getting repaired in time for the sockeye salmon season thanks to a $37,500 grant from the federal government.

The Peninsula Clarion reports the crumbling riverbank behind the Donald E. Gilman River Center in Soldotna has been depositing silt into the water. The erosion can have an impact on salmon, which depend on sufficient bank vegetation and gravel beds in the river for habitat.

The riverbank restoration project was funded by a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service grant and a matching contribution from the Kenai Peninsula Borough Assembly for a combined total of $75,000.

The borough hopes to finish the work by June 30, before anglers head out for the peak of the sockeye salmon run in July.

Employee injured in shooting at Anchorage grocery store

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Authorities say a grocery store employee in Anchorage was shot and wounded as he tried to keep a group of teens from trashing the inside of the store.

Officers had responded Saturday morning after police say the teens were fighting inside the store, breaking merchandise and urinating in the aisles.

Police say the employee approached the group and asked them to leave before one of the teens pulled out a gun and shot the employee.

The employee was hospitalized with injuries that were not considered life threatening.

Police did not say whether they made any arrests.

The shooting remains under investigation.

Small earthquake hits near town of Talkeetna

TALKEETNA, Alaska (AP) — A minor earthquake has hit central Alaska, near the town of Talkeetna.

The U.S. Geological Survey reports that the magnitude-2.9 earthquake hit 14 miles southeast of Talkeetna, which has a population of about 900, at 12:13 a.m. Saturday. The earthquake had a depth of 28 miles (44 kilometers.)

There are no reports of injuries or damage.

Also Saturday, a minor earthquake rattled homes in northwestern Colorado.

The University of Utah Seismograph Stations reports the magnitude 3.7 quake hit just before noon Saturday. The epicenter was 2.5 miles northwest of Rangely, a town of about 2,000 people 10 miles from the Utah line.

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