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  • 18Aug

    CHICAGO, Aug. 18 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The American Medical Association (AMA) Foundation awarded the Arthur N. Wilson, MD Scholarship to medical student Jodie Totten, who grew up in Sitka, Alaska and attends the University of Washington School of Medicine. Totten will receive a $5,000 scholarship to help defray medical school expenses. The Arthur N. Wilson, MD Scholarship annually supports a medical student who graduated from a high school in southeast Alaska and who has consistently received academic honors.

    Totten is a rising second year at the University of Washington School of Medicine and is in the “Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho” (WWAMI) program. She received a Bachelor of Arts from Northwestern University and attended Sitka High School. Totten has organized and participated in numerous volunteer activities, including a health fair to promote healthy lifestyles in Alaska and a Rotary International volunteer trip to Central America. She has global health interests and most recently went to the Republic of Palau, a medically-underserved island nation, to volunteer her services.

    “Jodie Totten has shown remarkable academic ability throughout her educational career,” said AMA Foundation President Jean Howard. “She understands the impact that rural physicians provide in their communities, and also has a wonderful global perspective on health care.”

    In 1984, Arthur N. Wilson, MD provided a bequest to the AMA Foundation for the Arthur N. Wilson, MD Scholarship, to support aspiring medical students from southeast Alaska. Born in 1898 in India, Arthur N. Wilson, MD graduated from Rush Medical School and, as a general practitioner, became an integral part of the town of Ketchikan, Alaska. His wife, Dagmar Nelson Wilson and sons James A. Wilson, MD, FACS and Arthur N. Wilson, Jr., MD, both of whom practiced medicine with their father in Ketchikan, have added to the scholarship fund.

    As the philanthropic arm of the AMA, the AMA Foundation has made it a priority to assist medical students in handling the rising cost of medical education. Each year, the AMA Foundation grants approximately a half million dollars in scholarships. On average, medical students in the U.S. graduate with a debt load of nearly $140,000.

    Since its founding in 1950, the AMA Foundation has advanced the health care of America through medical school scholarships, research grants and public health initiatives. Visit www.amafoundation.org for more information about the AMA Foundation’s programs.

    SOURCE American Medical Association Foundation

  • 15Aug

    WASHINGTON, Aug. 15 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — An Alaska man was sentenced today to 30 years in prison for sex trafficking of minors and adults, as well as drug trafficking offenses, Acting Assistant Attorney General Matthew Friedrich of the Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney Nelson P. Cohen of the District of Alaska announced.

    Don Arthur Webster Jr., 51, also known as “Jerry Starr,” was sentenced by Senior U.S. District Court Judge H. Russel Holland. In addition to his prison sentence, Webster was ordered to serve a lifetime of supervised release following his release from prison.

    Webster was convicted on Feb. 5, 2008, of 28 counts in the first sex trafficking trial in the District of Alaska. After 11 days of testimony, the jury found Webster guilty on two counts of sex trafficking of a minor; nine counts of sex trafficking of adults by force, fraud or coercion; two counts of distributing crack cocaine to a pregnant woman; four counts of distributing crack cocaine to individuals under the age of 21; and eight counts of distributing crack cocaine. Webster was also convicted of one count of maintaining a premises for the purpose of manufacturing and distributing crack cocaine, and one count of manufacturing crack cocaine.

    “This defendant preyed on the most vulnerable among us to make a fast buck. Using fear, violence and intimidation, he forced women and children into the tragic world of prostitution and drugs,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Matthew Friedrich. “The prison sentence handed down today denies Webster the freedom he denied his victims, and those who commit similar crimes should expect to be prosecuted.”

    “Evil takes many forms. Don Webster, a/k/a Jerry Starr, embodies several of them,” said U.S. Attorney Nelson P. Cohen. “He is a drug pusher - who used both cocaine and crack to enslave his victims. He is a disgusting bully who manipulated women and children. He is a physical abuser who forced his will upon weaker people with threats of burning them with boiling water; confining them to a closet; beating and raping them; and even choking a woman to the point of unconsciousness in the presence of two other women and a child. He is a thief who stole their dignity and hope. He is a violent predator who deserves the sentence imposed today. There are people in our world who need to be locked up and put away for a long time. Jerry Starr is one of them.”

    The case against Webster revealed that he operated sham escort businesses that were fronts for prostitution in the Anchorage area of Alaska. The evidence presented at trial established that Webster would target children and women who were homeless, in low-paying jobs or runaways, and invite them to work for his purported “escort services” - Foxy Roxies, Sunshine Girls, American Beauties, Kotton Kandy, Tiffani’s, Tickle Your Fancy and Lickety Split - businesses where an individual would supposedly pay for another person’s “time and company.”

    Evidence at trial further proved that in exchange for money from clients who called the escort services’ phone lines, Webster would provide adult women and underage girls to engage in sex acts. According to testimony, the prostitution business operated on an “out call” basis, meaning that the females would meet the caller at his residence or at a hotel paid for by the caller. The caller would agree in advance to pay a fixed hourly rate plus a transportation fee in order to meet with a woman, and then would pay additional money in exchange for sex acts or drugs which Webster provided.

    The youngest victim testified that she was 13 when she began engaging in commercial sex acts for Webster and that she continued to do so for two years. The other minor who was similarly victimized was 17 years old.

    The evidence also established that the women were required to give Webster all of the money they earned. When they returned from a “date,” they would receive an “issue,” which was approximately one gram of crack cocaine. In their testimony, the victims described going on up to ten dates per day, every day, with no days off. Victims testified they would work up to five days in a row without sleeping. All of the victims testified that they were addicted to crack cocaine when they were involved with the prostitution business. The women all lived in houses in the Anchorage area that Webster paid for and he imposed rules on them during their residence. They could not have any visitors, nor talk to anyone outside of the “family.” According to testimony, they could not purchase anything without Webster’s knowledge, and had to provide receipts if they did. They also could not talk to men unless they were being paid, and they could not obtain drugs from anyone other than Webster. The women were given an alias to use in connection with the so-called escort services. Victims testified that they called the defendant “Daddy” or “Jerry,” and many of them never knew his real name.

    According to witnesses’ trial testimony, Webster would physically assault and abuse the women in various ways. For example, the victims testified that Webster would often assault one woman in front of the others to make an example of her. Victims described being repeatedly choked, punched, slapped, bound and strip-searched by Webster or someone acting at his direction. He also threatened to pour boiling water on one victim while another was in the room. In another incident, when one victim left the house, Webster found her and dragged her back by her hair. In addition, two victims described being locked in “the box,” a small crawl space or closet, as punishment for disrespecting him. Furthermore, several victims described a “family” meeting where Webster dragged one young woman into a room, out of the other victims’ sight. The witnesses said they could hear the sounds of the resulting beating, and described how that woman emerged bruised and bloody, with chunks of her hair missing. One victim also described Webster raping her, and several others testified that Webster insisted on having sex with them.

    The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Audrey Renschen and Kim Sayers-Fay of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Anchorage and Trial Attorney Alexandra Gelber of the Criminal Division’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section. The investigation was conducted by the FBI and the Vice Unit of the Anchorage Police Department, in conjunction with the Alaska Human Trafficking Task Force.

    SOURCE U.S. Department of Justice

  • 12Aug

    ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Aug. 12 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The majority of Alaskans support increased access to domestic oil and natural gas resources, a new survey finds.

    “These latest numbers are indicative of increased public sentiment nationwide and closely mirror the findings of recent national polls. Like most Americans nationwide, Alaskans are also feeling the pain of escalating fuel costs and increasingly support developing domestic oil and natural gas resources,” said Marilyn Crockett, executive director of the Alaska Oil and Gas Association (AOGA). “While public support is growing, inaction by Congress is preventing the advancement of a balanced energy policy that includes more domestic development, more energy efficiency and conservation and the use of all energy resources.”

    The poll was conducted by telephone between July 10 and July 16, 2008 by Harris Interactive and commissioned by the American Petroleum Institute. The survey of 507 registered Alaska voters who are likely to vote in the upcoming presidential election found 69 percent of those surveyed said they somewhat or strongly support increased access to domestic oil and natural gas resources. Only 19 percent of respondents said they opposed increased access.

    “We remain committed to securing the nation’s energy future and look forward to working with all levels of government to deliver a comprehensive energy roadmap that calls for increased domestic development that’s environmentally responsible,” said Crockett. “Congress needs to lift the long-standing ban on offshore development in the Lower 48.”

    Currently, Congress is blocking the exploration and development of abundant oil and natural gas reserves beneath non-park federal lands and coastal waters. Advanced technology means America’s oil and natural gas companies can efficiently explore for these resources while protecting the environment. Based on federal government data, these resources could provide enough oil to fuel more than 65 million cars for 60 years and enough natural gas to heat 60 million homes for 160 years.

    For complete text of the survey and more information — including survey methodology — please go to www.energytomorrow.org/alaska.

    SOURCE Alaska Oil and Gas Association

  • 12Aug

    WASHINGTON, Aug. 12 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — William Weimar, 68, a former owner of an Alaska-based company, has pleaded guilty to making $20,000 in illegal payments to cover consulting and advertising expenses incurred by a candidate running for an elected position in the Alaska state legislature, Acting Assistant Attorney General Matthew Friedrich of the Criminal Division announced today. Weimar also admitted that he manipulated and structured the illegal payments to avoid currency reporting requirements for financial institutions under federal law.

    Weimar pleaded guilty before Chief U.S. District Judge John W. Sedwick at the federal court in Anchorage to a two-count information charging him with conspiracy to commit honest services mail and wire fraud and structuring financial transactions. In court documents, Weimar admitted to conspiring with the candidate, the owner of a company that provided consulting and advertising services to the candidate, and others by paying the consultant approximately $20,000 in 2004 for expenses incurred by the candidate’s campaign. Weimar admitted that he, the candidate, and the consultant agreed to make these payments in a manner that concealed the payments and deceived the public. Weimar admitted to making these payments to secure the candidate’s election to the Alaska state legislature, to deprive the public of the honest services that the candidate would provide as a state legislator, and to gain the candidate’s official support for legislation that would benefit Weimar’s ongoing financial interest in a private prison project.

    At sentencing, Weimar faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Sentencing has been set for Oct. 29, 2008.

    Including Weimar’s plea, there have been eight criminal convictions to date arising out of the ongoing investigation into public corruption in the state of Alaska. Thomas T. Anderson, a former elected member of the Alaska House of Representatives, was convicted in July 2007 and sentenced to five years in prison for extortion, conspiracy, bribery and money laundering for soliciting and receiving money from an FBI confidential source in exchange for agreeing to perform official acts to further a business interest represented by the source. Peter Kott, a former Speaker of the Alaska House of Representatives, was convicted in September 2007 and sentenced to six years in prison for extortion, bribery and conspiracy. Victor H. Kohring, a former elected member of the Alaska House of Representatives, was convicted at trial in November 2007 for attempted extortion, bribery and conspiracy, and was sentenced to three and a half years in prison. In March 2008, James A. Clark, chief of staff to the former governor of Alaska, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit honest services mail and wire fraud. Former Anchorage lobbyist William Bobrick pleaded guilty in May 2007 to felony public corruption charges. Two executives of VECO Corporation have also pleaded guilty to felony public corruption charges. U.S. Senator Theodore F. Stevens was indicted on July 29, 2008, and trial is scheduled to begin Sept. 24, 2008. John Cowdery, a current member of the Alaska state Senate, was indicted on July 10, 2008, and is also awaiting trial.

    This case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorneys Nicholas A. Marsh and Edward P. Sullivan of the Public Integrity Section, headed by Chief William M. Welch II, and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Joseph W. Bottini and James A. Goeke from the District of Alaska. The ongoing investigation is being led by the FBI and the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation.

    SOURCE U.S. Department of Justice

  • 11Aug

    SEATTLE, Aug. 11 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Alaska Airlines announced it
    has resumed operations this morning between the state of Alaska and Lower 48
    states and is adding flights to help reaccommodate about 5,200 passengers
    affected by earlier cancellations.

    The airline had to cancel flights to and from Adak, Anchorage, Fairbanks,
    Juneau, Ketchikan and Sitka, Alaska, late Sunday and early Monday as a safety
    precaution due to the pattern of ash at altitude created by the eruption of
    Kasatochi volcano in the Aleutians Islands.

    As of early Monday, 44 flights were canceled, including flights between
    Alaska and Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles, Portland, Ore., San Francisco,
    Seattle and Vancouver, British Columbia. The airline is monitoring the ash
    pattern on a continuous basis and will re-evaluate operations throughout the
    day and evening based on the latest conditions.

    “We recognize these cancellations have significantly impacted our
    customers with travel plans to or from Alaska,” said Glenn Johnson, executive
    vice president of airports, maintenance and engineering. “These decisions are
    guided by our commitment to safety, and we are making every effort to
    reaccommodate passengers whose flight schedules have been disrupted.”

    Travelers are advised to check the status of flights at alaskaair.com or
    800-ALASKAAIR. Specific information about making changes to flight itineraries
    due to these cancellations is available at alaskaair.com.

    SOURCE Alaska Airlines

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