The Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend is a total fraud and a scam subject to wholesale automated garnishment in a corrupt self-help court system
There is a wholesale identity theft with money laundering and misappropriation of personal, movable and real property also taking place in connection with the PFD application process
These are serious federal crimes, but the feds who live in Alaska and might otherwise investigate financial and white collar crimes are compromised by personal involvement and subornation of perjury.

This is apparently the only “legal” definition of “legal self-help” to be found anywhere; except factually wrong, because “self-help at law” is actually a serious crime of outrageous presumptuousness, extreme arrogance and shopkeeper’s privilege in court, and an egregious bar violation to boot if committed by any licensed attorney.


A certain degree of offense of “unsworn falsification” is improperly specified under a disbarred statute by corrupt legislators in the state as particularly relating to the fraudulent Permanent Fund Dividend application.

CSSB 104(JUD): "An Act relating to the crimes of unsworn falsification in the first and second degrees and false information or report; requiring the establishment of a permanent fund dividend fraud investigation unit in the Department of Revenue; and providing for an effective date."
(a) A person commits the crime of unsworn falsification in the first degree if the person violates AS 11.56.210(a)(1) and the application is an application for a permanent fund dividend. ¶(b) In this section, ¶(1) “application for a permanent fund dividend” includes a written or electronic application and any other documentation submitted to support an application for a permanent fund dividend; ¶(2) “permanent fund dividend” has the meaning given in AS 43.23.295. ¶(c) Unsworn falsification in the first degree is a class C felony.

Alaska has a self-help court system where any “established” business or debt collector who is recognized by the state as “in the business” of collecting consumer debts is allowed to serve a “writ of execution” and entitled to forcibly collect or “attach” any alleged debt claimed to be owed to them by a consumer.
Consumers for their part are subject to an extreme “shopkeeper’s privilege” in the State of Alaska and as “sitting ducks” ripe for the plucking they are not generally permitted to contest any debts claimed to be owed to a legitimate business in the state, or to resist any attempts at collections.