Get News & Views Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Alaskan Reporter Detained by Security at Joe Miller Event
Handcuffed reporter, Tony Hopfinger. The blowup comes as Miller’s relationship with the media is already at something of a low point: The candidate announced last week that he would no longer take questions about his past employment and personal history. (Jill Burke/ Alaska Dispatch) ska Senate
race erupted Sunday night after security guards hired by Republican
nominee Joe Miller put handcuffs on a reporter who had tried to ask
Miller a question.
Tony Hopfinger, the founder of Alaska Dispatch, was detained by guards
from the firm Drop Zone after trying to talk with Miller at the Central
Middle School in Anchorage, the Anchorage Daily News reports.
Drop Zone's owner told the paper that Hopfinger was trespassing at a
private event and accused him of assaulting a person there. "After
Miller walked away, Hopfinger said, he was surrounded by Miller
supporters and security guards and felt threatened, so he pushed one of
them away," the paper reported.
The newspaper said that Anchorage Police took statements for more than
an hour after the incident but that Hopfinger has not been charged with
any crime.
In a statement, the Miller campaign called Hopfinger a “liberal blogger”
and accussed him of having “chased Miller to the exit after the event
concluded in an attempt to create and then record a ‘confrontation’ with
the candidate.”
“While I’ve gotten used to the blog Alaska Dispatch's assault on me and
my family, I never thought that it would lead to a physical assault,”
Miller said. “It’s too bad that this blogger would take advantage of a
‘Town Hall’ meeting to create a publicity stunt just two weeks before
the election.”
Drop Zone owner William Fulton was quoted by Alaska Dispatch saying that the Miller forum was a private event and that Hopfinger refused to leave. “It wasn’t a public place,” he said.
But both of Miller’s rivals for the Alaska Senate seat – incumbent Sen.
Lisa Murkowski, running as a write-in candidate, and Democratic nominee
Scott McAdams – seized the chance to accuse Miller of hypocrisy.
“Joe Miller should immediately issue an apology to the editor of the
Alaska Dispatch, a legitimate member of the Alaska press corps, who he
had handcuffed by a private security firm,” Murkowski said in a
statement, noting that Miller brands himself as a constitutional
conservative. “We call on him to immediately disavow the actions of his
private security guards for violating the constitutional rights of a
United States citizen by illegally detaining him. I find it alarming
that Joe feels he needs to hire security forces to protect him from
Alaskan voters and members of the press.”
McAdams, the mayor of Sitka, tweeted in a messagee to Miller: “in case
you were unaware, the Constitution also applies to reporters.”
The blowup comes as Miller’s relationship with the media is already at
something of a low point: The candidate announced last week that he
would no longer take questions about his past employment and personal
history. Hopfinger reportedly planned to ask Miller about the
circumstances of his departure from a job at the Fairbanks North Star Borough.
A Public Policy Polling survey last week,
commissioned by the liberal website Daily Kos, showed the Senate race
to be a tight three-way match-up, with Miller holding a small lead and
taking 35 percent of the vote. Murkowski followed with 33 percent and
McAdams pulled 26 percent.
Miller had an unfavorable rating of 58 percent in the poll – a very high
number for a first-time candidate. Murkowski’s favorability was split
at 48 percent positive, 46 percent negative, and McAdams’s numbers were
44 percent positive, 26 percent negative and 30 percent unknown.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...

23 Comments so far
Show AllThis occurred at a PUBLIC school! I fear an America, where reporters are arrested for asking uncomfortable questions. (And do not receive the honest answers to which voters are entitled.)
I am not a fan of frivilous lawsuits, but to help restore sanity to the electoral process, I hope the reporter sues Miller for illegal arrest.
Just another example of conservative authoritarianism.
And these people will look at you with a staright face and claim they believe in freedom.
Also an example of our society collapsing.
Not as bad as Senator Kerry having a student questioner tasered for trying to ask him a challenging question during a question and answer session following a speech.
My Thoughts Exactly!
Search Google for "Don't taze me, bro." Watch the video. If you still say that Senator Kerry ordered the campus security goons to tazer Andrew Meyer then I don't know what to say. Your agenda must not be based in reality.
There were three guilty parties at that event. Andrew Meyer was guilty---not of asking the wrong question, but of continuing to try to get attention for himself after his time was up. I don't know if you have ever been to an event like that, but there typically are a lot of audience members who have questions, and not much time. Nobody in the room appreciates it when somebody tries to take more than his share of time.
The police were guilty of overreacting. They had a duty to enforce the protocol---to make the young man sit down after his time was up, or to remove him from the room if he would not quietly return to his seat. They had a right, to arrest him if he refused to comply with their lawful order, but they had no right to punish him themselves. What the police officers did was criminal.
Senator Kerry was guilty of standing there, laughing nervously while the cops dragged the kid out of the room. He could have spoken to the police officers and to the young man, but he chose not to do so. I don't know whether he could have prevented what the cops did to Andrew after they got him out into the hall, but he should have tried. In other words, Senator Kerry was guilty of not showing enough spine, but he was in no way responsible for what happened to Andrew Meyer.
Thank you for a thorough, complete and honest assessment of what went down...vs "Kerry having a kid tased..."
But to expand on part of your post, when tasers were first introduced some years ago, they were supposed to be a way for the police to defend themselves without using deadly force...today they are a high tech and deadly paddle that is wielded at each officer's descretion and mood swing.
Agreed. Tazers never were a less-lethal alternative to firearms. They are a less-lethal alternative to nightsticks. Less-lethal per incident, but used far more frequently. It's no wonder the police love them; they cause more pain, they leave no marks, and you can stand back and subdue/punish/torture the prisoner from a safe distance---no worry about being kicked or bitten.
Thank you for correcting me. Kerry's behavior still made me lose respect for him.
I also feel threatened by the recent arrest of James Hansen and others for peacefully demonstrating against mountain top removal coal mining in front of the White House.
Both Kerry's and Obama's actions are anti-civil rights.
Pointing to another wrong does not make this wrong right. It is just trying to confuse the issue without dealing with it.
Kerry did that huh...like from the lecturn said "tase that man for asking a tough question"
Kerry didn't have the student tasered, the police decided that on their own. Kerry was guilty of doing nothing.
I wonder how much the USA could get in selling Alaska back to the Russians? They would have to take the Palin and Miller families as well though.
My mom lives in Anchorage so I often get the scoop on the Senate race up there. This reporter was from a blog, but even the Anchorage Daily News has become Miller's enemy. He recently issued an official statement saying he would no longer be answering any questions about his past . . . they have been unearthing uncomfortable things about him that often fly in the face of his public statements and persona.
This latest action doesn't surprise me one bit. Miller is a perfect example of the new line of right-wing fascists that spout words like "freedom" and "democracy" from their mouths while busily building the gates around them to separate themselves from the people, with help from strong-arm goons with guns.
Why does someone running for the Senate need a personal security contingent?
And do they wear brown shirts?
Damn good question; especially in Alaska's red neck state of Sarah Palin.
It's fascist Miller time: Sieg Heils all around...
Lest we forget, the Nazis were a legitimate political party and played the normal political games until they were able to get Hitler appointed as Chancellor. The the goloves came off and any vestage of a democratic country quickly disappeared.
This is just the latest in the series of ongoing outrageous acts in this election cycle. I fear we are getting closer and closer to a facist takeover of this country by the corporations and reactionaries. To what ends, nobody has articulated. Is their a US version of Mein Kampf somewhere?
Vote as if your life, and the lives of your friends and family, will ride on the outcome.
The reporter must have failed to recognize the international symbol of thuggery: i notice all these security thugs (and also the dogs they run for) wear pins on their lapels with the red, white and blue fascist symbol.
take notice and beware.
As far as I am concerned, EVERYBODY should look for a candidate who will swear to restore the Constitution, including the Bill of Rights, intact and functioning, to both the nation and the government.
That would be a person to vote for. (Avoid party hacks, they'll promise anything.)
Lisa Murkowski sez: “We call on him to immediately disavow the actions of his private security guards for violating the constitutional rights of a United States citizen by illegally detaining him."
***
Oooh ... take that, pot! Kettle just called you black! In your face!
See http://www.adn.com/2010/10/18/1507982/questions-surround-use-of-security.html
Miller bodyguards at forum included active-duty soldiers
Questions surround Miller's use of security force at school
By RICHARD MAUER
rmauer@adn.com
Published: October 18th, 2010 10:17 PM
Last Modified: October 19th, 2010 08:06 AM
Was Joe Miller required to bring a security detail to his town hall meeting Sunday at Central Middle School?
[the answer is 'no']
[... more ...]
Read more: http://www.adn.com/2010/10/18/1507982/questions-surround-use-of-security.html#ixzz12pS0HYpb
Great links from the Anchorage Daily News. Thank you for posting them.