https://www.adn.com/alaska-news/cri...d-in-shooting-death-last-year-in-mat-su/

Sounds like pretty decent policing, despite the delays...


In once-closed case, Anchorage man charged with teen's Mat-Su shooting death
Author: Jerzy Shedlock Updated: 1 day ago Published 1 day ago
Alaska State Troopers said in a statement Friday night that a 19-year-old from Anchorage has been charged with killing a 16-year-old in the Mat-Su in June in a case that had once been closed.

Damien Peterson was arrested and charged Friday with second-degree murder, stemming from the death of Frank Woodford, according to the dispatch.

Peterson was taken to Mat-Su Pre-trial Facility in Palmer and is being held with no bail set, troopers said.

Relatives previously told Alaska Dispatch News that Woodford was a runaway when he died from a gunshot wound in late June.

[In June, a teen died from a gunshot wound in Wasilla. Now the once-closed case is getting another look.]


According to a troopers report released by Woodford's family, Woodford was shot in a room of a Wasilla home, and in that room were two other teenagers. One of the teens, Austin Barrett, is the oldest of five Valley teenagers charged in connection with the high-profile death of 16-year-old David Grunwald in November.

Michelle Woodford holds a portrait of her son Frank Woodford in her home in Caswell Lakes on Jan. 2, 2017. Frank died in June after being shot. (Zaz Hollander / Alaska Dispatch News)
Michelle Woodford holds a portrait of her son Frank Woodford in her home in Caswell Lakes on Jan. 2, 2017. Frank died in June after being shot. (Zaz Hollander / Alaska Dispatch News)
The report said Peterson — the older brother of another teen accused in the Grunwald case — was also in the room when Woodford was shot.

Peterson also is one of three defendants in a kidnapping and assault case that began in Eagle River and ended in Wasilla.

Troopers declared Woodford's death investigation closed due to "no conclusive evidence of foul play" but opened it for review after Grunwald's death, according to a spokeswoman.




Mark Begich, Joaquin Jackson, and Heller resistance... Three huge reasons to worry about the NRA.