Musher recounts terrifying attack

  • By MARK THIESSEN
  • Friday, March 18, 2016 1:03am
  • Sports

NOME — Iditarod musher Aliy Zirkle said an attack last weekend by a man on a snowmobile lasted for hours, and she felt like a hostage in the Alaska wilderness.

Arnold Demoski of Nulato is accused of intentionally driving a snowmobile into Zirkle’s team and then the team of four-time Iditarod champion Jeff King early Saturday morning. One of King’s dogs, Nash, was killed, and at least two other dogs were injured. Despite the attack, Zirkle finished the nearly 1,000-mile race across Alaska in third place Tuesday morning.

“Over the course of almost two hours one man, by using his snowmachine, made prolonged, aggressive and what I believe to be deliberate threats to me and my team,” she said in a statement posted on the Iditarod website.

“I was terrified. Had it not been for my defensive reactions, we could have been maimed or killed,” she said.

Demoski has said he was returning home from a night of drinking in a neighboring village when he struck the teams. He was going about 100 mph when he crashed into King’s team and about 40 mph when he struck Zirkle’s team, court documents say.

He turned himself in to authorities on Saturday morning after hearing about the attacks and checking his snowmobile, which he found damaged. He has been charged with assault, reckless endangerment and reckless driving.

Demoski’s attorney, Bill Satterberg, declined comment to The Associated Press this week, saying he doesn’t speak on pending cases. He didn’t immediately return a call left before business hours Thursday seeking comment on Zirkle’s statement.

Zirkle said she has mushed on Alaska trails for 20 years and does everything she can to make sure both she and her team are seen. She also said she is experienced in sharing those trails with other users.

“It is on these trails with my dogs that I feel most comfortable and confident,” she said. “That changed on the morning of March 12.”

Zirkle continued into the race checkpoint in Nulato after the attack, which she said occurred over a 17-mile stretch of trail. She said she would have scratched from the race had it not been for the support of the Iditarod judge, the veterinarians, other people with the race and Nulato residents.

“They provided me with practical and moral support and I would not have continued the race without their insistence and encouragement. I thank them all very much for what they did that night,” she said.

Zirkle said her dog, Clyde, couldn’t continue in the race after the attack. Clyde is being reunited with Zirkle in Nome. The rest of her team is healthy and no other dogs were injured in the attack, she said.

“I also have no injuries. However, I am very sad and angry,” she said, adding that her anger is “with only one man.”

She didn’t release a detailed account of the attack, and said this is all she is prepared to make public.

“Those close to me know the full story, as does the Alaska State Trooper to whom I gave my statement,” she said. “The events of the night were extremely distressing to me, and I do not wish to make any further public statements on the matter.”

More in Sports

The Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé Crimson Bears won fourth place during the Division II Hockey State championships in Palmer last weekend. Photo courtesy of Rapi Sotoa
Juneau takes home fourth place during high school state hockey tournament

The Crimson Bears also received the Sportsmanship Award last weekend.

Senior Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé hockey players were recognized at the Treadwell Arena on Friday, Jan. 23, 2026 before the Crimson Bears faced the Homer High School Mariners. Head coach Matt Boline and assistant coaches Mike Bovitz, Luke Adams, Jason Kohlase and Dave Kovach honored 11 seniors. (Chloe Anderson / Juneau Empire)
JDHS celebrates hockey team’s senior night with sweeping victory over Homer

The Crimson Bears saw an 8-2 victory over the Mariners Friday night.

Photo by Ned Rozell
Golds and greens of aspens and birches adorn a hillside above the Angel Creek drainage east of Fairbanks.
Alaska Science Forum: The season of senescence is upon us

Trees and other plants are simply shedding what no longer suits them

Things you won’t find camping in Southeast Alaska. (Jeff Lund/Juneau Empire)
I Went to the Woods: Sodium and serenity

The terrain of interior Alaska is captivating in a way that Southeast isn’t

An albacore tuna is hooked on a bait pole on Oct. 9, 2012, in waters off Oregon. Tuna are normally found along the U.S. West Coast but occasionally stray into Alaska waters if temperatures are high enough. Sport anglers catch them with gear similar to that used to hook salmon. (Photo provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/West Coast Fisheries Management and Marine Life Protection)
Brief tuna bounty in Southeast Alaska spurs excitement about new fishing opportunity

Waters off Sitka were warm enough to lure fish from the south, and local anglers took advantage of conditions to harvest species that make rare appearances in Alaska

Isaac Updike breaks the tape at the Portland Track Festival. (Photo by Amanda Gehrich/pdxtrack)
Updike concludes historic season in steeplechase heats at World Championships

Representing Team USA, the 33-year-old from Ketchikan raced commendably in his second world championships

A whale breaches near Point Retreat on July 19. (Chloe Anderson/Juneau Empire)
Weekly Wonder: The whys of whale breaching

Why whales do the things they do remain largely a mystery to us land-bound mammals

Renee Boozer, Carlos Boozer Jr. and Carlos Boozer Sr. attend the enshrinement ceremony at the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in Sprinfield, Massachusetts, on Saturday, Sept. 6, 2025. As a member of the 2008 U.S. men's Olympic team, Boozer Jr. is a member of the 2025 class. (Photo provided by Carlos Boozer Sr.)
Boozer Jr. inducted into Naismith Hall of Fame with ‘Redeem Team’

Boozer Jr. is a 1999 graduate of Juneau-Douglas: Yadaa.at Kale

Photo by Martin Truffer
The 18,008-foot Mount St. Elias rises above Malaspina Glacier and Sitkagi Lagoon (water body center left) in 2021.
Alaska Science Forum: The long fade of Alaska’s largest glacier

SITKAGI BLUFFS — While paddling a glacial lake complete with icebergs and… Continue reading

Photo by Jeff Lund/Juneau Empire
The point of fishing is to catch fish, but there are other things to see and do while out on a trip.
I Went to the Woods: Fish of the summer

I was amped to be out on the polished ocean and was game for the necessary work of jigging

A female brown bear and her cub are pictured near Pack Creek on Admiralty Island on July 19, 2024. (Chloe Anderson for the Juneau Empire)
Bears: Beloved fuzzy Juneau residents — Part 2

Humor me for a moment and picture yourself next to a brown bear

Isaac Updike of Ketchikan finished 16th at the World Championships track and field meet in Budapest, Hungary, on Tuesday. (Alaska Sports Report)
Ketchikan steeplechaser makes Team USA for worlds

Worlds are from Sept. 13 to 21, with steeplechase prelims starting on the first day