The Alaska Supreme Court weighing citizens’ right to challenge state’s predator control program

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The Alaska Supreme Court weighing citizens’ right to challenge state’s predator control program
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An opponent of the multiyear bear-killing program is defending her standing to be a plaintiff against the state.

Anchorage attorney Michelle Bittner, who sued the state over its program that is killing bears and wolves to boost the faltering Mulchatna caribou herd, stands in the courtroom after arguing her case to the Alaska Supreme Court on Wednesday.

In 2022, the program’s first year, the state killed 94 brown bears, five black bears and five wolves. The program has continued, and the total is now up to over 180 and 40 wolves, a toll that affects her as an Alaskan who values wildlife, Bittner told the justices. Still, Senior Assistant Alaska Attorney General Cheryl Brooking told the Supreme Court justices on Wednesday, the legal merits of the program were not up for their immediate consideration.

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