
Anchorage man faces 13 felony counts after gun threat in Eureka parking lot
An Anchorage man is in custody without bail after a 911 caller reported a man with a gun threatening to kill another person in a parking lot in the Eureka area along the Glenn Highway on Friday evening.
Bryce Harrington, 28, faces six counts each of felony assault in the third degree and felony terroristic threatening in the second degree, along with first-degree unlawful contact, misconduct involving weapons in the fourth degree, DUI, refusal to submit to a chemical test, and violation of conditions of release. The violation of conditions charge indicates he was already subject to court-ordered conditions from a prior case at the time of the incident, which occurred at approximately 8:24 p.m. Harrington was remanded into custody at the Glennallen Jail and held without bail.
Eureka has no local police presence. Alaska State Troopers provide primary coverage along that stretch of the Glenn Highway, and the nearest jail is in Glennallen. The Alaska Public Defender Agency has noted that rural clients held without bail may be transported hundreds of miles from their families and attorneys, complicating both defense preparation and family obligations.
The case touches on broader debates over pretrial detention and public safety in Alaska. The Alaska Department of Law has said that in cases involving weapons or serious assaults, remand without bail is sometimes the only way to reasonably ensure public safety. The ACLU of Alaska counters that pretrial incarceration should be the exception, not the rule, and that detaining legally innocent people harms individuals, families, and communities. The Alaska Network on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault has urged courts to weigh history of violence, access to weapons, and compliance with prior court orders when setting release conditions.
This article is based on a trooper dispatch. No additional court documents or named witnesses were available at publication.
Harrington is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty. No court date was listed in the trooper dispatch.
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