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Alaska News

Legislature approves extra legal help for Alaskans who can’t afford attorneys

After four years of effort, the Alaska Legislature has passed a bill offering additional support for the underfunded organization that offers free legal help to Alaskans facing civil lawsuits.

“We’re so excited,” said Maggie Humm, executive director of the Alaska Legal Services Corporation. 

ALSC is the state’s largest provider of free legal assistance for survivors of domestic violence and abuse. It generally supports Alaskans who are unable to afford an attorney on their own.

Under state law, Alaska must provide criminal defendants with a defense attorney. No such mandate exists in civil cases, so the work falls to the ALSC, a nonprofit that lacks the budget to take on every request for help.

On Wednesday, the state Senate voted 17-3 to pass House Bill 48 and give the corporation 25% of all state court filing fees, up from 10%. The change is worth an extra $400,000 to the corporation.

The change does not affect funding for the Alaska Court System; the fees are otherwise used for general purposes, not the courts specifically.

Humm said earlier this year that ALSC provided legal help to roughly 6,200 Alaskans in 2024. By email on Wednesday, she said she expects another 800-850 people will be helped by the additional money.

Because the House passed HB 48 on a 27-13 vote in February, the Senate’s action on Wednesday will send the bill to Gov. Mike Dunleavy for final approval or veto.

Sen. Forrest Dunbar, D-Anchorage, proposed an identical bill in 2023, and while that bill passed the Senate, it never received a vote in the House before the 33rd Alaska Legislature expired in 2024.

That left Sara Hannan, D-Juneau, to reintroduce the bill last year and restart the legislative process. 

By email, Humm said that if signed into law, the bill “helps to ensure that more low-income Alaskans facing issues such as domestic violence, elder fraud, and access to earned benefits receive the legal help they need to protect their safety, stability, and dignity. Investing in legal services benefits all Alaskans by helping resolve problems early, before they become more serious and costly challenges for both individuals and our communities.”

ALSC has been trying since 2011 to pass a bill that reserves 25% of the state’s court fees for the corporation. In 2018, the Legislature passed a measure allocating 10%. 

The post Legislature approves extra legal help for Alaskans who can’t afford attorneys appeared first on Chilkat Valley News.

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Entertainment

The Arch Deluxe Glow-Up McDonald’s Never Gave You

With a few gourmet ingredient swaps and some homemade flair, our copycat McDonald’s Big Arch burger is a truly deluxe, fully-loaded burger masterpiece.

​Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews

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Alaska News

Kodiak fisherman will plead guilty to stealing trees from Alaska’s Tongass National Forest

Yellow cedar trees are seen in this Creative Commons-licensed photo by Richard Droker on Oct. 24, 2015. (Courtesy/Richard Droker)

A commercial fisherman in Kodiak will plead guilty to stealing 16 yellow cedar trees from the Tongass National Forest in Southeast Alaska.

Mitchell Keplinger, charged with theft of government property in April, was scheduled to appear in U.S. District Court for the District of Alaska on Wednesday for his formal arraignment.

Keplinger signed a plea deal the day after he was charged. Under the terms of the deal, he will avoid jail time but will pay $85,682.17 in restitution and be on probation for three years, a term that may later be reduced to no less than 18 months.

That would be significantly lower than the maximum penalty for theft of government property, which can be punished by up to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000.

Keplinger’s attorney did not return a phone call seeking comment on Wednesday.

According to the text of the plea deal, Keplinger and his boat, the 54-foot seiner Alinchak, were working in the Sitka herring seine fishery in late March and early April 2024. After the fishery closed, Keplinger used his boat and crew “to harvest Alaska yellow cedar trees on U.S. Forest Service lands near Sawmill Creek, Sugarloaf Mountain and in and around Sitka Sound.”

The plea deal states that Keplinger knew that a permit was required to cut the trees and knew that he did not have that permit.

“Keplinger’s crew, who were cutting the trees at his direction, had covered one of the stumps with moss to conceal the theft,” the plea deal states.

Paul Robbins, a spokesman for the U.S. Forest Service in the Tongass, said by email that yellow cedar “is important culturally, ecologically, and economically. Its strength is seen in durable wood products from canoe paddles to engineered timber frames and the unique rot-resistant chemistry of its heartwood allows it to live for over 1000 years and to persist long after death as sequestered carbon.”

The 16 trees allegedly taken by Keplinger yielded 22 logs, “belonging to the United States, with a market value of $4,476.25,” according to the plea deal.

Keplinger then used his boat to take the logs to Kodiak, the plea deal states. The restitution required under the plea deal includes the cost of transporting the logs back to Sitka and the Forest Service.

“Timber theft by individuals is not common on the Tongass National Forest,” Robbins said.

Court documents do not state why Keplinger took the trees or how the theft was discovered. A spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Alaska declined to talk about anything not covered by public court documents, as did Robbins with the Forest Service.

The post Kodiak fisherman will plead guilty to stealing trees from Alaska’s Tongass National Forest appeared first on Chilkat Valley News.

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Music

Meghan Patrick Shares Pregnancy Complications, Cancels Summer Tou

Meghan Patrick has just scrapped 11 tour dates as she prepares for the arrival of her first baby. Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

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Music

Meghan Patrick Shares Pregnancy Complications, Cancels Summer Tou

Meghan Patrick has just scrapped 11 tour dates as she prepares for the arrival of her first baby. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Food

Dip Olive Garden Breadsticks In This Combo And You’ll Never Eat Them Any Other Way

Olive Garden is famous for its unlimited salad (delish) but also for its soft, buttery breadsticks. A delight on their own, you can amp them up this way.

​Food Republic – Restaurants, Reviews, Recipes, Cooking Tips

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Hip Hop

Anderson .Paak and DEAN Crave ‘Aftertaste’

Anderson .Paak Aftertaste cover

Anderson .Paak has reunited with the South Korean alt-R&B artist DEAN for a new single titled “Aftertaste.”

Produced by Dem Jointz (Jennie, Eminem), “Aftertaste” captures the pair’s creative chemistry as they shoot their respective shots at love atop club rhythms and bedroom R&B. DEAN chooses to sweetly serenade his subject (“I want your aftertaste/Five star, three course, Michelin plate”), while .Paak cuts to the chase: “That bass, that shake, that walk, I’ma need that/That taste, that waist, that uh, that pretty-ass face, I’ma need that!”

The duo collaborated more than a decade ago on the 2015 single “Put My Hands On You.” The song draws inspiration from .Paak’s feature film directorial debut, K-POPS!, which will be available for streaming on Netflix on May 30. Set against the backdrop of a Seoul K-pop competition show, K-POPS! explores generational connection and cultural exchange through music. .Paak wrote and directed the movie, and also stars alongside his real-life son Soul Rasheed.

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Earlier this year, .Paak shared a song titled “Keychain,” which featured the girl group aespa. The track fused aespa’s genre-mixing K-pop with .Paak’s hip-hop, R&B, and funk roots while nodding at his own Black and Korean heritage. “Keychain” was the first release for what’s shaping up to be a broader K-POPS!-inspired album.

Earlier this year, .Paak scored his 15th Grammy nomination for Best Dance/Electronic Recording for “No Cap” with Disclosure. He has recently appeared on songs by Argentine duo CA7RIEL & Paco Amoroso (“Ay Ay Ay”) and NCT member TAEYONG (“Rock Solid”).

.Paak is currently on the road with Bruno Mars’ The Romantic Tour, performing as his alter-ego DJ Pee .Wee across stadiums in North America and Europe. The dates mark one of his largest global touring runs so far and reunite the Silk Sonic collaborators.

Listen to Anderson .Paak’s “Aftertaste” here.

​Discover more about the world’s greatest R&B artists | uDiscover Music

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Music

The Best New Shows on TV and Streaming This Week

From a ‘Regular Show’ revival to the Disney+ special ‘The Punisher: One Last Kill,’ here are the best new TV shows and streaming series for the week of May 11, 2026. Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

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Sports Fox

Missouri RB Ahmad Hardy in Stable Condition After Being Shot at a Concert

Missouri star running back Ahmad Hardy is in stable condition after being shot at a concert in Mississippi, school officials said Monday. Missouri’s football program announced in a statement that Hardy was shot early Sunday morning and that the All-America running back underwent surgery for the gunshot wound later that day. “Ahmad is deeply loved by his teammates, coaches, friends, family and fans,” the statement said. “We will continue to stand beside him and his family through this difficult time, offering our love, prayers, strength and support. A timeline for his return to football activities is unknown at this time.” Missouri said it would provide more information on Hardy’s status as it becomes available. The details of the shooting were not immediately clear. Hardy earned first-team Associated Press All-America honors last season and was one of three finalists for the Doak Walker Award given annually to college football’s top running back. He rushed for 1,649 yards to rank second among all Bowl Subdivision players. Hardy is from Oma, Mississippi. He started his college career at Louisiana-Monroe but transferred to Missouri before the 2025 season. Reporting by The Associated Press.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Sports Fox

Sound Smart: 4 Observations on the Latest NFL Storylines

It’s hope season, when everyone’s team could win the Super Bowl. That hope will only grow from here — all the way up until fans face reality in Week 1 of the 2026 season. For now, this is the first phase of best-shape-of-his-life season. NFL players will soon report to minicamp and some have already reported to OTAs. Rookies have, for the most part, completed their rookie minicamps. And so, if you ask the coaches, every player is in incredible shape — “the best shape of his life.” This is “Sound Smart,” where I try to spin forward, dive deeper and think outside the box. If I do my job, you’ll have a better understanding of what really happened over the past week of the NFL offseason. 1. IF THERE’S ONE THING YOU SHOULD KNOW, IT’S … Aaron Rodgers is back to his same old stuff. Aaron Rodgers was supposed to sign this weekend. He reportedly was going to be in Pittsburgh to meet with the Steelers to work out a deal to play his 22nd NFL season. But according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, he hasn’t yet met with the team, though his agent may have had some discussions. In any case, there is still no deal coming out of the weekend. Which is just so classic for Rodgers. He has a habit of not doing what everyone expects him to do. Everyone thought he’d finally sign this weekend. He didn’t. And so we’re in another holding pattern — waiting for Rodgers. It’s like this every offseason, with the QB dragging out the process and creating uncertainty, like he did with the New York Jets and like he did last year with the Steelers and is doing now with the Steelers. It’s just more of the same from Rodgers. And this is what Pittsburgh should’ve expected: a long wait. Meanwhile, the Steelers have an offense that’s ready to hum. There’s a nice infusion of experience and youth, like at receiver with veterans DK Metcalf and Michael Pittman Jr. and rookie Germie Bernard. At tight end, there’s up-and-comer Darnell Washington and proven producer Pat Freiermuth. At running back, there’s incumbent starter Jaylen Warren and newcomer Rico Dowdle. The offensive line has plenty of talent, even if it’s not exactly clear yet who will start where. All those guys are waiting for Rodgers. And in all likelihood, he’ll show up — like he always does — in time for training camp. But just because that has happened in the past doesn’t mean it’s going to happen again. And the situation got a little murky when new Arizona Cardinals head coach Mike LaFleur refused to rule out the possibility of adding Rodgers. “We’re focused on the guys coming in,” LaFleur said on the “Jim Rome Show” last week. “We’ve got a [QB] room that we’re excited to work with, and that’s solely where our focus is.” It’s not a yes. It’s not a no. Rodgers is a free agent. He can sign wherever. The Cardinals, like the Steelers, selected a quarterback in the draft. Arizona snagged former Miami QB Carson Beck to work underneath journeymen Jacoby Brissett and Gardner Minshew. Rodgers could easily show up and be QB1 for the Cardinals. And of course, he could easily leave the Steelers at the altar. No one wants to see Mason Rudolph again, but he’s the one who would probably start if Rodgers doesn’t return to Pittsburgh. The Steelers also have Will Howard, a sixth-rounder last year, and rookie Drew Allar, a developmental prospect who landed in the third round this year. I think Allar has a lot of potential, but the team would probably like to sit him for a full year. All that makes Rodgers a crucial part of Pittsburgh’s plan. And as long as Rodgers is out there — undecided — the Steelers are hanging in limbo. They are essentially committed to him, even if he hasn’t officially committed to them. That’s how it always goes with Rodgers. But it’s at this time of year that I always wonder: Why did the Steelers sign up for this — again? Why did Pittsburgh want more of this? Rodgers isn’t anything more than a bridge quarterback at this point. He isn’t what he was. And yet teams talk themselves into another year with the guy. When they do, this is how he repays them. 2. BUY & SELL BUY: Saints QB Tyler Shough Not only was he a pleasant surprise in his rookie season, he also saw the team throw an enormous amount of support behind him during the offseason. New Orleans added RB Travis Etienne and guard David Edwards. The Saints then drafted receivers Jordyn Tyson and Bryce Lance and tight end Oscar Delp. Second-year head coach Kellen Moore is not hesitating to build out a core of playmakers in New Orleans. Shough should play point guard in the middle of it all. SELL: Browns QB Shedeur Sanders If Deshaun Watson has the advantage in the QB competition, then something has gone very, very wrong for Sanders. And if Sanders can’t make things work in Cleveland this year, he might be out of the league by 2028 — and maybe even 2027. BUY: Vikings edge Dallas Turner Minnesota traded Jonathan Greenard, and given the fact that he had 12 or more sacks in 2023 and 2024, the Vikings did it in a relatively quiet way, netting a third-rounder in a package during the draft. That felt like a real show of support of one of the league’s quickly ascending players in Turner. The Vikings also drafted a pair of defensive tackles to work with Turner and help take away some of the attention. It should be a big year for the young edge player. SELL: Cowboys edge Donovan Ezeiruaku Ezeiruaku figures to get more playing time in 2026, but only because the Cowboys did little to bring in competition. In his final five games of the 2025 season, Ezeiruaku managed just 11 pressures. On the season, he finished with two sacks, and he played the most snaps among the Cowboys’ defensive ends. It was a staggering lack of production for a defense that desperately needed edge help. BUY: Eagles WR Makai Lemon With A.J. Brown likely leaving town and the Eagles (yet again) installing a new offensive system, Philly must have targeted USC All-American Lemon in the draft with a role in mind for OC Sean Mannion’s offense. That’s why you trade up for a player you love (which is what the Eagles did). Lemon might have the most catches of any rookie receiver. SELL: Browns WR Jerry Jeudy The Browns drafted receiver KC Concepcion in the first round and then took receiver Denzel Boston in the second round. Cleveland just hired coach Todd Monken, whose background is in offense. When there’s a new crop of skill players and a new coach, those new guys are often going to get every opportunity to succeed. And that means the veteran Jeudy likely will not. BUY: Lions WR Isaac TeSlaa Remember when the Lions traded three third-round picks to move up and get TeSlaa? They loved him in the draft last year. And while he didn’t see crazy volume as a rookie, he had a touchdown on nearly half of his catches. His stat line was 16 receptions for 239 yards and six touchdowns. There’s something there. I bet the Lions try to get more out of him this year. SELL: Saints TE Juwan Johnson I just listed all of Shough’s playmakers and — if I’m being honest — I forgot to mention Johnson. He has, for a long time, seemed like a player on the verge of a breakout year. And he finally got it in 2025. Unfortunately, his successor arrived in the draft (Delp) and the team brought in more pass-catchers to eat into Johnson’s workload. It looks like it’s downhill from here for Johnson. BUY: Commanders RB Jacory Croskey-Merritt This dude was supposed to be the next big thing at running back in Washington, especially after Austin Ekeler went down with an injury. The Commanders, however, refused to trust Croskey-Merritt with a sizable workload. But even with Washington throwing darts at running back — adding Rachaad White, Jerome Ford and rookie Kaytron Allen — I think Croskey-Merritt is the most talented, by far. Talent should win, especially in that group of ho-hum RBs. 3. HE SAID WHAT!? “We kind of viewed him as a problem, not a prototype.” Buccaneers edge Rueben Bain Jr. took one of the draft’s most notable slides. Early in the process, he looked like a potential top-five pick — and then his arm length measured shorter than anticipated. At that point, he looked like a top-10 draft choice — but then news broke that he was involved in a 2024 car accident in which a person later died. Whether because of those factors or not, Bain landed at No. 15 to the Bucs. A tough draft day, however, can lead to a long career. Bain is a sensational fit for the Todd Bowles defense in Tampa. “Everybody’s got a prototype. And we kind of viewed him as a problem, not a prototype,” Bucs GM Jason Licht told “The Pat McAfee Show.” “I’ve seen that movie and it’s called: ‘A.Q. Shipley playing a decade in the league.’ Rueben’s arms are a lot longer than A.Q.’s, too — probably by about five inches. … We just saw him as a game wrecker at the college [level].” Bain was a full-time player at Miami, where he had 9.5 sacks and 15.5 tackles for loss last season. He also added an interception for good measure. He’ll likely settle right into a starting role alongside defensive tackle Vita Vea and emerging pass-rusher Yaya Diaby. During the pre-draft process, I spoke with Bain about how much he played in his final college season on the path to the national championship game. “Just want to be on the field at all times,” Bain told me. He should get the chance to do just that in Week 1. Consider him a legitimate option to win Defensive Rookie of the Year. [2026 NFL Draft Superlatives: Who Wins OROY, DROY? Biggest Steal? Best Upside?] 4. OFFSEASON ODDITY The NFL and the officials have a new collective bargaining agreement, and fans should be absolutely thrilled. I don’t blame you for not paying attention to the officiating negotiations with the NFL. I don’t blame you if this is the first you’ve heard of it. Labor disputes don’t make for the most compelling news, particularly when the players aren’t involved. But the NFL and the NFLRA have agreed to a deal that will keep the officials on the field for 2026 and beyond. The NFL product is vastly better when it has its officiating teams in place. Some may remember just how badly and quickly things fell apart in 2012 when the officials staged a lockout. Infamously, that was the year of the “Fail Mary,” where a game ended on a Hail Mary catch that, on the field, one official called incomplete at the same time another official called the play a catch. The touchdown counted, and the Seahawks beat the Packers 14-12. But it was a messy controversy, and the clearest example that the NFL needed its officials back on the field. That’s because the fill-in officials came from all sorts of backgrounds, including the high school level. The training wasn’t enough to prepare them for the NFL game. And their experience came from a version of the game that was much, much slower than the NFL’s product. Bottom line is, this was a massive win for fans. The current officials might not always get it right, but they are — without a doubt — the best referees out there. The NFL is lucky to have them back for years to come.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports