Rotten Mango - Young Woman Self Exits W/ Gun Longer Than Arms In Mayor's Home - 2 Yrs Later Another Girl Is Dead
Episode Date: March 26, 2026Two officers from the Kotzebue, Alaska Police Department enter a living room and ask the two small children watching SpongeBob, “Did someone call the police?” One just points to a bedroom doo...r. Inside, a man, Anthony, cradles a young woman’s body drenched in blood. He says she’s his girlfriend, Jennifer. That he too, was just watching SpongeBob in the living room when he heard a ‘pop’ from the bedroom and found her with a ‘self-inflicted’ gun shot wound to her chin. An investigation begins. The rifle used measures 27 and 1/8th inches long from barrel to trigger. Jennifer’s arm is 26 and 3/16th inches long. Nothing comes of it. The medical examiner observes red strangulation marks around Jennifer’s neck. The investigation is over within one day. Jennifer’s death is declared a self exit. They don’t test for gunshot residue on the boyfriend, Anthony. They don’t look into his past record of abuse and SA. After all, Anthony lives with his father, Clement Richards Senior, the mayor of the Northwest Arctic Borough. Surely this was a horrific one time tragic event… Two years later another young woman’s body is found one again, at the mayor’s home. Full show notes available at RottenMangoPodcast.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Bada being, baddaboo.
6 p.m. in Katsbue, Alaska.
It means absolutely nothing because in Katsbyu, it's always either very bright or always very dark.
There is, I mean, that's really not a metaphor.
This is not something deeper.
It's always either sunny all day long until you drive yourself crazy at night because you need to block out any light that's coming in through the window so that you can fall asleep at 11 p.m.
Or you get three hours of sunlight the entire day and then you just live in.
perpetual darkness, there is no middle ground like most places. To give you a point of reference,
in New York City during the summer, you get about 14 hours of sunlight. During the winter, you get
closer to 10 hours of sunlight. But it is pretty standard. You know, usually during the winter,
sunsets at 5 p.m. During the summer, it's closer to 8 p.m. That's not what happens in Katsbue.
Katzibu is above the Arctic Circle in Alaska, which means the winters are almost pitch black all night
all day long. But it's in the U.S.? Yeah, in Alaska.
Oh, okay. It's actually closer to Russia than it is to Anchorage, Alaska. It's very interesting.
Now, the area north of the Arctic Circle is probably only about 4% of the Earth's entire surface.
And all you really need to know is that if you live above the Arctic Circle, things like daytime, nighttime, it doesn't mean anything.
During the wintertime, it feels like Katzibu has some sort of dread countdown that starts in September.
September starts, you wake up, sun rises at noon, 11.57 a.m. noon, when half the workday is already over for most of everybody else. And then the sun sets before you're even out of the office at 3.21 p.m. barely three hours and 24 minutes of actual sun. But that's not even the worst of it. Each day of early December, shave off another five to seven minutes of daylight. In Katzibu, the shortest day of the year is December 21st, sun rises just right at
around 1 p.m. and sets at 2.39 p.m. You get two hours and five minutes of sunlight and that's it. And also,
this is not two hours of high UV, go outside and just get blessed with the vitamin D, just blasting in
the summer sun. That's not what it is. The sun does not go more than a few degrees over the horizon.
So it feels like a very eerie, two hour long golden hour. And then it's just gone. And sometimes it's not even
just pitch black. There's a lot of residents.
they say that they actually prefer pitch blackness in the winter,
but they have these hours that they call blue hours.
And everything is like a really haunting, intense, saturated blue.
It's not bright, it's not dark, but it's just like everything is a blue tint.
During the winter, Alaskans have a term called big dark.
It's just like a heavy weight that you feel during the wintertime.
Even though there might not be anything inherently wrong, you just feel like everything is wrong.
It's likely due to the melatonin production in the body.
and serotonin also crashes when there's less light input.
So you have surging melatonin, falling serotonin,
and Alaska has one of the highest rates of seasonal depression in the entire country.
Wow.
Someone who moved to a town north of the Arctic Circle thought,
it's going to be easy.
It's going to be easy to acclimate because, quote,
you know, I knew I would take some time to acclimate for it,
but I thought I prepared.
I love the cold.
I love the dark.
I've always wanted to go somewhere dark and cold
because I feel like I would thrive in this climate.
I was dead wrong.
I did not realize how much humans rely on light and dark cycles.
I've tried to become more physically active by going on daily walks and taking all my vitamin D supplements,
but my mind is beyond fucked.
And then the minute that you adjust, it's time for summer.
Starting in May, Katzibu suddenly never gets dark.
The sun rises at 5.53 a.m.
And then it sets at midnight.
Damn.
You've nearly 18 hours of sunlight.
But that's just the beginning.
Eventually, the sun is going to be up for close to 23 hours.
That is crazy to be living in a place like this.
And when that, you know, 23 hours of the 24 hours,
that doesn't mean that you have that one hour of like pitch darkness.
It never really transitions into dark either.
So it just always feels like daytime.
And that is when a call is made to 911.
6 p.m. May 2018.
You don't even know if the sun is setting anytime soon.
It probably isn't.
911 gets a call and cuts a beautiful.
that someone might be dead.
Two officers from the local police department,
they drive up to the house in question.
They walk up to the front door,
and it doesn't really strike them
as the type of house
where something bad is happening inside.
They swing open the front door.
It's open.
And in the living room,
there are two small children
watching SpongeBob on the TV.
It's kind of like a weird feeling.
One of the officers gets one of the kids' attention.
Did someone call the police?
One of the young boys points to the bedroom door.
Okay, very sorry.
strange. The officers start walking closer to the door in question. It's partially open and when they
peer in, there is a man holding a woman's body. This man is coated in blood, his clothes are soaked in
blood, his arms, his pants. Any part of this man named Anthony that the police can see, there is
blood coding Anthony. And the woman that he's holding is this small 25 year old Inupiac indigenous
woman. She's in a fetal position. There's this 22-count.
caliber rifle laying nearby and the officers glance around and they do notice blood spatter on the floor,
the dresser, mattress, blankets. There's even a few plastic totes on the ground nearby. That's covered in
blood splatter. She's been shot under her chin. Her name is Jennifer Kirk and she's now dead. The man
holding her body, Anthony, he speaks up first. He's her boyfriend. He says he was in the living room
watching SpongeBob with the two kids when he heard this pop sound go off. It sounded like a
firework inside the bedroom, so he runs in, he finds her on the ground bleeding heavily from her head,
quote, I have no idea what happened.
When you say under her chin, like right here?
Under her chin.
From bottom to top?
Mm-hmm.
The investigators, they place Jennifer's body into a body bag to transport to the medical
examiner's office.
That bag is sealed with a tag number 01059.
The investigators, they notice a few things.
I mean, first, they pull out a tape measure.
They measure the rifle from the tip of the barrel.
So this is where the bullet comes out.
It exits the gun at that point.
And then the tip of the trigger.
Not the handle, not the other end of the gun, the trigger.
You need to press this for the gun to fire.
It is 27 and 1 eighth inches long.
And then they measure Jennifer's arm.
Jennifer's arm is 26 inches and 3.16 inches long.
Her arm is shorter than the trigger to the barrel.
Her arm is shorter than the gun.
but they believe she self-exited.
Then at the morgue, as the medical examiner unseals the body bag number 010959,
they notice red markings around Jennifer Kirk's neck, and there's clear handprints around her neck.
So Jennifer Kirk did not just sustain a fatal gunshot wound.
She was strangled before she died.
The investigators, they do not ask the next obvious questions.
Instead, they close the case within one day of investigating, and they state that Jennifer
Kirk sadly, tragically self-exited. They don't ask the man Anthony to test his hands or his clothes
for gunshot residue. They don't look into his past because he has a past record of abuse and
SA. They barely question him. They don't canvas the neighborhood. They don't interview anyone
that might know something. They also don't go into the house and turn it upside down,
searching every square inch for any sort of evidence. Because after all, it would be kind of weird
to search the mayor's house, right? Anthony Richards, the man covered in blood.
is the son of Clement Richards Senior, the mayor of the Northwest Arctic Bureau.
How could a mayor's son ever turn out to be a killer?
And even if they find another body in that house two years after Jennifer Kirk,
do they really need to do something about it?
We would like to thank today's sponsors who have made it possible for Rotten Mingo
to support the Manilac Association.
They are an indigenously operated nonprofit that provides high quality,
culturally relevant health, social, and tribal services in the Northwest Arctic Bureau.
This episode's partnerships have also made it possible to support Rot Mango's growing team,
and we would also like to thank you guys for your continued support.
I will say that there is this huge expose done with ProPublica and Anchorage Daily News
with the journalist Kyle Hopkins.
It's so informative.
They went and they spoke to so many people in town.
They did investigative boots on the ground, investigative work,
and it's just a great piece of journalism, so please go take a look at that.
that. With that being said, today's case involves mentions of self-exit, DV, gun violence. However,
the biggest thing to be aware of, it involves missing and murdered indigenous peoples. There's
going to be especially sensitive conversations about institutional racism, systemic neglect,
police negligence, misconduct, prosecutorial failures. So please, if you feel overwhelmed,
take a break, and I will see you in the next one. Statements and quotes have been condensed
for brevity. Everything research for this video was found publicly available and that is in
comment statement, speculations, and accusations are not our own and or only mentioned for
comprehensive reporting.
So with that being said, nobody has been charged, but I have my opinions.
But let's get into it.
Really?
Yeah.
Being a political figure is all about how you deal with a scandal almost all the time.
It's a scandal that is caused by their own actions.
But nevertheless, it is how they bounce back from the scandal.
It's not even about the scandal itself.
Sometimes it requires you take the shit that is thrown at you for good reason.
You deserve shit thrown at you.
But then you take it and you throw it back at somebody else.
You think I'm bad?
Go look at that person.
Did you see what they said?
Sometimes it's all about ignore the giant elephant in the room.
You ignore it so much that everybody else gets used to the elephant being in the room.
It's like how you forget how to blink or breathe because you're just always doing it.
You're always breathing and blinking without addressing it.
So everyone forgets that the elephant is in there.
And then once in a while, someone will walk into the press room and go,
holy shit, there's an elephant in here.
And everyone goes,
I forgot about the fucking elephant.
Whereas sometimes the comeback requires
going to jail and serving your time.
It feels like most mayors
have their scandal at some point in their careers.
Are you really a politician
if you're not probably in the Epstein files?
Former mayor of D.C., Marianne Berry,
thankfully not in the Epstein files.
I will say that this is historically
one of the biggest mayoral scandals
and this is not me saying
that this is like the worst thing a mayor has done. It's just historically known as a massive
mayor's scandal. It's the crack scandal. And I will say for all that Marianne Barry and all that he did
that was kind of bad, okay, because most in all mayors seem to be bad, there always is some level
of corruption. The standard is all mayors are bad. Some just do a little bit more good than bad for
their own citizens. It does need to be noted that Marianne Barry had some very bad streaks.
Marianne Barry was the former D.C., Washington, D.C. mayor, and he was known as the Chocolate King.
Chocolate King.
Of the Chocolate City. They called it the Chocolate City.
And he did, I will say, like, people love Marion.
But he was known for having a lot of hot takes. He offended Polish Americans by calling them a slur.
He then stated that he would like to, quote, do something about these Asians coming in, opening businesses, those dirty shops, they ought to go.
Then he offended Filipino Americans by pointing out that there's so many nurses immigrating from the Philippines in.
to the United States to, you know, save lives.
And he says, and no offense, but let's grow our own teachers.
Let's grow our own nurses so that we don't have to be scrounging around in our community
clinics and other kinds of places having to hire people from somewhere else.
So he managed, yeah, to piss off a lot of communities, but he loved his own people.
And for that, a lot of people just could not fault him.
As mayor of D.C., he increased the share of government contracts awarded to black-owned businesses
from 5% to 40%.
He also required private corporations doing businesses in Washington, D.C., to appoint women and minorities to leadership positions.
One tribute about Barry's work, says, quote, single-handedly expanded the black middle class in D.C. and created a generation of black millionaires in a time when economic and cultural segregation was rampant.
He was also notorious for, like, driving around the city.
And if he saw someone on the street, he'd be like, do you have a job?
And they would say, no.
And they'd get a job by the afternoon.
He wanted everyone to have a job.
Yeah. Wow.
I would hope that his discriminatory remarks against Asians, Polish people, I mean,
I hope it was a big learning moment for him, a moment of growth. But regardless, he won re-election
countless times. And regardless of these remarks, he just keeps getting elected and elected.
And he honestly did change the trajectory of so many families' lives, probably with generational impact.
Like, ultimately, Mary and Barry did a lot of good. But then he smoked crack. And this was a huge,
So for years, federal investigators, they've been trying to get Barry on something.
You have to wonder if it's almost like they chose their target and they're just waiting for something to come up so that they could take Mary and Barry down.
They didn't like that a black Democrat kept winning mayor for Washington, D.C.
When was this?
Oh, this was a long time ago, decades ago.
He's since passed.
Okay, okay.
But this is probably one of the biggest mayoral scandals that there ever was.
this is like back when mayors did regular crimes of corruption and drugs
and now they do like Epstein crimes
so you know they get Mayor Barry's ex-girlfriend come in
the feds the FBI and she's also under pressure
the FBI are being overwhelmingly nice to her
and she agrees to set up a room a hotel room outfitted with two secret cameras
courtesy of the FBI and just three days before Mayor Barry is going to announce
that he's going to run for mayor for the fourth term
He walks into the hotel room and he wants to rekindle this relationship romantically.
She denies.
Especially because there's just another strange woman sitting in the corner of the room.
Her name is Wanda.
But her name is not really Wanda because she's an FBI undercover agent.
And so she's sitting there and she's like, oh, I'm just a friend of your ex-girlfriend.
Do you want to smoke crack?
Mayor Barry is like, no.
She then asks him again.
Are you sure you don't want to smoke crack?
He's like, no, I don't.
want to smoke crack and then she brings it up again and again and finally mayor berry picks up the
crack pipe inhales twice and a second later the door is kicked open FBI agents DC police they arrest
mayor Barry to which he responds and this is now the viral quote goddamn bitch set me up like
this set me up ain't that a bitch those are his words and that's why people love mayor Barry okay
like people love mayor Barry and then he looks at but they did say him up
They literally said it.
I mean, I don't even know how this is not entrapment.
It's just straight up entrapment at this point.
She asked so many times, are you sure you don't want to smoke crack?
So why the fucking girlfriend sold out like that?
I think they were scaring her.
I think they were scaring the shit out of her.
Now, I do want to know, Mary Berry did a lot of drugs.
Like, it is a truth.
He's done a lot of drugs, all various sorts of drugs.
This was a huge scandal back then because the press is racist.
So first of all, the setup itself is disturbing.
I think it's entrapment.
And then instead of the articles afterwards, just saying,
oh my gosh, our mayor was caught doing drugs,
which would have been the headlines had a white mayor been caught doing cocaine.
There is the persistent racism of a black man smoking crack,
which, by the way, I just want to note that there is a sentencing ratio of 100 to 1 between crack
and powder cocaine, which technically the molecule high is like the same thing,
which means if you have two sugar packets of crack,
you get a mandatory five-year prison sentence.
Meanwhile, you'll probably see an influencer do more than that of cocaine in a carbone
or no-boo bathroom on any given Saturday night.
So in order to get a mandatory five-year sentence for cocaine, you need to have over a pound
of cocaine.
Perhaps the more cleanly, morally indisputable act is that he tried to rekindle his relationship
with his ex in the hotel room while he's married.
And his wife did support him through the entire trial.
So anyway, he goes to jail for six months in federal prison.
And once he's released, he runs for mayor again and he wins.
He's back?
Yeah, he's back.
Yeah.
Wow.
He has since passed, but yeah, he was back.
This is like a crazy comeback from mayor.
This is, I mean, a lot of political consultants, they study Mayor Barry.
Wow.
So people actually like the fact that he was like,
the bitch sent me up. Yeah, they love that he was very real about it. And they also love the fact that he
was dealing with addiction. Because I think a lot of people could relate to it. And again,
it's like, wouldn't you rather your mayor be doing drugs than committing crimes against women and
children? Because nowadays, it seems like every other mayor is at risk of being found in the
files or being accused of essay. But even that would be more easily navigated than a situation
that Mayor Clement Richards Sr. finds himself in.
Monday morning, police are called to the mayor's house.
You know how this goes? You've heard it before.
A woman. Inouipag.
Found in the house dead.
Strangulation marks.
Boyfriend is the mayor's son.
You already know this story from May of 2018.
When the sun had no intention of setting, it's hot outside, the sun is up.
Jennifer Kirk is found dead at the foot of the bed.
But this is not that Monday morning.
This is March 9th, 2020.
It's 8.32 a.m.
The sun hasn't even gotten up.
It won't rise until 9.30 a.m.
The temperature is 13 degrees below zero.
And the police find another body.
30 years old, Anua Pag, beaten, strangulation marks around her neck,
and her name is Susanna Norton, but everybody calls her sousu.
She shares the same birthday as Jennifer Kirk, August 25.
first and both of them are found dead in the mayor's house so mayor lives in this house too yes
with the son yes and in the beginning who are those two kids watching tv so the son's kids with
jennifer kirk's kids oh that's jennifer kirk's kids how old are they they're described to be juveniles
oh that's crazy okay the term op book is not like a new term it's been around for a while it's a research book
the opponent, the opposition,
and a political race.
So what you do when you're trying to run for mayor
or any elected office where there is a lot of money
funneled into the campaigns, you hire two to three
specialists. They're called researchers,
and you pay them anywhere between $20,000 to $80,000
to do a full workup of the inside and outside
of your opposition.
The researchers will go and dig through archived old news,
reports, voting records, campaign
finance filings, social media posts, an op-book researcher says,
I was hired because they saw the opposition as a threat.
My job was to try and kill him.
I mean, not literally, but you get what I'm saying, right?
Let's say you do find some dirt on the opposition.
What do they do then?
Well, they study it for the debates.
But there's been this longstanding tradition,
it seems, that the researchers will share that material with a journalist
on the condition of no fingerprints.
The journalist gets to break a story with inside sources,
the campaign recycles the published story into attack ads, debate talking points,
and while the candidate acts like,
I found out through the news just like everybody else.
And they act just as outraged as all the other citizens.
You can sometimes tell by the release timing if this is from an op book.
In mayoral races, if one candidate consistently has bad information coming out
on the day of press releases or big gatherings and rallies,
it could just be very well released from the other party,
which is why it's important, usually big campaigns.
If they only have the budget to do one op book, they do a self-op.
Researchers, yeah, make an op-book on you, the candidate,
because you know the other party's going to do it.
You need good counterpoints.
You need to make sure that you're not taken off guard.
I mean, it takes a lot to run for mayor,
or really any elected office beyond that.
And that's why people like to play dirty.
Some wealthy candidates have also been known to hire every political consultant
in the market, not to use all of their services at once, but to prevent the opponents from accessing
them. It's kind of like when wealthy people, they get a divorce and they put all the best family
attorneys in the city on a retainer so that their partner can't use them. It's kind of like that.
It takes a lot to win the race to be mayor. But it really depends what you get out of it,
depending on the mayor system. So some cities have what's called a strong mayor system. New York,
Chicago, Houston. Mayor gets to appoint the heads of departments.
They help draft and propose budgets.
They have a lot of executive power.
Then you have a weak mayor system where you're pretty much just like chairing the council meetings and cutting ribbons.
Like you don't really have any independent executive authority.
You're just there.
So there's more money in the strong one.
Is that what you mean?
And it's very strange.
So there are some major cities where the mayor only gets paid like $100,000.
And then there will be a city in Florida with a thousand residents and the mayor is getting paid a quarter million dollars.
Now the Northwest Arctic Bureau in Alaska, that's a strong mayor system.
The charter for it explicitly states the executive power in the borough is vested in the mayor.
The borough mayor as the chief administrative officer is responsible for all proper administration of all Bureau affairs.
That gives Mayor Clement Richards a whole lot of power, a lot of power, enough power that he is going to be in charge of a $60 million construction contract.
And there's going to be allegations that he's blackmailed into this contract
because there is a video of him that exists with an underage girl.
Is that a rumor?
It's a rumor.
Now, one month after Mayor Clement is elected into office,
a police officer knocks on his door.
I mean, technically, this is a very uncomfortable situation for the police officer to be in,
but he's got a job to do.
The officer was called by Jennifer Kirk, a 22-year-old.
So this is when she's 22.
passes away at 25. She reports that she was punched in the face by someone who lives in this
very house, the mayor's son. So the report reads from the perspective of the officer. I asked Jennifer
how Anthony assaulted her and she stated that they were having intercourse and he tried to have
anal intercourse and when she told him no, Jennifer then stated that Anthony punched her in the back
three times causing pain and punched her in the right eye twice, causing pain, swelling and a bloodshot
eye. Jennifer said Anthony also grabbed her right arm leaving bruises just above her wrist. Obviously,
The officer has to investigate.
He walks up to the mayor's front door and he knocks.
And he knocks again.
And then Mayor Richards, Mayor Clement, he opens the door and he smells drunk.
Or at least according to the report, quote, appeared extremely intoxicated.
And then the mayor just aggressively starts asking, how can I help you?
How can I help you?
How can I help you?
Doesn't give the officer a chance to respond.
He asks, how can I help you three times?
And then slams the door shut.
It's like very odd behavior.
This is one month after he becomes mayor.
What is the officer supposed to do?
Knock again?
He doesn't.
Instead, he just moves on.
And so does everybody else?
Until three years later, Jennifer Kirk is found dead inside that house.
And there are clear markings of strangulation.
She was shot with a gun that is longer than her entire arm.
And it's ruled to self-exit.
And the police and the mayor, they move on to the next big case.
So instead of answering questions about what happened in his own house,
what his son could have been involved in,
The mayor is out there on a podium involved in another case answering questions about Ashley Johnson Barr.
Ashley Johnson Bar is the girl in purple.
So, okay, there's a lot that you have to know about the whole area of Katsabu.
It's closer to Russia, like I said, than Anchorage.
It's a very isolated area.
It's part of this like frying pan-shaped peninsula in Alaska.
And it's actually believed to be one of the oldest continuously inhabited settlements in the
Americas. The land should belong to the Inuapat people, and they do comprise of roughly 75% of the
population, but of course it's stolen land, but a lot more on this later. It's a very small population
where, yes, the trope, everybody knows everybody. And it's true. It's also true that September 6,
2018, everybody knows that 10-year-old Ashley Johnson Barr does not come home. And everybody
knows Ashley Johnson Barr. People say, she's the kid that just seemed to be everywhere. Like she could
teleport. She'll be picking blueberries with her family and then showing up to five different
church services and Bible studies every single week. If there's a body of water, she's probably
trying to change into a swimsuit and swim in it, even if it's a puddle. But that Thursday
evening, she goes to hang out at the playground in the town center. And this is not like other
parts of the U.S. where kids are not out by themselves. She's got a phone. She's at the town center.
This is very normal for kids in this area. This happened after Jennifer.
Jennifer's body was found?
Three months after Jennifer's body is found.
In this case, Ashley Johnson Barr's case does make national news.
And because the mayor is the mayor of the town that this is occurring in, he almost becomes
like this spokesperson for this case.
And yet nobody's asking him about the fact that three months ago, a woman was found dead
on his property.
And his own son was covered in her own blood.
Yeah.
How does that make sense?
Why has nobody...
Exactly.
It's just like he has so much power that this...
It's been silenced from the town?
Wow.
And again, this is a town where, like I said, it's that trope.
Everybody knows everybody.
And Ashley goes missing.
And for eight dailies, all hell breaks loose.
Boats, helicopters, K-9 units are flown into the town to help.
The Coast Guard gets involved at any given time.
There were as many as 50 people searching for Ashley.
September 14th, 2018, a volunteer spots Ashley's body in the tundra a few miles outside of town.
she had been essayed and strangled to death at 10 years old.
So very quickly, a 41-year-old man, Peter Vance Wilson, gets arrested.
I mean, the first sign that something was wrong with Peter was a relative of Peters was going to everyone in town is looking for Ashley.
And he's going through Peter's coat.
I don't know if he was hanging the coat up or if it was just like sprawled out on the couch so he's picking it up.
And he notices something heavy in the pocket.
He reaches in and it's Ashley's phone.
Okay.
Now, DNA testing also showed that he was the one that kidnapped Ashley, essayed her, and then strangled her with her own pants.
He also eventually confessed.
But the infuriating part about all of this is that all these people start coming forward, and they keep saying, we knew that Peter had problems, and we tried to tell everybody that Peter had problems.
Two female relatives stated that Peter had repeatedly throughout their entire childhoods, essayed them, and he never got in trouble.
He started essaying his relatives when he was 12 years old.
family members describe as many as 40 different accounts of essay from Peter
and they tried to tell people and nobody was listening to anybody.
Like the police station isn't doing anything?
Yeah, nobody's doing anything.
They just, you know, Ashley's father even states, quote,
some ladies and young girls sure did try and go and speak up.
Guess what happened?
Nothing happened.
People told them they never did this to you.
You're just making up stories.
But Ashley's case is monumental for a number of reasons.
I mean, I could do a whole episode on this,
but people realized how much resources they could actually mobilize.
I mean, the way that people came together to find Ashley,
how the entire state of Alaska seemed to come together,
that means the resources are there.
So if the case is there, this should be the reception for every missing and murdered indigenous person.
Not just like once in a while, but every single time.
Secondly, there was this sentiment in Alaska that a culture of silence is not going to be tolerated anymore.
If someone had taken accusations against Peter seriously, Ashley would still be alive.
many of Peter's relatives would have been safer.
Ashley's dad states,
our daughter started something.
No more silence.
I mean, there's just so much more to the case,
but I mean, her parents are doing a lot of good
for women and children in Alaska.
However, one of the most vocal people
during the entirety of this case
is this one man who just kind of inserts himself
into all of this.
Mayor Clement Richards.
He's all over the news stations
when the searches for Ashley is taking place.
And it's infuriating because, like,
everything that Ashley's legacy,
the mayor is exploiting because if anyone profits from a culture of silence, it's clearly
Mayor Clement Richards Sr. Because just three months before he makes himself the spokesperson for
Ashley's passing, Jennifer Kirk was found dead in his house and he's just sweeping it under the rug.
Some people just really make it easy for the police to do their job. Some cases just like are very easy
to solve. Or at least that's what it feels like. You get a checklist. Hey, these are the five things you need
to do. Find the evidence. Check. Check.
off the box, we're going to trial, you're getting a conviction.
Jennifer Kirk's case feels like that. It feels so easy. Either the truth is, it's in the evidence
that she did self-exit, like the police claim that she did, or naturally, there's something
else to look into, like the mayor's son Anthony. I mean, how much more literal with the red
flags do we have to get? The police department in their own report, quote, I noted the rifle
from the tip of the barrel to the tip of the trigger as being 27 and 1.18th inches long.
Jennifer's arm, they note in the report, is shorter than that.
When the police first bring in Anthony into the police station right after finding Jennifer Kirk's body, they interview him.
They don't arrest him, they don't interrogate him.
They just ask him questions, and they listen to Anthony's side of events, which go like this.
I was watching TV with the kids.
I heard a pop.
And then I saw Jennifer, you know, I had seen Jennifer go into the bedroom, so I freaked out, I go into the bedroom, I see her, I go to the neighbor's house, and I told them to call 911.
He states that Jennifer was still breathing when he found her.
And, you know, they've been in this very long relationship.
They have kids together who are in the living room and she just self-exits.
He explains, it's kind of a long story.
And they're like, well, tell us.
So she has this court date in her hometown, which is like a few towns over for DUI.
She's supposed to turn herself in.
But she was scared to go.
But I keep telling her, like, you got to just get it over with.
You got to go and turn yourself in.
I kept telling her that she needed to.
And then she starts getting emotional, crying.
and accusing Anthony of not wanting to be with her anymore.
And Anthony tells the officer, essentially,
I told her not to cry in front of the kids,
and I told her to go lay down in the room and calm down.
He stays out in the living room watching SpongeBob with the kids,
and it's like an hour in when he hears that firecracker go off.
So he rushes into the room, he finds that she shot herself,
and he explains, you know, this is very Jennifer.
She's really good at hiding her emotions until it's like an explosion.
Why did you go to your neighbor's house to call 911?
one. Well, I couldn't find my phone, so I ran next door. Which, side note, the mayor's house is
about a block away from the police department. So, continuing on, he gets back from telling the neighbor
to call the police. He goes back to Jennifer's body and he holds her. That's how he's described.
It's described that he does not attempt CPR. He doesn't try to stop the bleeding. He's just like
coating himself in her blood, holding her. After what can only be described as a very suspicious
story, the police are like, well, you're free to go. We're not arresting you.
Right when he leaves, the investigators get a call from the Emmy's office, and they advise the police that not only does Jennifer's body have a fatal bullet wound, but there are signs of strangulation on her neck.
Like handprints.
She was strangled before she died.
And this police department is not big at all.
Which, by the way, that's another thing that I have a personal gripe about this.
Okay, so we tried to FOIA request this case a long time ago, and a team member on the RM team was kept trying to get in touch with the police department.
And we've, like, we do FOIA requests all around different states and different towns, different cities, different police departments.
And some police departments, each one operates differently.
And each one feels like a whole new learning process of like how to get a FOIA request.
This is a small, tiny little police department.
And it took suspiciously long to get a response from them.
Like in a way that it didn't make any sense, in my opinion.
So this entire little tiny little.
police department, they probably know everybody and they know that a month after Clement is elected
into office so that a few years ago, an officer got called out to the mayor's house by Jennifer
Kirk because she reported that Anthony had assaulted her. And now she's dead a few years later.
All they have to do is a little bit of due diligence. And if you're already pulling up his profile,
you can also clearly see that September 2017, Jennifer called 911 again. She's actually still
at the mayor's house. She waits for the officers to arrive. She's standing out. She's standing out.
in the driveway. She's crying. And she tells the responding officer, Anthony just choked her.
He strangled her. And she's explaining like she had gotten into town. She wanted to see Anthony.
So right from the airport, she goes to the mayor's house. Both of them start drinking.
And Jennifer just wants to go back to her hotel. And she even offers Anthony, do you want to come
to my hotel with me? But Anthony does not want her to go back to her hotel. In fact, he doesn't even
want her to go. And the fact that she even offered for both of them to go is seemingly so offensive
and such a heinous thing for Jennifer to do
that Anthony starts verbally screaming at her.
And then he slams her down onto the bedroom floor,
sits on top of Jennifer putting his entire body weight on top of her.
So he's not only preventing her from getting up,
he's full on suffocating her.
Jennifer states that she just kept trying to struggle with Anthony to get up
and he only does because she starts pinching him really, really hard.
He gets up and I assume it felt like they were both cooling down
because Jennifer sits on the bed
and then she calmly tells him once more
that she wants to go back to the hotel.
This time he climbs up onto the bed,
pushes her down,
and he grabs her neck
with both of his hands and starts strangling her.
Her vision starts narrowing.
She tells the police that she couldn't breathe.
She's terrified of passing out.
And the report reads,
Jennifer eventually was able to get away from Anthony
and during this struggle to do so,
she sustained a visible laceration
from the top right side of her head.
The officers go to investigate, and guess what? Anthony is on probation. He's drunk when they go to talk to him. He's drunk. He's violating state law by abusing, violently abusing Jennifer. So he's arrested for breaking probation. And with this, I feel like the police have a pretty, at face value, a suspicious story of death. They've got strangulation marks on the deceased, a history of violence and strangulation documented by various criminal charges. And the police officers, they were even trained.
top 10 red flags for domestic violence killings and pretty much every single one of them checks off the red flags consist of victim dies prematurely jennifer kirk is 25 self-exit or accident scene one partner wanted to end the relationship prior history of dv victim found dead in a home or a residence victim found by current or previous partner prior history of dv includes strangulation or suffocation partner is the last to see
victim alive, partner has control of the crime scene, and body has moved or seen or evidence
is altered in some way.
I mean, it's very clear what's going on.
So has anybody said anything or they just closed a case?
Like, there's nothing?
Yeah, so they bring Anthony back in.
And they're like, hey, we found strangulation marks on Jennifer Kirk's body.
You didn't mention any of that.
Do you care to tell us what happened?
And he explains that, well, he just blocked out that part because it's just.
like been a bad day. And he said it was all in self-defense. He said that Jennifer started punching,
slapping him on the side of his head. So in order to stop her, he does what any normal human does.
He holds her back by her neck with both of his hands. It's like the most reasonable defensive stance.
Of course, everybody's done it before. And Anthony says, while he's doing this, she's still trying to
slap him. Now, when the police are like, well, how much pressure did you apply? He doesn't recall. Did she
fall in conscious or not, he doesn't remember. He doesn't remember if he knocked her unconscious or not.
And all of this is happening in the kitchen. This is what he says, which is also kind of crazy because
he made this whole thing about like, I don't want her to cry in front of the kids, but you're strangling
her in front of the kids. So after she might have been maybe, maybe not knocked out, Anthony can't remember.
And when she does become conscious, she goes to the bedroom and that's when she dies by herself.
And with that, the police are given a pretty easy pathway to get to the bottom of what happened to Jennifer Kirk.
And the entire town gets wrapped up in this hunt for the police department to find the strangler.
Authorities are asking for the public's help. Help us find out who did this.
Here are the clues that we have. They're putting out like pictures.
One investigator states the police department suspects foul play and is pursuing all investigative leads.
And they start putting up photos of the suspect in question.
Tipsters are calling in.
Volunteers are raising thousands of dollars.
I mean, this news is all over the area.
The strangler needs to be brought in and there needs to be justice.
And they do catch him.
They catch the strangler.
They drag him to court.
But it's not for Jennifer's death.
It's not for the death of Jennifer Kirk.
All of this police investigative efforts is for a husky.
So around the same time that Jennifer Kirk has found
dead. The city fire department's pet husky is also found dead. They close Jennifer's case and they do
like a citywide hunt for the strangler. For the husky. Yes. And like don't get me wrong. I think that
person needs to be punished for sure. But nothing for Jennifer. You think it's like a cover up? It's like a
It seems like priorities. They don't care for Jennifer Kirk. In fact, is it. You think they don't care or
they're hiding something, right? Like they don't care is like, okay, I'm not going to
do more investigation.
Hiding is someone is covering up for someone.
I don't know if they're that smart.
Really?
Yeah.
You're telling me mayor's son.
Yeah.
House.
A woman died.
The gun was longer than her arm.
It wasn't, you don't think it was a cover up from the mayor?
No, I don't think the mayor is that smart.
I think the mayor really runs on.
What made you think that, though?
Because everyone in town thought it was weird.
everyone in town thought
Jennifer Kirk's death is weird
Correct they don't care to make statements
And make it make sense
They don't care to address it
It's just like well what are you going to do about it
That's the feeling that I get
It's so blatant it doesn't feel like a cover up
Of like oh a diversion
Don't pay attention to this
Pay attention to this
It doesn't feel like that
So why is there no investigation if
Because the mayor controls the police department
This is a really small town
And they don't care to investigate
So even the police who made the report
Role the gun is longer than the arm
That means he also suspected of something
Some kind of foul play
Yeah but he doesn't care
Or he was told not to look
And he doesn't care enough to go against the status quo
Right so there are some kind of like
Cover up from the higher end
Yes but I don't they are alleged right
That's our personal opinion
Of just the limited
Information that we have right
In terms of the Husky
the search for the strangler.
I don't think it's some sort of, ooh, diversion, don't let the community members.
It doesn't seem like that.
It seems like the community knows and the mayor is like, what are you going to do about it?
Okay.
But Jennifer's case is like someone said do not continue.
Yeah.
Okay, okay.
So that's a cover up.
It's unclear if someone said do not continue or the lead investigator got bombed on the head
with a coconut and decided to close the case.
You know, we don't know what happened behind closed doors.
legally speaking, that would be bad to say.
Okay.
You can come to your own personal conclusions about that,
but all we know is that within one investigative day,
the case is closed, and it's deemed a self-exit.
Whether the mayor said, shut it down,
whether the investigative lead said,
wow, I did my due diligence of fucking eight hours,
and I think that this is a self-exit, it's hard to say, right?
What about Jennifer's families?
They think something is weird.
They just want more investigative.
they absolutely do not believe that she would self-exit.
She was just on the phone with her mom.
They were preparing for like future plan.
There was nothing to indicate that she is someone that would want to self-exit.
And then with all the history of domestic violence from Anthony, like it just, to them it makes
zero sense.
Now with the pro public apiece, the expose, the police are going to come back and say
something about Jennifer's death and I'm going to get into it and it's so infuriating.
But it just feels like to some people, because of the lack of investigation into Jennifer
Kirk's death, another person is going to end up dead. Because two years after Jennifer Kirk dies,
Susu Norton dies. And the mayor's son is going to be in the court once more answering questions
about Susu's death. But this time, it's not Anthony. It's a different mayor's son. Amos. Okay, so
Mayor Clement Richard Sr. has three sons. And all three of them have been charged with assaulting
women on the mayor's property. They all live together? Yes.
And it's not just one that's violently abusive.
All three of them.
There are at least 31 criminal cases involving the three sons and a total of six different victims.
All three sons have been charged with a combined 16 counts of domestic violence.
None of these charges resulted in felony domestic violence convictions.
And when you start putting these timelines together, it's actually so disgusting.
You want to lock the whole family up in a basement cell and feed them copious amounts of Advil on an empty stomach.
It's just heinous, okay?
A few months after Jennifer Kirk is found dead.
a woman walks into the police station with a right eye that is black and blue.
It's swollen shut.
She can't even open her eye.
She's crying.
And she reports that her boyfriend, Amos, the eldest of the mayor's three sons, has been abusing her.
This is a few months after Jennifer Kirk is found dead on the mayor's property.
So the police are like, well, we just found a dead woman on the mayor's property.
And now another woman is walking in.
She's got clear evidence of abuse.
and she's saying that a different mayor's son, you know, the same mayor, but a different son,
is beating her.
And she's got strangulation marks on her neck, just like Jennifer, or Jennifer Kirk had.
This is Sousu Norton, who will soon be killed.
She says that her boyfriend, Amos, he's a bit of a drinker.
She wanted him to stop drinking, so she poured out his beer.
He becomes so enraged, he grabs her by the hair, drags her around the entire house,
kicks her repeatedly in the head, stomach, face, back.
Her forearms are swollen from trying to protect her head and face while he's kicking her,
and she's six months pregnant with his child.
The incident report states,
Officer was unable to locate the defendant.
That's pretty much it.
Within two years, Susu Norton, just like Jennifer Kirk, will be found dead.
They don't do anything.
I mean, what do you expect from the sons whose own father?
Mayor Clement Richard Sr.
has a felony domestic violence charge.
Is he still the mayor?
Is he still out and about?
What's going on?
He tried to run for re-election.
He did not get re-elected in 2018.
And then in 2022,
Susu Norton's body is found in the mayor's house.
And he's still out there.
Kyle from ProPublica tried to go talk to him.
He's like, no comment.
He won't make any comments.
Nothing.
This is so bizarre.
What is going on?
Now, this happens when the mom,
Annette. So this is Clement Richards. This is like the ex-first lady of the town, I guess, right?
But Annette is pregnant with their third son, Anthony. So they have three sons. Anthony is,
you know, Jennifer Kirk's ex-boyfriend. She's pregnant. And by this point, they already have two sons.
She's eight months pregnant. And Clement Richards, in a fit of anger, beats her, kicks her in the stomach
repeatedly until she starts profusely bleeding from her private areas. The police are called to the
house, Clement and his wife Annette are just sitting in the living room. She's bleeding.
And the officer concludes that Clement had been dragging Annette around by her hair,
kicked her in the stomach with boots on, and then punched her in several other parts of her body.
The very next day Anthony is born.
Clement Sr. pleads no contest to felony domestic violence assault and goes to jail for six months.
Here's the mind-boggling part. Remember the whole op-book that political candidates
get on their opposition.
Former mayor Clement Richards has a domestic violence charge.
This charge that is publicly available to see, it's a matter of public record, before he's
elected to become mayor.
Meaning when he runs for mayor, none of his opponents.
Nobody in the area, nobody in the media mentions or brings up the fact that he nearly
killed his wife and child.
Nobody.
Because they don't do their homework?
Either they don't do their homework, or it's like what a lot of people are saying, enough
is enough this culture of silence is over with.
I see.
He becomes vice mayor, mayor.
He's on the city council.
He held political office from 1999 to 2018.
I feel like that's longer than some of you guys have been alive.
Wow.
With this charge.
And his wife, Annette, she starts working for the Alaskan state troopers,
working with prosecutors in the local area that later become judges.
These judges then later oversee her son's domestic violence cases.
Which side note, when Clement Richards was mayor, there was this huge scandal.
So aside from Jennifer Kirk dying inside of his house, while he holds public office,
there's this huge construction bid.
It's a construction project.
$60 million.
He's the mayor in a mayor strong system.
And he gets to have, like, he's aggressively pushing for this no bid contract to be awarded
to a local company called Remote Solutions.
They're going to get a $60 million contract to construct the school, the highway,
like this is what they need.
the school district still has to vote on it.
So does the Bureau Assembly.
But he's like going to each person and he's like, you got to vote.
Yes, he's got to go to remote solutions.
Mayor Clement is using all of his power to swing the votes in his favor.
They've got three special Bureau assembly meetings.
These were a huge scandal too.
So one of them is like randomly held in Seattle.
So they have to fly everybody out to Seattle.
And they spend like over $100,000 of taxpayer money.
It's like, why do you have to have it in Seattle?
It just seemed like a vacation.
But then out of nowhere, allegedly, Clement Richards,
It's like, well, wait, never mind, never mind.
I take it all back.
I don't want remote solutions to be the bid for this contract.
Out of nowhere.
All of this feels kind of part for the course, like some political corruption, go into Seattle.
But it doesn't feel that bad, right?
But like, why did he suddenly change his mind?
Well, Clement Richards fires his chief of staff for the borough, Eugene.
And Eugene files a complaint to the police department.
And he states that he was fired because he knew information that the mayor
does not want to get out. Apparently, this is what he alleges. The mayor was drunk driving a
bureau vehicle. This is like a city car with a young underage girl in the car. He almost
hits another car on the road. And that other driver that almost got hit, his name is Chris,
he starts allegedly recording this incident on his phone that depicts the mayor driving drunk
in a borough vehicle with a girl that appears to be underage. Chris then goes and shows it to a bunch of
people who then notifies Eugene, the chief of staff.
So Eugene is like, oh my God, there's this video.
He says, quote, I told our mayor that he needs to go talk to Chris about the situation.
Clement notified me that Chris agreed to delete the video and told Clement not to do it again.
Now, he notices, Eugene is like noticing all these borough meetings and Clement is like,
oh, we got to do remote solutions.
We got to do remote solutions.
This is the bid for the construction work, right?
And then suddenly he's like, no, it's not.
We're not doing remote solutions anymore.
And so Eugene is like, what the hell?
And then Clement is like visibly upset.
And so Eugene is like, what's wrong?
Why are you upset?
Eugene says, this is his claim,
that Clement was told that Chris did not delete the video.
And now the other parties who want this contract
are telling Clement drop, get rid of the Baker brothers.
The Baker brothers own remote solutions.
Who's Baker brothers?
They own remote solutions.
Oh, okay.
Get rid of the Baker brothers or this video goes out.
So all of a sudden he said, I don't want remote solutions anymore.
So basically he has like a little underground deal with Baker's brother.
That's a big allegation.
Okay.
I mean, he really is trying to get Baker's brother this deal for whatever personal, whatever.
Could be for love, could be for whatever, yeah.
Yeah, he really liked them.
And then someone, a competitor, got their hands on Chris's video.
Now they're kind of telling him to, we want the contract.
Kill the contract.
Kill the deal because we want it.
Right.
Now there's a scandal about that.
So why is Eugene getting fired for that then?
So then Eugene is like, that's messed up.
He's like telling Clement Richards, no, like that's messed up.
You got to do something about it.
Like I, you cannot let this effect to how you mayor this town.
Then he gets fired.
So then he's like, okay, well, I'm going to file a report because you wrongfully
terminated me for like having a morally upstanding take.
Okay.
So, but I will say the other side of it, I went into too many rabbit holes, okay?
but the other side of it, this is an allegation, but the other company, one of them shares a child with someone on the school board.
So everybody's just trying to get the company that they get a kickback from.
And I don't know if kickback should be used in like the very strict definition of contractually you get this much.
But just you get some sort of indirect benefits.
The driver was contacted by a journalist and they state that there is no video.
There's no involvement.
but the whole thing was just a massive scandal, just huge.
It was an even bigger scandal than what's going on inside that house.
The mayor's three sons, Amos, he has multiple charges against him.
He's the eldest for victimizing and abusing his girlfriend and the mother of his children,
Susu Norton, while she's pregnant.
He's violently assaulting her, just like his dad violently assaulted his mom while she was pregnant.
Susu Norton's death is being investigated right now.
And I would say almost would be in most people's opinion, suspect number one.
And then you have the second son, Clement Jr.
One complaint filed against Clement Jr. reads that a redacted victim called 911 to report that
Clement Jr., the mayor's second son, was assaulting her inside the mayor's house.
This is Clement Jr.'s girlfriend.
And she says that she was trying to leave the house.
Clement Jr. gets up in her face and she starts pushing her as she's walking out of the bedroom.
Quote, the victim stated that when she turned around to push the defendant away from her,
he began to punch her in the face.
The victim said that she attempted to get away from the defendant but was unable to.
He just keeps punching her until a third party, one of his friends that happens to be there,
rips him off of her.
The officers contact the defendant, Clement Jr.
And they write that the defendant was extremely uncooperative and denied anything happened.
He had a strong odor of alcohol on his breath as well as on his person, red watery eyes,
and poor balance.
Now, Clement Jr. pleads guilty to harassment and receives a suspended sentence and his conviction,
and his conviction is white from public record.
And then you have Anthony, the youngest son, Jennifer Kirk's abuser.
He's got a lot of cases.
Many of them are the ones that we've covered with Jennifer Kirk,
her reports before her death.
He also has another case against him,
an essay case where the victim states
to the judge that she's terrified of running into Anthony
because it's a small town,
which, by the way, Superior Court Judge Paul Ropman
decides that he's going to give Anthony a special chance.
And by special, I just mean very uncommon.
So he gives Anthony a very low bill.
This bail goes from being $7,500 to $2,500.
And he explains his decision by saying that he worked with Anthony's mother and knew his father held elected office.
What the fuck does that mean?
The judge states, I know Mrs. Richards for when she used to work with the troopers.
She has a lot of experience with these types of cases and know what these are like.
Mr. Richards has been part of city council.
You know, if you're not now, I don't know if you are now.
So he's been part of the local council.
So they're going to be fine third parties, I think.
They're going to be fine third parties?
Yes.
Okay.
This is the system in which all of these little, okay, they violently assault a woman.
They get charged with felony assault.
And then the judge gives them a low bail.
And the judge is like, fine third parties, meaning I think your mom and dad are going to make sure that you don't try to run away, that you don't do anything crazy while you're on bail before the trial.
And guess what?
A trial never fucking happens.
because the prosecutors then come in and they're like, hey, plead guilty and instead of a felony charge, we'll give you a misdemeanor for something like harassment instead of violently kicking someone in the stomach while they're pregnant.
They really run to town, huh?
Yeah.
The judge even says, to say that you dodged a bullet is an understatement on this one.
These are some pretty serious charges.
And I understand the evidentiary issues that had been presented, but had those not been there, had those been less complicated, you were facing some very serious charges.
that involve a lot of jail time.
You understand that, of course.
It just seems like a, who's dodging a bullet?
And how are they dodging a bullet?
Through you?
Judge Paul Routman declined to comment
and a court spokesperson has stated,
judicial officers cannot and do not comment on their cases
in order to maintain the integrity of their decisions
and to ensure that for fairness reasons,
their thinking is reflected solely in the official court record
without extraneous commentary.
Even though the Code of Conduct for judges state that,
quote, shall not allow family, social, political,
or other relationships to influence the judge's judicial conduct or judgment.
So the sheer fact that he's like, why know your parents?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Even after the death of Jennifer Kirk, July 17th, 2020.
So this is actually after Jennifer Kirk's death and Sousu Norton's death.
There's another filing.
After two women are found dead in the house.
Yeah.
Okay?
A woman reports, her boyfriend scratched her face and kicked her.
Her boyfriend being Anthony Richards.
What is going on in this house?
Yeah.
She said that Anthony threw her onto the ground,
kicked her and punched her in the face,
started kicking her in the ribs,
her legs, her back, her butt, causing pain.
The officers actually located a third-party witness
who was like, oh yeah, I saw that happen.
And when they finally find Anthony
in the reported states that he starts cussing out the officers
that he's not going to jail.
And quote, while declaring to Anthony that he was under arrest,
Anthony attempted to walk into the residence.
Officer Aaron and I got a hold of him
while I was trying to place handcuffs on Anthony.
He grabbed my handcuff by the loop and would not let go,
prompting me to pull my laser and demand that he let the handcuff go.
Anthony Richards was arrested and transported to KRJ,
where he remained uncooperative and refused to participate in a preliminary breath test.
Okay.
But he's out now.
So these, like, cops, they first get involved.
They're like, that's us.
I'm going to arrest you.
You're going to get punished.
And then they turn around just like, there's nothing going on here.
Yeah.
Drop it.
Yeah.
Or they arrest them.
And then the judge is like, you guys are good, fine people.
I see no reason to be suspicious of you.
You can be out on bail until the trial.
And then prosecutors, remember?
And that used to work with the prosecutors.
Not saying that there's a connection, but I'm just saying that's an odd thing, right?
They'll come in and they'll say, hey, plead guilty.
I'll give you a misdemeanor.
They do tiny bits of jail time here and there, but barely any.
And these judges are actually insane.
There's one judge that lowered his bail to $100, $100 while he's out on probation,
$100.
And there's an audio of this where he's talking to Anthony and he's explaining why strangulation is such a bad thing aside from the fucking obvious.
And he says, talking about the gravity of the situation, what jumps out at me in both of these cases is there's an allegation of strangulation in both cases.
And that's the reason that this was charged as a felony case.
Listen, I hope you do understand that you're serving a large amount of jail time.
It's not large at all, okay, but continuing.
but you are getting away from a felony conviction by taking this agreement.
That's a big benefit to you.
But what I'm getting at is strangulation is a very serious thing.
And it's recognized that way by the legislature.
That's why these types of cases can be charged as felonies.
You know, one thing I would like to point out to you is the natural result of a punch or a kick or kind of, you know, your typical misdemeanor assault is a bruiser injury or that sort of thing, which is fucking.
false. Like you're a judge, you should know better. You should have at least some working
neuropathways because people have died from one punch. The result of strangulation, if not stopped,
is the person can't breathe. And that's death. And that's a serious thing. And that wasn't the result
in your abuse case, fortunately, but someone who wasn't trained in the medical profession,
that sort of thing. It's a dangerous thing because someone like you or I, you don't know when
to let up or when it might be too late. So keep that in mind.
It's like you're talking to a five-year-old of not to play fight.
But also, and one comment reads, keep that in mind.
The judge is literally saying, next time you beat a woman, keep in mind, strangulation is a bigger charge.
Because you might accidentally kill them.
Like, what do you mean keep in mind?
And like, what do you mean a medical professional?
We're not medical professionals, so we can't strangle women.
Which, side note, I don't know if you want to take a random comment online as truth or a fraction of the truth or like a flat out lie or a hallucination.
It's up to you.
But it reads, I worked a summer job.
up in that town in 2008. One of my 16-year-old co-workers was viciously jumped by one of the
Richards brothers while I was there. And another ex-co worker got jumped right after I left. I tried
to get the kid to go to the police, but he said their family is too powerful. Also, one of the
police officers in that police department was basically fucking every girl in the area that was between
18 to 20 years old, and I'm not exaggerating. He was openly flaunting his relationship with
these teens. He groomed in front of everyone and nobody did a thing about it. I was just telling my
partner how insane this place was like a week ago.
This town is out of control.
Yeah.
Whoa.
There's another nearby town, I believe in the same bureau, where ProPublica did a huge
expose on them as well.
But every single police officer in that small police department, not this one, but it's a
town nearby, they all have domestic violence charges.
Every single one.
And actually, Alaska is one of the most dangerous states in the United States.
States for a woman, women are two and a half times more likely than the national average to be
killed by a man in the state of Alaska. More than four in five indigenous women, specifically
have experienced violence in their lifetime, and indigenous women are killed at a rate 10 times
the national average. On any given day in the United States, thousands of indigenous women and
girls are listed as missing in federal databases, and no matter how large that number is,
it's still not comprehensive. There is not even, like,
like a way to identify that someone is indigenous when they go missing. It's always like white,
Hispanic, Asian, black. There's no way. There's actually no comprehensive federal database that
tracks how many indigenous women are missing. There's no reliable count of how many have been
murdered. It said that when an indigenous woman disappears, she disappears three times in life,
in the media, and then in the data. So we're working on a full episode, on a few other cases.
I mean, a lot of these take a lot of time because it's hard even to get like the FOIA requests and it's just really difficult.
But it all just comes down to this, which don't even get me started on the boarding schools, that they would systematically just eradicate indigenous culture while as saying indigenous women, saying that their culture is lesser than other cultures.
Meanwhile, you're R-wording them.
Every elected official gets up on every single fucking podium,
shoves their face inside of a mic,
and they pledge, they promise everyone that there's going to be change.
And the only way that they're going to bring about change
is the minute that their ass touches the seat of power.
So you must vote for them specifically.
It's very sympathetic words that are spoken with all of these politicians.
And then the execution is completely hollow.
It's empty.
There's nothing of substance.
Do they actually do something?
After the pro-publica expose on this case,
In an open letter, the police chief states that state investigators reviewed the case of Jennifer's death in 2018, and they found no new leads.
The letter reads, to the Katsibi community, since the news articles about several deaths were published by the Anchorage Daily News, past traumas and pains have been reopened in our community.
These difficulties are not lost on me or your police department.
The tragedy around the death of Jennifer Kirk in 2018 is one of many that weighs on our hearts.
We need to advise the public that reading this letter may be disturbing for community members.
Many in our community have raised questions or concerns about Jennifer's untimely death.
I wanted you to hear from me directly on how the investigator assigned to the case took care to investigate Jennifer's passing
and what the process looked like so you have as much information as possible to make informed decisions about what you read, see or hear.
They allege in this letter that the investigator spent at least 16 days interviewing witnesses,
collecting evidence, and following up leads before closing the case.
Jennifer's own sister has come out to state that the police failed to properly communicate with the family during the initial investigation.
They failed to interview certain witnesses.
They even declined to provide the family police audio and video recordings from this closed investigation.
Previously, Jennifer's parents were outspoken about stating that she would never self-exit and that the police never even really spoke to her about anything.
Also, it was closed within one investigation day.
I don't know where he's coming up with 16 days all of a sudden.
And also, if that's the case, you should prosecute Anthony for strangulation, even if you don't prosecute him for potentially being involved in something more sinister, but he admitted to strangling her before she died.
They continued, the medical examiner has the ultimate authority in determining the case of death.
After a thorough review of the evidence in post-mortem autopsy, the medical examiner determined that there was no evidence that Jennifer had in any way been strangled prior to her death that day.
There was also no evidence that anyone other than Jennifer fired the gun that ended her life.
The police wrote in their own report that her arm is shorter than the gun.
So suddenly it's no longer shorter than the gun.
And it's actually physically feasible that she could have pulled the trigger.
But they don't provide any context.
Because I'm sure you could MacGyver the trigger in a way where if you pull something else, maybe the trigger is pulled.
But they're not saying that's what happened.
They're just saying, no, I'm telling you this.
so you're going to believe it.
And they counter it with this.
Some have expressed concern,
whether it would have been physically possible
for Jennifer to fire the rifle.
Measurements taken of both Jennifer's body
and the firearm show that it was.
How?
Literally how.
Yeah.
It's just like physically, like physics.
It doesn't make math.
It doesn't make sense.
I know this is hard to hear.
Something I do want to note to you,
we are aware of the domestic violence history in this case.
And in others,
I want to be clear.
I strongly and vehemently condemn that.
No one should ever think that it is okay to abuse another and cause harm.
Those who do harm should face consequences.
Okay, then persecute him for strangulation.
While it is not my decision nor my departments on prosecuting or sentencing those incidents,
I do want you to know that I denounce domestic violence in the strongest possible terms.
And while many of you have asked about Jennifer, others have also inquired about Susanna Norton,
her ongoing homicide investigation.
Susanna is not forgotten.
we know that many find similarities in the location, family involved,
and other circumstances surrounding her murder.
I understand that.
As your chief, I want you to know that we have reached out to the Alaska Bureau of Investigations
and asked them in 2021 to review the investigation.
Which, side note, they kind of refuted this.
They were like, we were not requested in 2021 to look into Susanna Norton's death.
Okay.
So they're like, actually, we were asked like later, not in 2021.
So this police chief, I don't know where he's getting his numbers.
Maybe I'm getting the numbers wrong.
but like it just is not adding up at all in any sense of the word.
I'm sure the Alaska Bureau of Investigations
Missing and Missing and murdered indigenous people's unit
will provide updates to us and to the community as they move forward.
This doesn't make sense.
The same reporter from ProPublica actually reached out to the police chief last year
and asked a few series of questions.
On what day did Investigator Millett close Jennifer Kirk's death investigation?
May 24th, 2018 is the police chief's word.
That's one day.
One day, but now he's saying it's 16 days.
The death investigation records suggest that the case was closed before investigator
Milliette received the final autopsy report for Jennifer Kirk.
Is that correct?
And he says correct.
But then in this open letter now, he's saying, well, this is up to the ME.
We don't decide anything.
So why is he switching up?
Jennifer's sister even states this open letter definitely took us by surprise again,
and it was almost like adding insult to injury.
Okay, then what about the death?
What about the investigation into his suit?
Su Su Norton's death.
Alaskan state troopers have taken over the investigation in 2022.
That's two years after she was found dead.
They told Susu's family that they're going to send investigators into the town.
And that never happened.
And Susu's family would know because they lived three houses down from the mayor.
They never came into town.
They never investigated.
They're not talking to anyone.
They just keep saying that they're investigating.
And they also release this video on YouTube where they're like, let us know if you know anything.
What's the video?
It's a state trooper standing there being like, we are taking this very seriously.
We are investigating the death of Susu Norton.
Please let us know if you've known anything, seen anything.
And it's like, isn't that your job?
As for Susu's family, they weren't even told that she was strangled to death.
And they live three houses down from the mayor.
It just feels like there are certain cases where it's kind of like the whole sympathy and words, execution is hollow.
everyone is like, okay, we're going to take missing and murdered indigenous people so seriously now.
So what we're going to do is we're going to create a subunit inside of our police department
or the Alaskan state troopers are going to have their own dedicated unit into investigating
missing and murdered indigenous people. And we're going to name it, M-M-I-P.
And then we're going to investigate all these cases and they come out online and they're like,
yeah, we're investigating. And then ProPublica goes to the family and they're like, are they investigating?
No.
It just seems like they're not doing anything.
So what's like the latest update on the previous mayor and the family now?
They won't give any comments.
They all still reside in that house.
And Sousu Norton's death is so called being investigated.
So all the local knows this, I'm assuming.
And they're all thinking the same thing that we're thinking.
But still, nothing's being done in that.
that town because nothing's being done and okay here's another thing right so while i do think that
the rules around a foyer request so in the united states if you it's the freedom of information act
if you want information about a particular case especially like a criminal case you as a citizen
each state is different some states are really annoying some states you have to like be a resident of that
state anyway you submit a request and you can get redacted case files they're not going to give you
everything. They're just going to give you what is mandated by law to give you. And with Jennifer
Kirk's case, there wasn't a lot, but you can FOIA request it because it's a closed case,
because she was deemed to have self-exited. Now, here's the thing with Susanna Norton. They
keep saying it's an ongoing investigation, which means you cannot get a FOIA request on an
ongoing investigation, because most of the time, it's probably not good. They're investigating right now.
You should not impede the police on doing their work. But if they're not doing the work, it almost
feels like they're doing this so that nobody can get information, nobody can point out things
that are weird or ask questions, and then everybody forgets about it, and then they move on.
Yeah, yeah.
So they requested our FOIA request for Sussu Norton's death, and they're saying, yeah,
the request, they denied it.
Oh, they denied it.
Yeah, they denied it, and they said it's because it's an open, ongoing investigation, right?
But then I'm looking online, and the family is coming out to journalists and saying,
what are they investigating?
They told us they were going to come into town, and they haven't come into town.
So it's just open.
It's not an investigation.
Also, I'm just saying it's a really small police department and the fact that they took so long to get back to us.
Because usually police departments, if they want to reject you for a FOIA request, it's like they already have a template.
They're like for ABC, bye, you're not getting it.
Okay?
And then you can try to fight it because sometimes you're like, I don't think that's legally right.
You can try to kind of maneuver around it.
But no, they took so long.
and it didn't make any sense.
One comment about this case reads,
when it's rich billionaires who jettison themselves
to the bottom of the ocean,
we've got enough resources and money
to send the coast guard to the bottom of the sea
to retrieve their bodies and the debris.
When it's two indigenous women, no one cares.
Suddenly there's no more money, no more resources,
no bother, no care.
This is documented discrimination in broad daylight.
Other people are commenting,
how is this coordinated silence okay?
Like, who's holding these organizations accountable?
Why are they allowed to just not answer?
Like, why is the former mayor allowed to just not respond to comments?
Yeah.
And so that is where we are right now with this case.
There's going to be a lot more.
We're working on multiple different episodes, but if you live in Alaska, if you live anywhere
near this town, call their police department, send in tips, send in requests to the state troopers,
interact with anything that you see online about Jennifer Kirk and Susanna Norton.
I think police typically don't care until everybody cares.
And then they still don't care.
They just don't want to be seen as not doing their job.
What are your thoughts?
Let me know in the comments.
And I will see you in the next one.
Be safe.
