Alaska Inter-Tribal Council v. State

110 P.3d 947, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 50, 2005 WL 858698
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 2005
DocketS-10844
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 110 P.3d 947 (Alaska Inter-Tribal Council v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alaska Inter-Tribal Council v. State, 110 P.3d 947, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 50, 2005 WL 858698 (Ala. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The appellants are plaintiffs who sued the State of Alaska, alleging that its allocation of law enforcement services violates the constitutional rights of residents of “off-road,” predominantly Alaska Native, communities. Among other things, the plaintiffs alleged that the state violates their federal and state rights to equal protection of the law by adopting or creating a de jure discriminatory system of law enforcement, by engaging in intentional racial discrimination in providing law enforcement services, and by discriminating against residents of off-road, outlying communities in providing law enforcement services. The superior court rejected all of their claims, in part on summary judgment and in part following a bench trial. The plaintiffs argue here only that it was error to reject their federal and state equal protection claims. We conclude that the superior court did not err in holding that they did not prove that the state adopted or established a de jure discriminatory law enforcement system. We also hold that it did not err in rejecting after trial their state equal protection claim that alleged that the state’s law enforcement system is linked to a discriminatory intent or purpose. The rejection of that claim after trial renders harmless their argument that *950 the court erroneously dismissed their corresponding federal claim on summary judgment. We also conclude that the superior court did not clearly err in holding that off-road and on-road communities are not similarly situated. We therefore affirm.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

This appeal concerns plaintiffs’ claims that the State of Alaska, in allocating state law enforcement services, unconstitutionally discriminates against residents of small rural, predominantly Native, communities that are not on the state road system. Plaintiffs refer to these communities as “off-road predominantly Native communities” and as “Native Villages.” The state describes them as “isolated,” “geographically cut off from the rest of the state,” “predominantly populated by Alaska Natives,” “off-road,” and “rural Alaska.” For simplicity, we will sometimes refer to them as “off-road” communities, and will sometimes refer to communities on the state road system as “on-road.”

Residents of Alaska receive law enforcement services in various ways. Most are served by police officers employed by their local governments. The Alaska Police Standards Council (APSC), which establishes minimum standards for police officers in Alaska, certifies these officers. 1 APSC issues certificates to persons who satisfy the standards for “police officers.” 2 A person may not be appointed a non-probationary police officer in Alaska without meeting those standards. 3 Law enforcement services provided by local municipal police departments are not at issue here.

Alaskans who live in places that do not have local certified police officers receive law enforcement services from the Alaska State Troopers, a division of the Alaska Department of Public Safety. Troopers are certified as police officers by the APSC. Troopers must receive at least 440 hours of training in law enforcement; they actually receive 1100 hours of training. In addition to law enforcement, troopers provide traffic enforcement, search and rescue coordination, Civil Air Patrol support, court security, sex offender registration, and prisoner transportation services.

The Alaska State Troopers are organized into five detachments encompassing large regions across the state. Detachment A covers Southeast Alaska. Detachment B covers Southcentral Alaska, including the Mat-Su Valley, portions of the Anchorage Bowl, and areas east to the Canadian border. Detachment C covers Western Alaska, Kodiak Island, and the Aleutian Chain. Detachment D covers Interior and Northern Alaska. Detachment E covers the Kenai Peninsula.

The communities and individuals bringing this lawsuit are located within Detachment C. It contains the greatest concentration of off-road Native villages, including sixty-five percent of the federally-recognized tribes in Alaska, and has an area nearly the size of Texas. 4

Troopers are not stationed in every community within each detachment. They are instead posted in hub communities that have transportation links to other areas within the detachment. In Detachment C, troopers are stationed in hub posts in Aniak, Bethel, Dill- *951 ingham, Galena, King Salmon, Kodiak, Kot-zebue, Nome, and St. Mary’s. King Salmon, with a population of approximately 440 in 2000, is the smallest of these “hub” communities. 5

Troopers in hub posts provide some law enforcement services to residents of outlying communities, but generally only respond to emergencies or reported felonies. Troopers in on-road posts also patrol roads within their jurisdiction. As of 2002 the starting salary for a trooper was approximately $19 per hour. As of 2002 there were 237 Alaska State Troopers, 185 of whom were below the rank of sergeant and actively engaged in case investigation.

Many off-road communities that have neither local municipal certified police nor a local trooper post receive some local law enforcement services from Village Police Officers (VPOs) or Village Public Safety Officers (VPSOs). VPOs and VPSOs are not certified by the APSC. A VPO may only serve in an incorporated “community off the interconnected Alaska road system, with a population of less than 1,000 persons.” 6 Similarly, a VPSO may only serve in “a community with a population of less than 1,000 individuals.” 7

The VPO program began when James M. Fitzgerald, then Commissioner of Public Safety, in 1959 proposed establishing a “constable” program to “provid[e] improved State Police service in remote villages and communities.” 8 In a letter to State Police District Commanders, Commissioner Fitzgerald wrote:

I am in receipt of daily requests from communities throughout Alaska for resident police services. This of course would be prohibitively expensive were we to utilize regular State Police Officers. Yet, there is a definite requirement in many of these villages for local police officers to “keep the peace.” This need cannot be met by sending State Police officers from cities which are several.hundred miles distant. A good deal of thought has been given to this matter, and I have considered the feasibility of appointing special State Police “Constables” amongst the native and eskimo population of these villages and communities_They would receive special training in effecting an arrest and in the enforcement of misdemeanor statutes ....

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Bluebook (online)
110 P.3d 947, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 50, 2005 WL 858698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaska-inter-tribal-council-v-state-alaska-2005.