• Sean Judd, 51, of Fairbanks, was charged Wednesday with felony third-degree assault. According to court documents, a woman was at a west Fairbanks residence to make amends with Judd Tuesday evening. She decided to leave, and Judd did not want her to leave the tent. Judd reportedly pulled out a knife and threatened to cut her bike tire. The woman yelled at Judd and Judd reportedly kicked the bicycle and threatened to stab the woman. Judd denied that any altercation took place and blamed the woman for things happening in his life. Alaska State Troopers saw a large knife if front of Judd’s tent.
• Garrison Sumner Collette, 43, of Ester, was charged Wednesday with misdemeanor fourth-degree assault. According to court documents, Collette got into an argument over farm equipment ownership with a family member and reportedly punched the family member in the face until they fell to the ground. Collette reportedly got on top of the family member and punched him multiple times in the face and arms. Collette denied punching the man.
• Aireyona Thalia Crowder, 21, of Fort Wainwright, was charged Tuesday with misdemeanor fourth-degree assault and misdemeanor fifth-degree criminal mischief. According to court documents, Crowder reportedly ran into her ex-boyfriend at Fred Meyers on May 31, took videos of them walking around the store and said “there goes my baby daddy with his new girl.” When the couple returned to their pickup truck, they found that there were broken items and food thrown around the interior of the vehicle. As the woman was trying to cleanup the passenger seat, Crowder reportedly grabbed the woman by the hair, threw her to the ground and punched her in the face.
• Justin Ryan Stark, 37, was charged Thursday with two counts of felony third-degree assault. According to court documents, a man came home from work Wednesday and Stark reportedly approached him and asked if he was in the Army. When the man said that he was not, Stark reportedly berated him. The man left the apartment to smoke a cigarette. The apartment manager told Stark he was not allowed to be there. Stark reportedly walked out of the property with a pickaxe and threatened the man. When the man walked on Reward Drive following the incident, he reportedly threw a hatchet style weapon towards a woman’s car.
• Brynn Ashlee Butler, 42, of Fairbanks, was charged Thursday with misdemeanor fourth-degree assault. According to court documents, Butler is the housing coordinator for the City of Fairbanks and a man was one of her clients until he was placed in housing in March. He was moved out of that housing at the beginning of April and has been staying in rentals rented by Butler, who he said he is in a relationship with. Butler and the man reportedly got into an argument at a Turner Street rental late Wednesday night. Butler and the man got into an argument, and Butler reportedly “clawed and scratched” at the man’s face and his phone. Butler told Fairbanks police that the man took her phone so she went to the residence to get it back. She said she went to the house to see what time the man needed a ride to work and he took her phone after she got mad. Butler said she asked for her phone back and then left. She said that they had an argument but she didn’t remember what it was about.
• Henry Walter Wiehl III, 33, of Fairbanks, was charged Thursday with misdemeanor fourth-degree assault. According to court documents, Wiehl and a woman got into a 26th Avenue apartment around 6 p.m. Wednesday. Wiehl is accused of beating the woman up, leaving the apartment and driving away in the woman’s car. Wiehl claimed that the woman hit him and swung at him. He said that he was trying to remove the woman from the truck when he accidentally grabbed her nose. He also accused the woman of trying to damage his boat.
Jeffery Scott Hibnes Jr., 50, of Fairbanks, was charged Wednesday with two counts of misdemeanor interfering with emergency communications. According to court documents, Hibnes reportedly called 911 13 times on Feb. 24. Hibnes uses an electric-powered wheelchair and reported that he was too intoxicated to get himself dressed. Medics and police officers refused to dress Hibnes. Hibnes reportedly told dispatchers that he was going to fall out of his chair to purposefully create an emergency. On April 5, Hibnes reportedly called 911 numerous times without reporting an emergency. He was seated on the ground and said that he needed help getting into his wheelchair.
• Jade Ovanna Herbert, 21, of Fairbanks, was charged Wednesday with misdemeanor fourth-degree assault, misdemeanor first-degree criminal trespass and misdemeanor second-degree harassment after troopers responded to a report that someone was on a man’s property. According to court documents, Herbert is accused of entering her ex-boyfriend’s house without permission. When troopers arrived and tried to detain Herbert, she reportedly threw a bottle of whiskey in the troopers’ face.
• Dawon Khalil Harvey, 24, of Fort Wainwright, was charged Wednesday with felony second-degree assault, misdemeanor assault when child present and misdemeanor fourth-degree criminal mischief. According to court documents, a woman discovered that Harvey was cheating on her early Tuesday morning and confronted him about it. Harvey reportedly wouldn’t let the woman leave the apartment and she punched him multiple times when Harvey reportedly grabbed her and forced her onto the bed. After about an hour, Harvey let the woman leave the room. The woman decided to destroy Harvey’s gaming setup when Harvey reportedly grabbed her, forced her to the ground and strangled her twice. During the altercation, Harvey reportedly broke the woman’s glasses. While the woman was at work, Harvey reportedly trashed the woman’s apartment and broke multiple items. The woman was missing several items so she went to Harvey’s Fort Wainwright apartment to get her things back.
The Public Safety Report is compiled from criminal complaints filed in state and federal courts, as well as some police blotter information, trooper dispatches, fire department reports and interviews with public safety officials. Individuals named as arrested and/or charged with crimes in this report are presumed innocent until proved guilty in a court of law.