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Double homicide: North Pole man held for fatal shootings in Delta

Daniel Serkov of North Pole is being held at Fairbanks Correctional Center on two counts of first-degree murder.
Alaska Department of Corrections
Daniel Serkov of North Pole is being held at Fairbanks Correctional Center on two counts of first-degree murder.

A North Pole man is being held at Fairbanks Correctional Center in connection with a double homicide last Friday near Delta Junction.

Thirty-three-year-old Daniel Serkov of North Pole was arraigned Saturday on charges that he shot two men to death the day before at a facility just north of Delta. Fairbanks Correctional Center booking office staff say the presiding magistrate ordered Serkov held on two counts of first-degree murder, and set bail at $2 million.

Troopers identified the two victims as 44-year-old Andrey Dorozhin and 35-year-old Dmitriy Sergiyenko, both of Delta Junction.

The Alaska Bureau of Investigation says Troopers got a report about a double homicide at around 1 p.m. Friday. And when they arrived, they found the bullet-riddled bodies of the two men and a dog at what authorities say is a drug-rehab facility on the Tanana Loop Extension.

By then, rumors were flying on social media, as area residents tried to find out what was going on. One woman who lives a few miles away from the murder scene and asked not to be identified says the uncertainty made her worry even more.

“I’m a widow. It’s just me,” she said. “And I’m armed, but I’d feel safer if I’d had more information that I could’ve gotten from the Troopers had they put it out.”

Soon after Troopers discovered the bodies, they were contacted by Fairbanks police, who advised them that Serkov had just informed them that he’d violated the terms of his release for an earlier unrelated case by possessing a gun that he used to shoot an aggressive dog in Delta.

According to the Alaska Bureau of Investigation report, Troopers then talked with Serkov and determined he was involved in the homicides. They confiscated his 9mm handgun they suspect was used in the shootings and remanded him to Fairbanks Correctional Center on two counts of murder and evidence tampering. He was later also charged with criminal mischief.

The woman in Delta concerned about the lack of information from Troopers says they should’ve contacted area residents after they arrested Serkov to let them know a suspect was in custody.

“If they already had the guy, they didn’t let us know,” she said. “So, a lot of people are sitting at home that are worried about their own safety.”

State Department of Public Safety spokesperson John Dougherty says Troopers do have a system that Alaskans can sign up for to get text or email alerts by going to the DPS website. And he says Troopers didn’t issue an alert in this case because they found the victims’ bodies only a few minutes before Fairbanks P.D. called and said Serkov was at the police station.

“That alert system was not activated, as there was no action that the Troopers needed the Delta Junction community to take,” Dougherty said.

This is believed to be the Delta area’s first double homicide. An investigation into the murders continues.

News
Tim Ellis has been working as a KUAC reporter/producer since 2010. He has more than 30 years experience in broadcast, print and online journalism.