A record $1 million reward was posted on Sunday for
information leading to the capture of a fugitive former Los Angeles
policeman, Christopher Dorner, suspected of targeting police officers
and their families in three killings committed in retaliation for his
2008 firing.
Los
Angeles Police Department Chief Charlie Beck said the reward, raised
from private donations, police unions, businesses and city and county
governments, marks the largest sum ever offered in Southern California
in a criminal investigation.
The reward was posted as law enforcement agencies across the region
pressed on for a fourth day in their search for the suspect, ex-LAPD
officer and U.S. Navy reservist Christopher Dorner, 33. Beck described
it as the most extensive manhunt ever mounted in the Los Angeles area.
He called the spate of revenge-driven violence Dorner is accused of committing “an act of domestic terrorism.”
“This is a man who has targeted those who we entrust to protect the public. His actions cannot go unanswered,” Beck said.
At a news conference, Beck said investigators were making progress
but he declined to elaborate, saying they presumed that if Dorner is
still alive, he would be following media coverage of the manhunt
closely.
Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa added, “Our dedication to
catching this killer remains steadfast, our confidence in bringing him
to justice remains unshaken.”
An LAPD spokesman also said police would be providing extra security
for the recording industry’s Grammy Awards ceremony on Sunday at the
Staples Center in downtown Los Angles.
The search for Dorner has been focused in the snow-covered San
Bernardino Mountains northeast of Los Angeles since a pickup truck
belonging to Dorner was found abandoned and burning near the popular ski
resort community of Big Bear Lake on Thursday.
Police throughout the region also have chased down numerous unconfirmed sightings and dead-end leads.
One of the latest of those, prompted by calls from two individuals
reporting they had seen someone resembling Dorner, led police on Sunday
to a hardware store in L.A.’s San Fernando Valley community of
Northridge.
The store was evacuated and searched, but no evidence of Dorner’s presence was uncovered, police said.
His last confirmed encounters with authorities came early on Thursday
in two Riverside County towns east of Los Angeles, police said. He is
accused of exchanging gunfire with a pair of police officers in Corona,
injuring one, and later ambushing two policemen at a stoplight in
Riverside. One of those officers was killed, the other wounded.
‘UNCONVENTIONAL WARFARE’
A rambling manifesto posted on Dorner’s Facebook page last week
claimed he was wrongly terminated from the LAPD in September 2008 and
vowed to seek revenge by unleashing “unconventional and asymmetrical
warfare” on police officers and their families.
A former Navy lieutenant, Dorner was named as a suspect in last
weekend’s slayings of a campus security officer and his fiance, the
daughter of a retired Los Angeles police captain blamed in Dorner’s
manifesto for his dismissal. The couple, Keith Lawrence, 27, and Monica
Quan, 28, were found shot dead last Sunday in their car on the top level
of a parking structure in the city of Irvine, south of Los Angeles.
Dorner had ended his military service two days earlier, but the Navy has not disclosed the circumstances of his discharge.
Quan’s father, Randy, had represented Dorner in disciplinary
proceedings that led to his dismissal from the LAPD after a police
inquiry found he had made false statements accusing a superior officer
of using excessive force against a homeless person.
Beck announced on Saturday a reopening of the inquiry to “reassure
the public that their police department is transparent and fair.”
The LAPD also has launched an inquiry into a police shooting in which
two women were wounded when officers opened fire on a pickup truck
resembling Dorner’s vehicle in a case of mistaken identity on Thursday.
The two women, one of them aged 71, were delivering newspapers when they
were shot.
The police officer who was killed in an ambush that morning was
publicly identified on Sunday as Michael Crain, 34, a U.S. Marine Corps
veteran who served in the Riverside Police Department for 11 years.
LAPD spokesman Andrew Smith said “an army” of police officers would
be providing security for a public memorial service planned for Crain on
Wednesday.
In addition to keeping up the manhunt in and around Big Bear Lake,
police were searching areas around the homes of more than 50 Los Angeles
police officers whose families authorities believe Dorner has targeted
as potential victims. By Channels Television
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