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Alaska News

Anchorage police chief defends handling of serial killer case featured in MMIP docuseries

Anchorage skyline seen on Dec. 19, 2025. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

The Anchorage Police Department is featured prominently in the national investigative documentary series “Lost Women of Alaska,” which examines the case of serial killer Brian Steven Smith, who was arrested in 2019 and convicted for torturing and killing two Alaska Native women. 

In the three-part series now streaming on HBO Max, the victims’ families and advocates raise lingering questions and concerns around how Anchorage detectives handled the case, both before and after Smith’s arrest, and more broadly about how law enforcement investigates missing and murdered Indigenous people, a phenomenon known as MMIP.

Anchorage Police Chief Sean Case was appointed by Mayor Suzanne LaFrance in July 2024. He previously worked in the Anchorage Police Department for over 20 years. (Photo courtesy of the Anchorage Police Department)

Anchorage Police Chief Sean Case referred specific questions about how the case was handled to the detectives involved, but spoke to broader concerns raised by the series in a 30 minute phone interview on Mar 4. 

Case said he disagrees with a central premise of the series, which is that Alaska fosters a sense of freedom for perpetrators like Smith to victimize or prey on women. 

“That we provide an environment to prey on, or our women are vulnerable — I don’t think that’s true,” Case said. “But I do think that as a state and as a community, we definitely like less government involvement than more. That’s kind of one of our things. We have that libertarian streak that kind of runs through all Alaskans, and particularly in Anchorage that’s one thing that we’ve really been addressing in the last two years.” 

Case cited recent changes in Anchorage law prohibiting some public camping, public indecency and threatening behavior as helping to “close criminal loopholes,” and upping police enforcement response. “Over the course of time we kind of forget that Anchorage is a big city with a lot of big city problems,” Case said. “So we’re kind of turning that corner a little bit where we are utilizing a lot more tools that are available to us.”

He also cited the departments’ use of technology, like artificial intelligence to assist in investigations. “I actually kind of think we’re even going above and beyond what we see in the Lower 48 and we’re kind of starting to lead the pack when it comes to our use of technology here,” he said. 

Case said despite some department short staffing, he sees the use of technology as helping to improve law enforcement’s response. 

“So I think in some respect, we just need to start thinking about Anchorage a lot of times like it is a city, and we need to respond to city crime in a more of an urban city way, instead of that ‘Last Frontier’ kind of approach,” he said. 

‘No Humans Involved’

In the series, a former Anchorage detective turned MMIP advocate, Michael Livingston, describes that during his career in the department from 1983 to 2003, there was a secret, unspoken policy of responding to certain deaths or missing persons reports as “NIH” — no humans involved. 

“That means when a patrol officer rolls up to a scene and there’s a deceased person,” Livingston explains in the series. “And if they happen to be a person without a home, who had challenges with alcohol and lifestyles, the patrol officer would evaluate, we’re not going to devote any resources to determine how and why this person died.”

Cassandra Boskofsky, seen in an undated photo. (Photo courtesy of the Boskofsky family)

Livingston said he’s concerned that the policy and culture of “NIH” has continued in the department. He and other advocates and family members criticized detectives for failing to identify a third possible victim of Smith, Cassandra Boskofsky, after photos of her were discovered on Smith’s phone in 2019. She had been reported missing the month before Smith’s arrest. Advocates found the photos and a forensic sketch in court documents during Smith’s sentencing in 2024, and later identified her. 

“When I look at the amount of work the Anchorage Police Department did or didn’t do with Cassandra Lee Boskofsky, I can’t help but wonder if, because of the challenges that Cassandra faced in her life, the Anchorage Police Department did not dedicate the amount of attention that they should have,” Livingston said, in the docuseries. 

In the series, Anchorage Detective Brendan Lee denies the allegations, and Case also rejects the claim.

“First of all, that individual was from a different era. He’s been gone for quite a long time. And I have never in my 25 years here, ever, heard that term used by anyone in the department in a way that they aren’t going to investigate, they’re not going to take seriously any victim based on their race, based on their gender, based on their socioeconomic status,” he said. “Never.”

Case pointed to the department’s focus on homeless outreach and mobile intervention teams for behavioral health needs: “Those two populations alone are some of our most vulnerable populations, and we’re investing the time and resources so we can make sure that we’re properly caring for those folks.”

When asked about why police failed to try to identify Boskofsky and share the forensic sketch with her family or the public, Case deferred specific questions to the detectives in the case, but defended the decision.

“The idea of a forensic sketch is something we very, very rarely do, and one of the reasons why we very rarely do that is because they’ve just proven to be pretty unreliable, and that’s not an exact science,” he said. 

Case said detectives must weigh the risk of disclosing violent photos. In this case, Boskofsky was pictured laying outside on grass, immobile and possibly dead. 

“One of the things that the detectives really battled with is you’ve got to weigh the entire amount of evidence that we have in the case with taking some information and like a photo and presenting that to the family, for example, and the type of trauma that you may be creating that you’re not convinced you’re going in the right direction,” Case said. “Like there’s not that body of evidence that you’re like ‘this is worth the risk.’”

Boskofsky’s death was ruled a homicide by a jury in a presumptive death hearing brought by the family, and the Anchorage Police Department confirmed the case remains active. 

The Boskofsky family and advocates have created an online petition with over 2,200 signatures with a list of demands of the police department, including mandatory standards for family notification when evidence potentially involving their loved one is discovered. 

Insufficient evidence to arrest Smith in 2018

Another major question raised by the docuseries is why Anchorage detectives decided not to question or arrest Smith in 2018. A former romantic partner of his, Alicia Youngblood, reported to police that year that he had shown her a video of himself killing a woman. The series shows Youngblood’s distress in reporting this confession, and interviews with police. But she could not obtain the video from Smith, and police were unable to identify a victim or a body. They told her there was not enough evidence to take further action.

Smith would go on to be convicted for torturing and killing two women, Kathleen Jo Henry and Veronica Abouchuk. 

He filmed and narrated the acts, which were found on his phone by another woman, Valerie Casler, who had stolen the phone and reported him to police in 2019. In the series, Anchorage Detective David Cordie grows emotional recounting how he watched the horrific videos and recognized the voice belonging to Smith, a South African national, speaking in the videos a year later.

Anchorage Police Department Detective David Cordie is interviewed in the investigative docuseries 'Lost Women of Alaska' (Photo courtesy of Investigation Discovery)
Anchorage Police Department Detective David Cordie is interviewed in the investigative docuseries ‘Lost Women of Alaska’ (Photo courtesy of Investigation Discovery)

“Absolutely I felt some responsibility about what took place. It’s easy to second guess. We didn’t have a crystal ball to know what was going to take place,” Cordie said in the series. 

Case again deferred specific questions to the detectives, but defended their decisions saying there is a high expectation for evidence that must be met in order to interview suspects. 

“We’re not going to jeopardize giving information out to a potential suspect,” he said. “So, for instance, interviewing a suspect when we don’t feel like we have enough information where we can get a good interview, where we can potentially figure out if the suspect is lying in an interview or we haven’t collected enough evidence that we can use that evidence to our advantage in an interview with a suspect.”

“And if we go in kind of half prepared, just like we know something doesn’t look right, something doesn’t feel right, and then we go into an interview, and we try to, you know, for lack of a better term, kind of throw something against the wall and hope for the best, we could actually damage the case,” he said.

Missing in Anchorage 

Case explained the department’s protocol for when a missing person is reported in Anchorage. 

He said when the report is received, the police patrol division will respond according to department policy and begin an investigation where the individual was last seen, gather information, conduct interviews and determine if the individual is at-risk. Cases will be referred to the detective division, or to the homicide division if foul play is suspected. 

“Those cases are all being worked by the entire unit, so all of those detectives are familiar with everybody’s cases that they have. So you may have one detective that’s the lead, another detective that’s a second on it, and then there are different tasks on all these cases that will then be pushed out to the other detectives,” he said.

Following the interview, a department spokesperson confirmed there are 45 detectives and seven sergeants across divisions, including seven detectives in the homicide division. 

Those seven detectives, plus two supervisors, are working on MMIP cases, which totalled 39 active cases of missing adults as of Mar. 10, according to the department spokesperson.

Case said the department is working on establishing a new victim advocate position within the homicide unit this year, to provide more timely updates and communicate with family members on active cases.

He said that has long been a concern within the department, particularly for domestic violence, sexual assault, homicide and suicide cases. “Those areas where we tend to get our families of the victim that really needs and should get, you know, updated regular information,” he said. “Because we understand kind of the state that they’re in, you know, they’ve got a lot of unanswered questions, and that can weigh pretty heavily on you, and be pretty damaging, just from a behavioral health standpoint.”

Public safety and justice for Alaska Native peoples

When asked to respond to public concern, particularly Alaska Native communities’ concern for safety amid the ongoing MMIP crisis in Alaska, Case responded that he recognizes the fear and sees the police department’s role as one part of a wider, complex system. 

He said in particular the department is working with hospitals to make sure people who travel to Anchorage for medical care don’t go missing.

“Because we know some of them fall off the radar and there’s got to be a safety net that we create, not just with hospitals, so I’m not putting this blame on hospitals, but with our entire community response,” Case said. “We do get missing reports on on folks that come from rural Alaska for medical treatment, but as well as a whole host of other reasons why we get missing reports when, when people are visiting from rural Alaska, and so really trying to get down and talk about, like, the real kind of causes for some of this — some that we can address, some that are a little bit more challenging,” he said. 

Case said that he sees some of the stereotypes around rural residents from Native villages coming to Anchorage for services such as medical care, as unfair. “We kind of pass a judgment on some of the some of the things that happen when they get introduced to a completely different culture and completely different risk factors. And the judgments are unfair,” he said. “And one of the challenges I think that we have is we don’t want to talk about just kind of the broad range of challenges that we have so that we can actually address them and help them.”

“So when I think about Alaska Natives first, I think about the rich culture, and I think about a proud culture,” he said. “But I also think about a culture that has been put through a lot of trauma throughout their history, that a lot of people aren’t really familiar with.”

Case said there can be culture shock for rural residents visiting Anchorage, and there are many factors that contribute to people being at-risk for going missing or being victimized. 

“It is a challenge that we’ve been dealing with for a long time,” he added. “And it’s certainly a challenge that I think collectively understand we can do a better job. I think we just have to have the right conversations.”

Case said he considers participating in the docuseries an important part of communication and engagement with the public.

“We’ve really been a lot more open than certainly APD has in the past. And we’re certainly a lot more open than most police departments around the country, and there’s pros and cons for all of that,” he said, and added that some APD has changed some policies after pushback from the public.

“I think the more information that we can provide just kind of across the spectrum of what we do and how we do it, the better relationship we’re going to have with the community, and the better police department we’re going to be in the long run,” he said.

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World Baseball Classic Power Rankings: All 8 Quarterfinalists Ranked

It’s not surprising to see Japan and the Dominican Republic emerge from World Baseball Classic pool play undefeated. The third unbeaten squad, though? It’s not who anyone would’ve expected. The 20-team field is down to eight, and while pool play didn’t go the way Team USA would’ve envisioned, the dream team survived thanks to Italy’s extraordinary 4-0 run through Pool B. Now, the top four favorites from our initial World Baseball Classic power rankings still remain standing, but Italy looks capable of taking any team down. Before the quarterfinals begin Friday night in Houston and Miami, here are the countries still vying for a championship — ranked from eight to one — along with a player to watch and an X-factor for every team. – WBC Standings, Bracket, Schedule: How To Watch 8. Korea (2-2, Pool C Runners-Up) This is already a step forward for Korea, which failed to advance out of the first round of the last three tournaments. But this is also the only team in the tournament with multiple losses. Korea moved on over Australia and Chinese Taipei, who were also 2-2, due to tiebreaker rules. Every run mattered in a 7-2 Korea victory over Australia in a tense finish to the pool. A much tougher test awaits against the Dominican Republic in the quarterfinal. Considering Korea’s best attribute is its hitting — not a pitching staff that has a 4.50 ERA this WBC (and tallied a 7.55 ERA in the last one) — a tall task awaits against one of the scariest lineups in the tournament. Player to Watch: Do Yeong Kim Kim only has four hits in the tournament, but he has made them count. The 2024 KBO MVP hit a go-ahead two-run home run against Chinese Taipei (and later tied the game in the eighth with an RBI double in a game Korea ultimately lost in extra innings) and contributed an RBI single in the Australia win. There are MLB players on this roster, but both Kim — who became the youngest player in KBO history two years ago to join the 30-30 club as just 20 years old — and reigning KBO Rookie of the Year Hyun Min Ahn, whose sacrifice fly against Australia made the difference in advancing, also bring a lot of firepower to this lineup. X-factor: Bo Gyeong Moon The 25-year-old KBO slugger hit more than 20 home runs each of the last two seasons and has been the team’s top hitter this tournament. He knocked in four runs in the deciding game against Australia and leads all players in the WBC with 11 RBI. 7. Canada (3-1, Pool A Winners) Canada has advanced to the quarterfinals for the first time in the country’s history and has an argument to be one spot ahead here, especially considering its victory against Puerto Rico in Pool A. But a cruel reward awaits for its pool-play success with a date against Logan Webb and Team USA. Will Canada avenge its Winter Olympic gold-medal hockey losses on the diamond? It won’t be easy, but every player in the lineup has big-league experience and the pitching staff has allowed just six earned runs in the tournament. Player to Watch: Owen Caissie The Canada lineup features a 2024 All-Star in Josh Naylor among many MLB veterans, but one of the stars of the show is still making his name. Owen Caissie, Miami’s top position player prospect, is 7-for-14 with three doubles and a home run. He started and ended the scoring in the game against Cuba that sent Canada through to the quarterfinals by knocking in two runs. X-factor: Michael Soroka One former MLB All-Star already shut down the U.S. roster, when Team Italy’s Michael Lorenzen fired 4.2 scoreless innings in an upset win. Will Soroka make it a second? The 2019 All-Star allowed one run in three innings in a win against Colombia earlier in the tournament, and Canada will surely need Soroka to give the club length against USA’s lineup if it wants a chance of advancing. 6. Puerto Rico (3-1, Pool A Runners-Up) The home-field advantage is gone as the club travels from San Juan to Houston. Puerto Rico didn’t win its pool, but it did put on a show for its fans, particularly with a 10-inning walk-off victory against Panama that provided one of the most memorable highlights of the tournament. The insurance issues hit this country hard, particularly on the offensive side. The team is batting just .211 with one home run in the tournament, but Puerto Rico’s pitchers have the lowest ERA in the WBC (1.22). Player to Watch: Nolan Arenado He has made some fantastic plays in the field this tournament. He had a slow start to the tournament offensively, but perhaps his 3-for-4 day against Canada will get him going. X-factor: Darell Hernaiz With no Francisco Lindor or Carlos Correa, Puerto Rico needed another infielder to step up. Enter Hernaiz, who took advantage of the opportunity. It was Hernaiz’s walk-off homer that sent Hiram Bithorn Stadium into a frenzy. Does he have more magic in his bat? 5. Italy (4-0, Pool B Winners) This team is the story of the tournament. In a pool that included the best U.S. team ever assembled and a Mexico squad that nearly made it to the 2023 finals, it was Italy that emerged undefeated. The young squad, composed primarily of prospects and recent MLB call-ups, has the country believing. Player to Watch: Vinnie Pasquantino Pasquantino is the heart and soul of this squad. The captain played a vital role in recruiting the players on the roster, and while his value primarily came from his leadership and defense through the first three games of the tournament, the Royals slugger finally broke out against Mexico with the first three-homer game in WBC history (and his life). X-factor: Dante Nori On any night, any number of prospects on this team can carry the offense. But the best hitter of that group so far has been Nori, the Phillies’ 2024 first-round pick, who’s 6-for-12 with two homers and a double to start the tournament. That offensive production will be all the more important with standout catcher Kyle Teel out for the rest of the tournament with a hamstring injury. 4. Venezuela (3-1, Pool D Runners-Up) Venezuela already punched its ticket to the quarterfinals before its final pool-play game against the Dominican Republic, but that game still had major implications. Because Venezuela lost that game — despite a spirited ninth-inning charge — it finished as the runner-up of Pool D, which means a meeting against Japan and World Series MVP Yoshinobu Yamamoto awaits. Can Venezuela’s high-powered offense knock off the reigning champs? It certainly has a chance, even though the country has only advanced to the semifinals once before. Player to Watch: Luis Arraez On a team featuring Ronald Acuña Jr., William and Willson Contreras and 2025 All-Star Maikel Garcia, it’s hard to imagine another player rising to the top. But that’s what Arraez has done this tournament — not only with his bat-to-ball skills but also surprisingly with his power. He leads all players in the WBC with six extra-base hits after starting the tournament 7-for-14 with two home runs, four doubles and nine RBI. X-factor: Jackson Chourio After getting hit in the hand by a pitch during an exhibition, Chourio missed Venezuela’s first two games. He hasn’t gotten his bat going in the two games since returning, but the precocious Brewers outfielder — who just turned 22 on Wednesday — has been a 20-20 hitter each of his first two big-league seasons and could get going at any point. If he does, that could be the difference. 3. Japan (4-0, Pool C Winners) Japan went undefeated through pool play, as expected. But the three-time champs didn’t exactly bulldoze their way to this point, eking out an 8-6 win against Korea in the late innings and barely surviving a 4-3 victory against Australia. Still, Samurai Japan ranks in the top three in both OPS and ERA in this WBC — showcasing the talent both in the lineup and pitching staff — and remains the king of international competition until proven otherwise. Player to Watch: Shohei Ohtani There won’t be an Ohtani vs. Trout teammate-on-teammate matchup to end this WBC. Ohtani is only hitting during this competition, and boy, has he. The four-time MVP put on a show in the Tokyo Dome, starting the tournament 5-for-9 with two homers and a double, and he tends to rise to these sorts of occasions. X-factor: Masataka Yoshida On a team with Ohtani, Seiya Suzuki, Munetaka Murakami, Kazuma Okamoto and NPB Central League MVP Teruaki Sato, who leads the group so far in hits? That would be Yoshida, who’s 6-for-12 with two home runs. Yoshida was a below league-average hitter last year for the Red Sox, but he excelled in the 2023 WBC, and he’s doing so again — an encouraging sign for both Boston and Japan’s unrelenting lineup. 2. Dominican Republic (Pool D Winners, 4-0) There’s a strong argument to be made that Team D.R. should be the favorites. Three years ago, it was a massive disappointment when a loaded Dominican roster somehow failed to advance out of pool play, but this group looks more motivated and cohesive, and the 4-0 record so far is evidence. The Dominican players seem to be having a blast — quite literally. Eight different players in the lineup have already homered (often epically), and five have gone deep multiple times. The offense leads all teams in the WBC in runs, home runs and every slash-line category. When this lineup is clicking, there isn’t one better, and it’s hard to envision Korea’s pitchers holding it down. This group has a real shot to win the tournament for the first time since 2013. Player to Watch: Vladimir Guerrero Jr.? Juan Soto? Fernando Tatis? I mean, take your pick here. They’re all destroying the baseball. The trio of superstars have combined to hit .425 with six home runs. Against Venezuela in the Dominican Republic’s toughest test so far, Soto started the scoring with a homer in the first. Kete Marte and Guerrero followed with homers in the third. Tatis broke the game open with a three-run shot in the fourth. There’s nowhere for opposing pitchers to breathe. X-factor: Junior Caminero On a team full of Dominican luminaries, this feels like the official arrival of Caminero as one of the dudes. The 22-year-old’s earth-shattering home runs — and electric reactions — aren’t to be missed. The two he has launched this tournament both left his bat at more than 111 mph and traveled more than 400 feet. He seems built for this spotlight. 1. USA (3-1, Pool B Runners-Up) Considering the U.S. nearly didn’t even make it to the final round of eight, it’s fair to wonder if this dream team of All-Stars, MVPs and Cy Young Award winners is still worthy of the top spot. Even as it stormed its way through the first three games of the tournament, there were some surprising stretches of ineffectiveness for both the juggernaut offense and the electric arms on the most gifted baseball roster ever assembled. Still, this roster is just too talented to put anywhere else. If the U.S. can rebound from here and finish the job — as it was built to do — the stunning pool-play loss to Italy and the near exit that followed will just be a footnote in its WBC story. Player to Watch: Aaron Judge For all the boppers on this roster, the three-time MVP is the captain for a reason. Two of Judge’s four hits this tournament have left the yard, including a two-run shot that started the scoring in a crucial victory against Mexico, and his arm in right field has made a difference. He could have been the hero against Italy, too, but he struck out to end the game while representing the tying run. Now, how will he rally the troops and respond? X-factor: Brice Turang On a team filled with All-Stars and more decorated hitters, Turang has been a standout. The 2024 National League Platinum Glove Award winner is primarily on the roster for his defense, but he leads the team with four doubles and has an OPS over 1.000 in the tournament. Another name to watch is Twins starter Joe Ryan, who isn’t on the roster yet but is expected to join Team USA after the quarterfinal and would be lined up to make his WBC debut in the championship game.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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