Hunt for accused killer ex-cop moves into California mountains

BIG BEAR LAKE, Calif. (AP) - Police spent all night searching the snowy mountains of Southern California but were unable to find the former Los Angeles police officer accused of carrying out a killing spree because he felt he was unfairly fired from his job.
Authorities planned a midmorning Friday news conference about 80 miles east of LA at Big Bear Lake, where Christopher Dorner's torched pickup was found Thursday.
Local ski areas were open, but Bear Valley schoolchildren had the day off because of the manhunt.
About 150 miles to the south, up to 16 San Diego County sheriff's deputies spent the night surrounding and searching a rural home after a hoaxer reported Dorner was there. There were people at home but Dorner wasn't one of them, said Lt. Jason Rothlein. Investigators have a pretty good idea who made the call and will be seek criminal charges, he said.
Though the focus is on the resort area, the search for Dorner, 33, stretches across California, Nevada, Arizona and northern Mexico. LAPD officers are especially on edge because Dorner, who was fired from the force in 2008 after three years on the job, promised in rambling writings to bring "warfare" to police and their families.
"We don't know what he's going to do," said Cindy Bachman, spokeswoman for the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department, one of many law enforcement agencies whose primary purpose has become finding Dorner. "We know what he's capable of doing. And we need to find him."
Tracks that surrounded the truck and hours of door-to-door searching around Bear Mountain Ski Resort turned up nothing, and authorities conceded that the whereabouts of Dorner, also a former Naval reservist and onetime college running back, remained a mystery.
"He could be anywhere at this point," said San Bernardino County Sheriff John McMahon, who had 125 deputies and police officers and two helicopters searching the community of Big Bear Lake, where light snow fell early Friday morning.
The saga began Sunday night, when Monica Quan and fiance Keith Lawrence were found shot in their car at a parking structure at their condominium in Irvine. Quan was an assistant women's basketball coach at Cal State Fullerton.
The following morning in National City, near San Diego, some of Dorner's belongings, including police equipment and paperwork with names related to the LAPD, were found in a trash bin.
The LAPD was notified of the find, and two days later informed Irvine police of an angry manifesto written by a former officer and posted on Facebook. Among those named as targets was Randal Quan, a former LAPD captain turned attorney who represented Dorner in his unsuccessful attempts to keep the police job he lost in 2008 for making false statements.
Randal Quan was also Monica Quan's father.
"Bing bing bing, the dots were connecting," Irvine police Lt. Julia Engen said. "These names are somehow associated to Mr. Quan, who just lost his daughter the prior day. The dots connected. OK, now we've got a name of somebody to look at. That's when the discovery was connected."
On Wednesday night, Irvine and Los Angeles police announced they were searching for Dorner, declaring him armed and "extremely dangerous." Hours later, they learned they were all too correct.
Two LAPD officers en route to provide security to one of Dorner's possible targets were flagged down by a resident who reported seeing the suspect early Thursday at a gas station in Corona. The officers then followed a pickup truck until it stopped. The driver, believed to be Dorner, got out and fired a rifle, police said. A bullet grazed an officer's head.
Later, two officers on routine patrol in neighboring Riverside were ambushed at a stoplight by a motorist who drove up next to them and opened fire with a rifle. One died and the other was seriously wounded but was expected to survive, said Riverside police Chief Sergio Diaz.
Thousands of heavily armed officers patrolled highways throughout Southern California, while some stood guard outside the homes of people police said Dorner vowed to attack. Electronic billboards, which usually alert motorists about the commute, urged them to call 911 if they saw him.
At a news conference held amid heightened security in an underground room at police headquarters, Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck urged Dorner to surrender.
"Of course he knows what he's doing; we trained him. He was also a member of the Armed Forces," he said. "It is extremely worrisome and scary."
While in the Naval Reserves, Dorner earned a rifle marksman ribbon and pistol expert medal. He was assigned to a naval undersea warfare unit and various aviation training units, according to military records, taking a leave from the LAPD to be deployed to Bahrain in 2006 and 2007.
He wrote that he would "utilize every bit of small arms training, demolition, ordinance and survival training I've been given," the manifesto read.
The hunt led to two errant shootings in the pre-dawn darkness Thursday.
LAPD officers guarding a target named in the manifesto shot and wounded two women in suburban Torrance who were in a pickup truck delivering newspapers. Investigators said Maggie Carranza, 47, and her mother, Emma Hernandez, 71, were in a Toyota Tundra, similar to Dorner's Nissan Titan. Carranza had minor hand injuries. Hernandez was hospitalized with a gunshot wound in the back. A lawyer said they had no warning.
Minutes later, Torrance officers responding to a report of gunshots encountered a dark pickup matching the description of Dorner's, police said. A collision occurred and the officers fired on the pickup. The unidentified driver was not hit and it turned out not to be the suspect vehicle, they said.
In San Diego, where police said Dorner tied up an elderly man and unsuccessfully tried to steal his boat Wednesday night, Naval Base Point Loma was locked down Thursday after a Navy worker reported seeing someone who resembled Dorner.
Navy Cmdr. Brad Fagan said officials believe Dorner had checked into a base hotel on Tuesday and left the next day without checking out. Numerous agencies guarded the base on Thursday. Fagan said Dorner was honorably discharged and that his last day in the Navy was last Friday.
Nevada authorities also joined the search, because Dorner owns a house nine miles from the Las Vegas Strip.
In Big Bear, Dorner's pickup was taken to be processed at a crime lab Thursday evening and examined by investigators from multiple agencies.
The manhunt was affecting some local businesses. A couple of fast food restaurants shut their doors and only took drive-in customers, and the main shopping avenue had light foot traffic.
Dorner's writings suggested he did not expect to live through the ordeal.
"Unfortunately, I will not be alive to see my name cleared," he wrote at one point in his manifesto, later saying, "Self-preservation is no longer important to me. I do not fear death as I died long ago."
Authorities planned a midmorning Friday news conference about 80 miles east of LA at Big Bear Lake, where Christopher Dorner's torched pickup was found Thursday.
Local ski areas were open, but Bear Valley schoolchildren had the day off because of the manhunt.
About 150 miles to the south, up to 16 San Diego County sheriff's deputies spent the night surrounding and searching a rural home after a hoaxer reported Dorner was there. There were people at home but Dorner wasn't one of them, said Lt. Jason Rothlein. Investigators have a pretty good idea who made the call and will be seek criminal charges, he said.
Though the focus is on the resort area, the search for Dorner, 33, stretches across California, Nevada, Arizona and northern Mexico. LAPD officers are especially on edge because Dorner, who was fired from the force in 2008 after three years on the job, promised in rambling writings to bring "warfare" to police and their families.
"We don't know what he's going to do," said Cindy Bachman, spokeswoman for the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department, one of many law enforcement agencies whose primary purpose has become finding Dorner. "We know what he's capable of doing. And we need to find him."
Tracks that surrounded the truck and hours of door-to-door searching around Bear Mountain Ski Resort turned up nothing, and authorities conceded that the whereabouts of Dorner, also a former Naval reservist and onetime college running back, remained a mystery.
"He could be anywhere at this point," said San Bernardino County Sheriff John McMahon, who had 125 deputies and police officers and two helicopters searching the community of Big Bear Lake, where light snow fell early Friday morning.
The saga began Sunday night, when Monica Quan and fiance Keith Lawrence were found shot in their car at a parking structure at their condominium in Irvine. Quan was an assistant women's basketball coach at Cal State Fullerton.
The following morning in National City, near San Diego, some of Dorner's belongings, including police equipment and paperwork with names related to the LAPD, were found in a trash bin.
The LAPD was notified of the find, and two days later informed Irvine police of an angry manifesto written by a former officer and posted on Facebook. Among those named as targets was Randal Quan, a former LAPD captain turned attorney who represented Dorner in his unsuccessful attempts to keep the police job he lost in 2008 for making false statements.
Randal Quan was also Monica Quan's father.
"Bing bing bing, the dots were connecting," Irvine police Lt. Julia Engen said. "These names are somehow associated to Mr. Quan, who just lost his daughter the prior day. The dots connected. OK, now we've got a name of somebody to look at. That's when the discovery was connected."
On Wednesday night, Irvine and Los Angeles police announced they were searching for Dorner, declaring him armed and "extremely dangerous." Hours later, they learned they were all too correct.
Two LAPD officers en route to provide security to one of Dorner's possible targets were flagged down by a resident who reported seeing the suspect early Thursday at a gas station in Corona. The officers then followed a pickup truck until it stopped. The driver, believed to be Dorner, got out and fired a rifle, police said. A bullet grazed an officer's head.
Later, two officers on routine patrol in neighboring Riverside were ambushed at a stoplight by a motorist who drove up next to them and opened fire with a rifle. One died and the other was seriously wounded but was expected to survive, said Riverside police Chief Sergio Diaz.
Thousands of heavily armed officers patrolled highways throughout Southern California, while some stood guard outside the homes of people police said Dorner vowed to attack. Electronic billboards, which usually alert motorists about the commute, urged them to call 911 if they saw him.
At a news conference held amid heightened security in an underground room at police headquarters, Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck urged Dorner to surrender.
"Of course he knows what he's doing; we trained him. He was also a member of the Armed Forces," he said. "It is extremely worrisome and scary."
While in the Naval Reserves, Dorner earned a rifle marksman ribbon and pistol expert medal. He was assigned to a naval undersea warfare unit and various aviation training units, according to military records, taking a leave from the LAPD to be deployed to Bahrain in 2006 and 2007.
He wrote that he would "utilize every bit of small arms training, demolition, ordinance and survival training I've been given," the manifesto read.
The hunt led to two errant shootings in the pre-dawn darkness Thursday.
LAPD officers guarding a target named in the manifesto shot and wounded two women in suburban Torrance who were in a pickup truck delivering newspapers. Investigators said Maggie Carranza, 47, and her mother, Emma Hernandez, 71, were in a Toyota Tundra, similar to Dorner's Nissan Titan. Carranza had minor hand injuries. Hernandez was hospitalized with a gunshot wound in the back. A lawyer said they had no warning.
Minutes later, Torrance officers responding to a report of gunshots encountered a dark pickup matching the description of Dorner's, police said. A collision occurred and the officers fired on the pickup. The unidentified driver was not hit and it turned out not to be the suspect vehicle, they said.
In San Diego, where police said Dorner tied up an elderly man and unsuccessfully tried to steal his boat Wednesday night, Naval Base Point Loma was locked down Thursday after a Navy worker reported seeing someone who resembled Dorner.
Navy Cmdr. Brad Fagan said officials believe Dorner had checked into a base hotel on Tuesday and left the next day without checking out. Numerous agencies guarded the base on Thursday. Fagan said Dorner was honorably discharged and that his last day in the Navy was last Friday.
Nevada authorities also joined the search, because Dorner owns a house nine miles from the Las Vegas Strip.
In Big Bear, Dorner's pickup was taken to be processed at a crime lab Thursday evening and examined by investigators from multiple agencies.
The manhunt was affecting some local businesses. A couple of fast food restaurants shut their doors and only took drive-in customers, and the main shopping avenue had light foot traffic.
Dorner's writings suggested he did not expect to live through the ordeal.
"Unfortunately, I will not be alive to see my name cleared," he wrote at one point in his manifesto, later saying, "Self-preservation is no longer important to me. I do not fear death as I died long ago."
If you want a different picture of these events and what actually led up to them, check out the comments on news websites from Los Angeles sources. Rampant speculation based on LAPD's enormous list of instances of police brutality and corruption. Many, many commenters are touting this guy as having attempted to bring the worst offenses into the light of the courtroom. LAPD is being portrayed as the bad guys, "Code Blue" having been declared on Mr. Dorner (Code Blue means they're attempting to murder the guy to shut him up forever. Supposedly, PD has shot up two or three vehicles, all with innocent civilians inside, all from far enough away that the identities of the occupants of the vehicles were not known until afterwards. Fortunately, no one has been hurt, but the folks of LA are being told only the police and their families are in danger from Mr. Dorner.
Afraid it's case of, "Who are we supposed to believe?"
Remember a couple of years ago in Maryland the 2 knuckleheads who killed about a dozen people sniping. This guy knows the craft knows the police methods they haven't got a clue in where he is or what he's driving.With patience he has the potential to kill many.
This is an aweful tragedy, but I expect Hollywood will show up before he does. If that sounds trite, I suppose it is; I do hope the find this guy soon.
Dorner has them playing his game. He's had four years to plan his revenge. He's got the whole LE community running scared. LE can only keep up this level of alert for so long. He's got to slip up eventually. Doubt he will ever see jail. Probably should call in the drones.
Looking where he ain't.. SOP
@gbudavid Yep. Off-loaded his Harley and went for a little ride.
Hmmm..well, if there was any doubt about whether or not Dorner should have been fired, there isn't now.
RIP Kelly Thomas....
Kelly Thomas? Related to this story? I didn't see that name listed as being killed.
Even the police shouldn't be allowed the carry guns. Period! Sounds ridiculous doesn't it? When I lived in SoCal, you heard every night about a new case of police brutality from the LAPD. Not sure if much has changed because that was way back when OJ Simpson was on trial. Doesn't sound like it has.Â
 @PDXBEAR A weapons instructor in this area worked down there during the King era. He's a minority. Taught me a lot, man. His job was to case houses that they were going to raid to make a mental note of where the windows were, any security lights, and particularly evidence of children such as toys in the yard. Then, before the raid, he used a silenced weapon to take out the yard dogs--gangs always have guard dogs--and the outside lights, and then they'd storm the gang house. His account of a gunfight in a closet is his to tell but, riveting. Awesome guy.
He will not be taken alive.
 @RalphCramden Looks like if you own a dark colored Toyota it had better be bullet proof or left in the garage. Sure hope the guys shooting up anything that looks like his car are canned and charged with a crime. Just because you are scared for your life does not mean you can shoot up a vehicle without knowing who is inside cop or no cop.
 @FreedomRocks The LAPD feel they are above the law. That is what started this whole mess.
@FreedomRocks @RalphCramden ---- sure they can, this LAPD.
 @RalphCramden Maybe a big neon sign to rent for a week to put in the back of the truck that says I am not Dorner please ask first before shooting?
Sounds like they are shooting at any dark colored pickup. Jeeez.
 @old_dollor Those dark colored pickups all look the same to me anyway...
Gee, if high-capacity magazines and AR-15s aren't necessary for use inside residential areas, why are there SO FREAKING MANY COPS CARRYING THEM in this picture.  How many bullets are those cops going to fire into the neighborhood to "protect" the community from a rogue cop?I see five LEO-only AR-15 variants in the top photo which means, if they're using 20-round mags (mid-cap) they're carrying at LEAST 100 rounds into the house.Mr. Biden, Mayor Hales, I would like to know--since you claim that these weapons are only used for killing as many people as possible--why those cops are going into a house to catch ONE GUY, and please explain how this doesn't fly in the face of your rhetoric.
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 @Dr. Rawdog  @Playanekes Didn't the idiots in NY had to do a lot of back peddling on that one because they passed laws in a hurry that did not exclude police and then had to be revised when they realized their knee jerk reaction was a slight problem...
 @Playanekes  @FreedomRocks  @Dr. Rawdog Stonewall was shot by his own men.
 @FreedomRocks  @Dr. Rawdog That's exactly what happened if you look at it in one way.If you look at it in another way, Cuomo came to the same realization as Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson, which is that you can't trust a Yankee with a gun.
This whole thing started when Dorner reported another officer for using excessive force during an arrest.  LAPDs actions yesterday in Torrance really prove Dorner's point.
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I do NOT in any way condone anything about what Dorner is doing...but...if you read his manifesto (which I did last night)...you will understand that we have just as much to fear from the current LAPD officers as we do from Mr. Dorner.
 @oh4FS  I read it also. I feel for him. I wish it hadn't come to this. I wish a reporter would actually investigate his claims before the LAPD have the chance to "silence" him once and for all for crossing "the blue line"
The fact that Dorner was not discharged for 10 months tells me that his "whistle blowing" was probably not the reason for dismissal. The fact that he waits four years to enact his vengence by killing the child and fiance, two totally innocent people,......this tells me this guy was off plumb. The manifesto is a one-sided story. If you give it credibility without further scrutiny, you fall short of being fair.
 @oh4FS Yep and you still convinced the average citizen does not need a way to protect himself from the state? Clearly they can and will go rouge under the right conditions...
 @FreedomRocks  @oh4FS in your fantasy, what happens after you draw your weapon on a police officer that you feel threatened by? I have always wondered what you psychotic gun fanatics actually think would happen in this scenario.
 @sharkbomb  @oh4FS Why do anti gun people always have to paint and extremely limited EXAMPLE that fits their arguments against guns.
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All I said was at some time in our countries future it may be nice to be able to protect yourself from a run away police state.
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Then you start making up fantasy scenarios that fit your agenda....only one person in fantasy land here...
 @sharkbomb  @FreedomRocks  @oh4FS Have you always wondered because it hasn't happened?  Otherwise, you'd know.Oh, yeah... Waco. Janet lied, Children Died.
 @oh4FS Protecting and Serving, Liberal Police State style.