AG Cox gives faulty figures on avalanche of amicus briefs

In a hearing before the Senate State Affairs Committee Thursday, Cox said he didn’t know how many amicus briefs had been approved over the last seven years under Dunleavy, but it was “well over 500, maybe even over 600.”

He said that he is approving amicus briefs “relatively on pace with that same sort of trend.” Not true.

Cox signed 110 amicus briefs in his first 215 days as attorney general. That puts him at a rate of about 190 per year. Had the previous Dunleavy AG’s done this from 2019 to 2025, they would have signed about 1,330 amicus briefs.

Credit Sen. Loki Tobin for spotting Cox’s inaccurate claim and noting that he was signing amicus briefs at a rate more than twice that of Dunleavy’s previous generals.

That Cox is unwilling or unable to give a clear answer on something this simple is alarming.

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AG Cox and his reckless attack on Anchorage school board

Temporary Attorney General Stephen Cox didn’t tell the straight story Thursday about the terrible judgement he and Education Commissioner Deena Bishop displayed last fall in spreading lies that officials of the Anchorage school district are teaching children not to believe in the Declaration of Independence or the U.S. Constitution.

General Cox should refresh his memory about his grandstanding exercise before his next confirmation hearing Friday at 1:30 p.m.

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Dermot Cole Comments
AG Stephen Cox wants his name on every right-wing lawsuit in America

Temporary Attorney General Stephen Cox, the transplanted Texan who has yet to celebrate his one-year birthday as a member of the Alaska Bar Association, faces confirmation hearings this week in two Senate committees.

One of the most striking aspects of his tenure is that Cox has stamped his name on right-wing court cases from elsewhere in America every couple of days, siding with the Fox News bubble on everything from cake decorations to firing members of the Federal Reserve.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Facing legislative rejection, attorney Wood quits Alaska Judicial Council

Longtime Alaska Attorney John W. Wood, 79, whose confirmation by the Legislature was in serious trouble, has resigned from the Alaska Judicial Council.

There were three major reasons he was likely to be rejected by the Legislature.

First, he was convicted in 1993 of failing to file his federal income taxes in 1987. On Feb. 10, 1995, the Alaska Supreme Court publicly censured Wood as a result of his conviction.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Audit blasts Crum $225 million investment plan that ignored clear state procedures

Former Revenue Commissioner Adam Crum ignored numerous safeguards and pressed ahead with his decision to try to put $225 million into long-term investments last year, neglecting to follow the advice of the chief investment officer of the Department of Revenue.

Legislative leaders and the CIO of the revenue department told Crum that all money in the Constitutional Budget Reserve should have remained in cash or in investments that could be turned into cash quickly, but Crum went ahead anyway with the $225 million plan three days before he quit to run for governor.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Trump's war brings crippling fuel prices to rural Alaska

The spike in world oil prices created by Donald Trump’s war with Iran is bringing grief to Fairbanks and Anchorage. In rural Alaska, however, the situation is a great deal worse. For many parts of rural Alaska, the survival of villages is on the line. What follows is a good overview of this complex situation by Gwen Holdmann of UAF and Ben Mallott of AFN.

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Dermot Cole Comments