Search for fugitive ex-cop sets LA region on edge

IRVINE, Calif. (AP) - A heavy police presence sectioned off a block of homes in a quiet Southern California suburb Sunday, as residents adjusted to life at the center of a sprawling manhunt for a fugitive whose police and military background and vitriolic online manifesto has put the region on high-alert.
Joe Palacio lives down the street from a home surrounded by authorities protecting a police captain mentioned as a target in Christopher Dorner's Facebook rant against those he held responsible for his dismissal from the LAPD five years ago.
Dorner, 33, is suspected of killing three people, including one police officer, and as the manhunt entered its fourth day with no success, authorities posted a $1 million reward for information leading to his capture.
After days of anxiety, the fact that Dorner was still a fugitive caused concern among some living in the upscale, planned community - and downright fear among others.
"If he did come around this corner, what could happen? We're in the crossfire, with the cops right there," said Palacio, who lives on the street corner being guarded by a black-and-white cruiser.
"I do think about where I would put my family," he said. "Would we call 911? Would we hide in the closet?"
The upscale neighborhood has been flooded with authorities since Wednesday, with police helicopters at one point circling neighborhoods and cruisers staking out schools. Some have responded by keeping their children home. Others no longer walk their dogs at night.
Dorner's background added to the worry. The former LAPD officer also served in the Navy, earning a rifle marksman ribbon and a pistol expert medal. He was assigned to a naval undersea warfare unit and various aviation training units, according to military records.
In his online manifesto, Dorner vowed to use "every bit of small arms training, demolition, ordnance and survival training I've been given" to bring "warfare" to the LAPD and its families.
As tense Irvine residents tried to go on with their lives, police investigated a taunting phone call to the father of the woman they believe Dorner killed last week.
Two law enforcement officers who requested anonymity because of the ongoing investigation told The Associated Press they are trying to determine if Dorner made the call telling retired police Capt. Randal Quan that he should have done a better job protecting his daughter.
The bodies of Monica Quan and her fiance were found Feb. 3 in Irvine, setting off what would become a wave of fear. They had been shot.
Things escalated early Thursday morning, when police say Dorner got into a shootout with an LAPD officer in Corona, grazing an officer's head with a bullet before escaping. Police believe he then used a rifle to ambush two Riverside police officers, killing one and seriously wounding the other. A funeral for Officer Michael Crain, an 11-year veteran, was scheduled for Wednesday.
About 65 miles away, the manhunt continued in the San Bernardino mountains near the ski resort town of Big Bear, where authorities found Dorner's burned out pickup truck Thursday. Police have since announced discovering weapons and camping gear inside the vehicle.
The search scaled down as the weekend went on, but a helicopter with heat-seeking technology scanned the area as two-dozen officers went door-to-door to search about 600 cabins.
With Dorner still on the loose and little apparent evidence pointing to his whereabouts, police offered a $1 million reward.
"We will not tolerate this reign of terror," said LA Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.
Meanwhile, worrisome questions emerged: How long could the intense search be sustained? And, if Dorner counties to evade capture, how do authorities protect dozens of former police colleagues whom he has publicly targeted?
LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith characterized the protection detail provided to people Dorner has targeted as intensive. The department has deployed 50 protection details to guard officers and their families who are deemed targets in Dorner's manifesto, he said.
"It can't be one guy with a gun in a living room," Smith said.
The department, however, is looking for ways to economize if the search for Dorner stretches on, whether it's reducing the numbers of officers assigned to the targets or something else, he said.
There were no plans to reduce protections until Dorner was in custody, said Los Angeles police Sgt. Rudy Lopez.
As long as Dorner's whereabouts are unknown, the police department must provide protection to those named in his rant, said Chuck Drago, a Florida-based police consultant.
If the search drags into weeks and months, the LAPD will likely find secret safe houses for the targeted individuals, much as they would for witness protection participants, instead of posting officers outside their homes nonstop, he said.
"We realize it costs money and it gets expensive, but this is as clear of a threat as you can get," Drago said. "We know that if he's able to get to these targets then he's probably able to hurt them. The money is always an issue but not when it's somebody's life at stake."
LAPD remains on modified tactical alert, responding only to priority calls and not to those for lesser issues such as public intoxication or business disputes.
Authorities Sunday morning had six cars protecting Capt. Phil Tingirides, who chaired a disciplinary panel that stripped Dorner of his badge. Black and white police cruisers were posted on each end of his street and four more were parked outside his home.
At least a half-dozen officers were visibly standing guard.
___
Associated Press writer Andrew Dalton in Los Angeles contributed.
Joe Palacio lives down the street from a home surrounded by authorities protecting a police captain mentioned as a target in Christopher Dorner's Facebook rant against those he held responsible for his dismissal from the LAPD five years ago.
Dorner, 33, is suspected of killing three people, including one police officer, and as the manhunt entered its fourth day with no success, authorities posted a $1 million reward for information leading to his capture.
After days of anxiety, the fact that Dorner was still a fugitive caused concern among some living in the upscale, planned community - and downright fear among others.
"If he did come around this corner, what could happen? We're in the crossfire, with the cops right there," said Palacio, who lives on the street corner being guarded by a black-and-white cruiser.
"I do think about where I would put my family," he said. "Would we call 911? Would we hide in the closet?"
The upscale neighborhood has been flooded with authorities since Wednesday, with police helicopters at one point circling neighborhoods and cruisers staking out schools. Some have responded by keeping their children home. Others no longer walk their dogs at night.
Dorner's background added to the worry. The former LAPD officer also served in the Navy, earning a rifle marksman ribbon and a pistol expert medal. He was assigned to a naval undersea warfare unit and various aviation training units, according to military records.
In his online manifesto, Dorner vowed to use "every bit of small arms training, demolition, ordnance and survival training I've been given" to bring "warfare" to the LAPD and its families.
As tense Irvine residents tried to go on with their lives, police investigated a taunting phone call to the father of the woman they believe Dorner killed last week.
Two law enforcement officers who requested anonymity because of the ongoing investigation told The Associated Press they are trying to determine if Dorner made the call telling retired police Capt. Randal Quan that he should have done a better job protecting his daughter.
The bodies of Monica Quan and her fiance were found Feb. 3 in Irvine, setting off what would become a wave of fear. They had been shot.
Things escalated early Thursday morning, when police say Dorner got into a shootout with an LAPD officer in Corona, grazing an officer's head with a bullet before escaping. Police believe he then used a rifle to ambush two Riverside police officers, killing one and seriously wounding the other. A funeral for Officer Michael Crain, an 11-year veteran, was scheduled for Wednesday.
About 65 miles away, the manhunt continued in the San Bernardino mountains near the ski resort town of Big Bear, where authorities found Dorner's burned out pickup truck Thursday. Police have since announced discovering weapons and camping gear inside the vehicle.
The search scaled down as the weekend went on, but a helicopter with heat-seeking technology scanned the area as two-dozen officers went door-to-door to search about 600 cabins.
With Dorner still on the loose and little apparent evidence pointing to his whereabouts, police offered a $1 million reward.
"We will not tolerate this reign of terror," said LA Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.
Meanwhile, worrisome questions emerged: How long could the intense search be sustained? And, if Dorner counties to evade capture, how do authorities protect dozens of former police colleagues whom he has publicly targeted?
LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith characterized the protection detail provided to people Dorner has targeted as intensive. The department has deployed 50 protection details to guard officers and their families who are deemed targets in Dorner's manifesto, he said.
"It can't be one guy with a gun in a living room," Smith said.
The department, however, is looking for ways to economize if the search for Dorner stretches on, whether it's reducing the numbers of officers assigned to the targets or something else, he said.
There were no plans to reduce protections until Dorner was in custody, said Los Angeles police Sgt. Rudy Lopez.
As long as Dorner's whereabouts are unknown, the police department must provide protection to those named in his rant, said Chuck Drago, a Florida-based police consultant.
If the search drags into weeks and months, the LAPD will likely find secret safe houses for the targeted individuals, much as they would for witness protection participants, instead of posting officers outside their homes nonstop, he said.
"We realize it costs money and it gets expensive, but this is as clear of a threat as you can get," Drago said. "We know that if he's able to get to these targets then he's probably able to hurt them. The money is always an issue but not when it's somebody's life at stake."
LAPD remains on modified tactical alert, responding only to priority calls and not to those for lesser issues such as public intoxication or business disputes.
Authorities Sunday morning had six cars protecting Capt. Phil Tingirides, who chaired a disciplinary panel that stripped Dorner of his badge. Black and white police cruisers were posted on each end of his street and four more were parked outside his home.
At least a half-dozen officers were visibly standing guard.
___
Associated Press writer Andrew Dalton in Los Angeles contributed.
He is probably long gone. This was bound to happen. Â
Police departments target officers when they are too honest. Â I have seen this happen. Â
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National news is reporting that he may have called one of the victims' fathers, from a phone in Vancouver, Wa.
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The million dollars are coming from the police unions around he state.
They kind of have to they have a vested interest in getting this crazy man off the streets
$1 million dollars...............................................REWARD? or BOUNTY?..............you decide!!!!!!!
He's turning into a left-wing counter-culture hero the way Manson was when he killed the Summer of Love. This completely blows up the standard right-left rhetoric.People who are complaining about the bounty, remember that it will save them a whole lot of money over having to have tens of thousands of cops on high alert, drones flying, lawsuits rolling in when the Feinstein Police State fails to protect and serve... this is a cost-conserving measure as much as a fear reaction.He can't wage war on the LAPD if he goes to Mexico, Nevada or Oregon, but, I think there's more to the idea that he broke his axle and ran into the mountains because anybody knows he could have hijacked a car, driven somewhere and won't be trackable until a missing person report comes in or an abandoned car is found. In California.
In other words, they have no clue as to his whereabouts or any leads. Â They f..d this one up.
 @pdxtvguy This kind of thing normally wraps itself up after 50 minutes but sometimes they stretch it out for a whole season. The tricky part is when Jack Bauer or Batman doesn't come to the rescue.
Hey, LAPD, Dr. Evil would like to have a word with you:
Â
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l91ISfcuzDw
A million dollars? Tax-free? Dead or alive? Where's the money coming from? Â
@jpk You get an IOU...
As long as it's in writing. LOL
California can't pay it's own bills but now offers bounties. Â Stupid state. Â Do something that won't cost any money take all the bans off firearms and sooner or later somone will come across him.
Cool, $1,000,000 and they are searching every house and vehicle in the region! I'll bet if it was 3 normal citizens there would be no manhunt at all beyond a couple of uniformed officers and one plain clothes detective completing the routine investigation/paper work and there would be no reward other than the "CrimeStoppers" $1,000 civilian reward. I am willing to bet they will also find some way of justifying the shooting of those two innocent ladies and the other guy's vehicle.
Dorner is dead. They'll find him, and if he's still alive, he'll either commit suicide or be assisted with suicide. LAPD doesn't take kindly to this kind of thing, and that guy will never stand trial.Â
 @Old29 Yeah, they prefer to be the ones that do the shooting.
 @TreeWizard  @Old29 Then the east LA riots and civil marches begin. Then it starts over.
Funny how this plays right into DHS branding returning vets essentially as terrorists to be watched at every turn.
Very few people ever get the reward offered. Usually they claim you never gave them your address, that you weren't the one that turned in whomever they're looking for, or it was a police officer on routine patrol that spotted the wanted person. The rewards are a joke.
(I must note, that's a fine looking Ruger Officer Owens is holding.)
 @Reflect makes me want to have one.
 @Reflect I noticed the same thing. It's not an AR-15. My uncle taught me to handle, shoot, clean and store rifles with a Ruger Mini 14 which was hugely cool to me because the A-Team carried them. :>Â
 @ReflectÂ
I was thinking the same thing. It's not common for LE to use a Min-14 but is definitely a nice weapon. Being that it is stainless steel has some advantages in wetter climates.
 @RalphCramden True indeed.
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 @gunnutz I don't have to imagine. ;)
They'll make a movie about this in a couple of decades.
"They'll make a movie about THIS in a couple of decades." What do you mean THIS? The fugitive cop, the corrupted LAPD, or the even? They had "Training Day", good one and it gave me a heavy heart after watching it. I recommend it.
 @Reflect I'm sure they're already working on it.
 @axpman You're probably right.
Man, don't come up behind one of the LAPD and yell boo for a couple of weeks.