A man suspected of intentionally driving a snowmobile into the teams of two mushers near the front of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race was arrested on Saturday in a Yukon River village.
Arnold Demoski, 26, of Nulato was arrested on suspicion of assault, reckless endangerment, reckless driving and six counts of criminal mischief.
Demoski spoke to KTUU-TV, saying he was returning home from a night of drinking when he struck Aliy Zirkle and Jeff King’s teams early on Saturday morning.
Photo: Maren Johnson/Husky Homestead via AP
The crashes killed one of King’s dogs and injured at least two others. One of Zirkle’s dogs was also injured. Iditarod officials at first reported King had been injured, but the four-time champion later said that the snowmobile had missed both him and his sled.
Demoski said that when he woke up on Saturday morning and heard what had happened to the mushers, he checked his snowmobile and realized he had done it. The snowmobile was missing a part and had rust-colored stains, he said.
Demoski said he does not remember the collisions, which the Iditarod described as apparently intentional attacks.
“I just want to say I’m sorry,” he said.
Zirkle, 46, who finished second in 2012, 2013 and 2014, was mushing from Kokukuk to Nulato, a run of less than 33km on the Yukon River, when she was hit, race marshal Mark Nordman said.
The snowmobile hit the side of Zirkle’s sled about 8km outside of Koyukuk, turned around multiple times and came back at her before driving off, Alaska State Troopers spokeswoman Megan Peters said by e-mail.
The snowmobile reappeared about 19km outside of Nulato. The driver revved up and pointed at Zirkle before leaving, Peters said.
Demoski told KTUU that he did not return to harass Zirkle. He said he wanted to check to make sure she was OK. One dog on Zirkle’s team was bruised. Officials described the injury as non-life-threatening.
Zirkle reached Nulato and told a race official the incident had left her shaken.
“I’m really bad. Someone tried to kill me with a snowmachine,” she said on a video posted to the Iditarod Insider Web site. “Snowmachine” is what Alaskans call snowmobiles.
King, a four-time Iditarod champion, was behind Zirkle and fared worse. When King reached the vicinity outside of Nulato, his team was struck from behind by the snowmobile.
Nash, a three-year-old male, was killed. Crosby, another three-year-old male, and Banjo, a two-year-old male, received injuries and are expected to survive.
King told the Iditarod Insider the snowmobile narrowly missed him and his sled, but hit his dogs at high speed.
“One of my dogs was killed pretty much on the spot, and a couple others I gave first aid to the best I could and loaded them into my sled,” he said. “I kind of felt like a triage ambulance.”
It did not appear to be an accident, he said, adding that it seemed more like an act of bravado.
Rural Alaskan communities have wonderful people, he said, but they also have serious social problems.
“It is beyond comprehension to me that this was not related to substance abuse,” King said, adding that “no one in their right mind would do what this person did.”
King remained in Nulato early Saturday afternoon.
The race leader early Saturday afternoon was Brent Sass, who left the village of Kaltag at 8:20am.
Zirkle rested four hours in Nulato and dropped one dog before heading back onto the Yukon River with 14 dogs in harness. She reached Kaltag at 10:44am, and after a nine-minute rest, left again in second place.
Current champion Dallas Seavey left Kaltag at 11:24am in third place. His father, former champion Mitch Seavey, was in fourth place.
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