Ahad, 10 Februari 2013

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Dorner manhunt: Reward will be offered for ex-cop's capture - Los Angeles Times

Posted: 10 Feb 2013 07:55 AM PST

Search continues for fugitive ex-cop

Authorities on Sunday will offer a reward for information leading to the capture of a former Los Angeles Police Department officer wanted in the killings of three people and the wounding of two others.

According to a statement, the news conference will be attended by law enforcement officials from Los Angeles, Riverside and Irvine. Officials from the FBI and U.S. marshal's office also will be there.

The reward will come a week after Christopher Jordan Dorner's alleged killing spree began.

Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck announced he was reopening the investigation into the firing of  Dorner from the Police Department, the event that apparently sparked his vengeful campaign.

Beck said he was reopening the investigation "not to appease a murderer" but to assure the public his department is fair and transparent. He said he wanted to protect an "increasingly positive relationship with the community" that the LAPD has developed over the last few years.

"I am aware of the ghosts of the LAPD's past and one of my biggest concerns is that they will be resurrected by Dorner's allegations of racism within the department," Beck said in a prepared statement. "...Therefore, I feel we need to also publicly address Dorner's allegations regarding his termination of employment."

DOCUMENT: Chief Beck's statement regarding Dorner

Dorner was stripped of his badge in 2009 after a police disciplinary board found him guilty of making false statements against his training officer, Teresa Evans. In August 2007, Dorner accused Evans of kicking a mentally ill man during an arrest in San Pedro.

The internal affairs investigation concluded Evans had not kicked the man and Dorner was lying.

Police said Dorner has killed three people, including a Riverside police officer, and injured two others over the last week in a campaign to take revenge on those he blamed for his dismissal from the LAPD.

At a news conference Saturday, LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith announced a special joint task force was being formed to investigate the Dorner case. Participating agencies include the Irvine and Riverside police departments, the FBI, the U.S. marshal's office and other law enforcement organizations.

Dorner remained a fugitive Saturday despite an interstate manhunt that included SWAT teams, armored-personnel carriers and helicopters with heat-detecting cameras.

In their third day of searching for the 33-year-old Navy veteran, authorities kept their focus on the mountains around Big Bear Lake in San Bernardino County.

Dorner's burned-out pickup truck was discovered Thursday morning on a dirt forest service road in the area. The truck's axle was damaged and investigators discovered torched weapons inside the vehicle, law enforcement sources said. Sheriff's SWAT units began scouring the forest for Dorner within hours, but their efforts were slowed by heavy snowfall.

On Saturday, agencies from throughout the region collaborated on an aerial search using two helicopters equipped with infrared cameras that detect heat.

"We can see any person or a rabbit," said helicopter pilot Bill Fitzgerald of the Orange County Sheriff's Department. "The only thing that's harder about it here is that the person could be bundled up, so you maybe only get their head or hands."

With the novelty of the manhunt wearing thin and fresh powder thick on the slopes, tourists descended on the resort area Saturday. Visitors enjoying blue skies and 18 inches of fresh snow said they doubted Dorner was near.

"It would be dumb for him to be up here with his torched vehicle," said Kristy Deas, who was visiting with her husband and three children from Edwards Air Force Base. "He's probably somewhere else."

FULL COVERAGE: The manhunt for Christopher Dorner

Years of court filings and Internet posts have shed some light on the fugitive's mysterious personality. Dorner was described as a bully and depicted as a man who appeared obsessed with preserving his good name.

He had a history of making complaints against fellow LAPD officers as well as an ex-girlfriend.

When a Los Angeles police disciplinary board found Dorner guilty of making false statements against Evans, he could not hide his dismay. "I told the truth!" Dorner blurted out in the hearing room. "How can this happen?"

Dorner's stunned reaction was detailed in transcripts of the hearing filed in appeals court. "The board has determined that Officer Dorner's credibility is damaged beyond repair," the board chairman said.

Dorner also was accused of punching a recruit, Abraham Schefres, in the chest while both were in the Police Academy in 2006, records show. Schefres was wearing a bulletproof vest and a trauma plate when Dorner allegedly punched him.

Schefres did not believe the punch warranted a complaint at the time and later told an investigator he "believed this was part of Dorner's persona," records show. He described Dorner as a "hothead" who would walk up to fellow recruits and "get in their faces in an aggressive" but joking way.

Dorner said he "tapped" Schefres on the chest because he was wearing an expensive trauma plate, according to the transcripts.

Schefres was interviewed about the punch during an investigation into allegations that Dorner slapped the hand of another recruit, records show. Dorner had accused a second recruit — as well as another recruit — of using a racial slur while they were traveling in a police vehicle during their time in the academy.

The department confirmed Dorner's slur allegation against one of the recruits but not the other, records show. The agency concluded Dorner's punch of Schefres did not rise to the level of misconduct.

By then, Dorner was serving a military deployment overseas for the Navy. He returned to the LAPD in the summer of 2007, and in August made the accusation against Evans.

In a Facebook post that authorities have described as his manifesto, Dorner allegedly said he had "exhausted all available means at obtaining my name back. In essence, I've lost everything because the LAPD took my name and (knew) I was INNOCENT!!!"

Dorner spent years unsuccessfully appealing his termination. The Facebook post complained about Randal K. Quan, saying he did not fairly represent Dorner at the LAPD hearing. "Suppressing the truth will lead to deadly consequences for you and your family," the manifesto said.

Quan's daughter, Monica Quan, a Cal State Fullerton assistant basketball coach, and her fiance, Keith Lawrence, were found shot to death last Sunday in Irvine. Irvine police on Wednesday named Dorner as the suspect. On Thursday, Dorner allegedly opened fire on three Riverside police officers, killing one and wounding another.

--Matt Stevens, Ari Bloomekatz, Hailey Branson Potts

Photo: Search and rescue personnel from the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department gear up Saturday for the continuing manhunt for fugitive ex-cop Christopher Dorner in the mountains around Big Bear Lake. Credit: Michael Robinson Chavez / Los Angeles Times

Northeast struggles to dig out after 'Nemo' - USA TODAY

Posted: 10 Feb 2013 08:23 AM PST

The thick blanket of snow and troubles that buried most of the Northeast this weekend slowly began receding Sunday, with power being restored in some areas, and highways and airports again coming to life.

Power had returned to more than 300,000 people and businesses Sunday, almost half the number left cold and dark during the height of the brutal and historic storm that dumped 2 feet to 3 feet of snow in many areas.

Although more than 6,000 flights have been canceled in the region since Friday, New York's major airports were operational Sunday. Even Boston's Logan International Airport was open for business.

And the sun came out.

In Somerset, Mass., Mary Lewis, 48, was feeling some relief Sunday, her house again warm after almost 24 hours without power. She, her husband and teen daughter had spent hours trying to stay warm with the heat of a fireplace and hot chocolate from a gas grill. They finally had to abandon their home, taking shelter with a neighbor who never lost power.

Her power was restored late Saturday. On Sunday she was was able to drive to the home of her parents, 45 minutes away, to help dig them out.

"It was a little stressful for awhile, but it's getting better," Lewis said. "At least we were prepared for it. We are resilient."

FULL COVERAGE: 'Nemo' blasts Northeast

STORY: Airline cancellations soar in blizzard

But much work remains before normalcy returns following the storm that was blamed for 11 deaths in the USA, including an 11-year-old Boston boy who was overcome by carbon monoxide in a running car that his father was digging out of a snow bank.

Hurricane-force winds and history making snowfalls had conspired to spread misery from New Jersey to Maine. Winds gusted to 76 mph in Boston and 84 mph in Cuttyhunk, Mass., during the height of the storm Saturday. The storm piled the most snow on Hamden, Conn. — 40 inches — and was the fifth largest in Boston history, with 24.9 inches of snow recorded there.

The 31.9 inches in Portland, Maine, is the most ever recorded there from a single snowstorm; the storm was the second biggest for Hartford, Conn. (22.8 inches) and Concord, N.H. (24 inches), and third biggest in Worcester, Mass. (28.7 inches).

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said his city dodged the worst of the weather, with Central Park coming in at just under a foot of snow.

But in New England, while many highways were cleared Sunday, many side roads remained impassable and cars remained entombed by snow drifts. Some people found the snow packed so high against their homes they couldn't get their doors open.

"It's like lifting cement. They say it's 2 feet, but I think it's more like 3 feet," said Michael Levesque, who was shoveling snow in Quincy, Mass., for a landscaping company.

Across much of the region, streets were empty of cars and dotted instead with children who had never seen so much snow and were jumping into snow banks and making forts. Snow was waist-high in the streets of Boston. Plows that made some thoroughfares passable piled even more snow on cars parked on the city's narrow streets.

In Massachusetts, NStar utility said it was too dangerous to send in crews in many areas. National Guard troops helped evacuate coastal areas where there was some flooding.

Municipal workers from New York to Boston labored through the night Saturday in snow-bound communities.

"We've never seen anything like this," said Suffolk County Executive Steven Bellone of Long Island, which got more than 2½ feet of snow.

Amtrak said trains between New York and Boston were suspended Saturday but some trains would run Sunday.

The storm, dubbed "Nemo" by the Weather Channel, was not as bad as some of the forecasts led many to fear, and not as dire as the Blizzard of '78, used by longtime New Englanders as the benchmark by which all other winter storms are measured.

Contributing: Gary Strauss, Kevin McCoy, Melanie Eversley, Ben Mutzabaugh, Stephanie Haven; Associated Press

Kredit: www.nst.com.my
 

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