"I can't claim a Bill Clinton and say that I never inhaled," Palin said in a 2006 interview.
Back in 2006, Anchorage Daily News political reporter Kyle Hopkins did a roundup on some of the issues surrounding the Republican primary race for governor, the election in which Sarah Palin upset incumbent Frank Murkowski.
One of the issues in his story was marijuana policy.
Hopkins asked Murkowski, Palin, John Binkley and Andrew Halcro -- the Republican candidates for governor -- about their take on marijuana and if they'd ever smoked.
Palin was the only one who openly admitted to smoking pot, though Halcro and Binkley alluded to it.
From the ADN:
Palin doesn't support legalizing marijuana, worrying about the message it would send to her four kids. But when it comes to cracking down on drugs, she says methamphetamines are the greater threat and should have a higher priority.
Palin said she has smoked marijuana -- remember, it was legal under state law, she said, even if illegal under U.S. law -- but says she didn't like it and doesn't smoke it now.
"I can't claim a Bill Clinton and say that I never inhaled."
A quote on R.A. Dillon's Alaskan Abroad blog is what led me to Hopkins' story:
"Gov. Palin is one of many millions of Americans who have used marijuana and gone on to live productive, wildly successful lives. That she used marijuana is no big deal, but what is a big deal is that she thinks that the 100 million Americans who have used marijuana, including herself, belong in jail. That wouldn't be good for her kids. Perhaps most importantly, Alaska is one of 12 states that allow the medical use of marijuana, and one in five Americans currently live in those states The GOP ticket should embrace the time-honored Republican principle of local control by promising to end the federal government's war on sensible medical marijuana laws in both red and blue states." – Rob Kampia, executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project in Washington.
Saturday, August 30, 2008
Palin and pot
Monday, August 25, 2008
Soldiers shot in Players House of Rock parking lot
From KTUU.com:
by Casey Grove
Sunday, Aug. 24, 2008
ANCHORAGE, Alaska-- Anchorage police are piecing together what led to the shooting of two men at a midtown bar early Sunday morning.
The two men shot in the parking lot of Players House of Rock are active-duty soldiers at Fort Richardson, says the post's public affairs office.Police say at about 4 a.m. witnesses reported hearing an argument between at least three men in the parking lot of the Players House of Rock.
Witnesses say they heard gun shots and police arrived to find two men with gun shot wounds to the torso.
Eileen Zaiser who lives next door says every Friday and Saturday night the parking lot is "out of control" and the bar's security is too lax.
Zaiser says she's repeatedly complained to police about the problems.
"I had just spoken to a sergeant at length about the problems, and as soon as he took off in his patrol car, I heard two gun shots, really loud, and I called 911. I went outside and came over to the parking lot there, and a man was lying on the ground, writhing, holding his stomach," said Zaiser.Players House of Rock co-owner Al Choy says the shooting had nothing to do with the club.
Both victims were taken to local hospitals where police say they underwent surgery and are in critical but stable condition Sunday.
Investigators do not have any suspects and ask anyone with information to contact the Anchorage Police Department.
Friday, August 22, 2008
Technical difficulties
Posts to Los Anchorage have been pretty spotty lately because the internet connection at Los Anchorage World Headquarters has been down. We're not sure if that's due to technical problems, or if it's simply a deadbeat roommate who hasn't paid the bill.
In either case, Los Anchorage will be back in full force as soon as we have internet access.
Thanks, and feel free to send ideas to casey.grove[INSERT AT SYMBOL HERE]gmail.com
Contributions are welcome and appreciated at Los Anchorage. That means emailing links, story ideas, photos, or just shooting the shit. Click "Send" early and often.

Monday, August 4, 2008
Ted Stevens: What a difference a year makes

I'd been looking and looking for this article I wrote about Sen. Ted Stevens back in '07 -- and, despite internet archiving trouble at the Anchorage Press, I found it, tucked away in an email.
It was a short item about how he'd filed to run again in 2008, and how it'd be his last term as a senator. It seemed completely innocuous at the time, and I remember back in March of '07 asking Stevens a question about the election -- then about a year and a half away -- while standing in his Anchorage office. My now-coworker Mike Ross looked at me like I was crazy to ask such a mundane question.
Before 2007, Stevens was almost guaranteed to win. In 2008, he's the highest profile suspect to be indicted in Alaska's corruption scandal.
Back when I wrote it, Stevens and his spokesman, Aaron Saunders, said some things that seem telling now. Here's a couple reporting tidbits of interest:
Just in case
When I asked Stevens who among Alaska Republicans might follow in his footsteps and become a senator, he mentioned that he'd heard of some "placeholders," but he didn't really name anyone. He said he'd heard of some Republicans that would be ready to run in '08, just in case.
“You know, accidents happen, and people as old as me, well, nobody wants an accident,” Stevens said. “Something might happen along the line, and they think, ‘Well, I’ll just file in case.’"
Did he know, in March of '07 that he was being investigated?
In August of '07, the FBI served a search warrant at Stevens' Girdwood home. The connection to Veco Corp. became known, making readings of Stevens' political future a bit murkier. And that probably gave some contenders hope that they'd have a chance to beat Stevens in the Republican primary or the general election.
Sen. Mark Begich?
When I asked Stevens' spokesman Aaron Saunders who in the Democratic Party they expected as an opponent in '08, Saunders told me, off the record, that they had heard Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich would run. That prediction was spot-on and doesn't seem surprising at all now (and I think Aaron will forgive me for going on the record with that). But remember, this was back in February of 2007 -- months before the Veco-Stevens connection was widely known -- and I, for one, didn't think Begich would have a chance running against Stevens.
Those tidbits from my reporting might be more interesting than the actual story, which itself, might not be all that interesting. But here it is, nonetheless, rescued from the vault:
From the March 8, 2007 edition of the Anchorage Press Flashlight section:
Stevens looks to ’08
by Casey Grove
The 2008 election is still more than a year and a half away, but Senator Ted Stevens says he’s already concerned about it.
Stevens says he’s the “No. 1 target” for those trying to unseat incumbent Republicans.
“You’re never going to see a campaign that’s going to be as horrendous in the U.S. Senate,” he said of the ‘08 election. “It’s going to be politics every day.”
Stevens added, “I’ve never seen this height of political activity this early in the cycle.”
Riding a wave of dissent, perhaps from the Iraq War, Democrats retook the U.S. Senate in 2006. Stevens, 83, is now in his 39th year serving in the Senate. He’s the oldest and most senior Republican.
“If you want to set off a cascade, that’s the person to beat,” Stevens said.
“The person that doesn’t worry about it, running at my age, becomes vulnerable.”
Stevens said the way to counter the coming onslaught is by being proactive: learning the issues, campaigning and raising money, and watching one’s back.
“We’ve run into a lot more antagonism this year,” Stevens said.
Stevens has had trouble since some comments he made on net neutrality, comparing the internet to a “series of tubes” and referring to sending an email as sending “an internet.” He attracted the derisive attention of the blogging community.
Lately there seems to be a pattern, Stevens said, with bloggers propagating false or misleading information, which is then picked up by other media “like a rolling snowball.”
As for possible challengers, Stevens said he’s heard rumors, some of Democratic challengers, but he wouldn’t name names. He said he’s also heard word of possible “placeholders” from within the Alaska Republican Party who would run if Stevens were unable to for some reason. “You know, accidents happen, and people as old as me, well, nobody wants an accident,” he said. “Something might happen along the line, and they think, ‘Well, I’ll just file in case.’"
While campaigning in Alaska and visiting remote communities is difficult, campaigning is really a lot of fun, Stevens said.
“You get to use somebody else’s money to travel around the state and see your friends. There’s increased opportunity for fishing.”
-30-
And, if you check your local headlines, Stevens is back in Alaska campaigning.
From the Anchorage Daily News: Stevens:"I am innocent of the case that's been made against me"