Originally posted by Forever_frost
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Evidently, you CAN push someone too far
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Originally posted by Nash B. View PostAnd lived to be convicted..
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Originally posted by Aceman85turbo View Postso they didnt shoot up TWO innocent civilian vehicles last week?
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Originally posted by Forever_frost View PostAnd they 'found' an ID in the burned out cabin that is Dorner's. The same one that was found last week in a trash can near Mexico. Odd isn't it?
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This all stinks of bullshit and will do nothing to help police relations with citizens.
"a million huh? Let me see the deposit in my bank account, sign this contract saying you won't attempt to withdrawal funds, and THEN you crooks get the info"
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Originally posted by Cooter View PostNope. That too was made up by the media. These are not the droids you're looking for.sigpic18 F150 Supercrew - daily
17 F150 Supercrew - totaled Dec 12, 2018
13 DIB Premium GT, M6, Track Pack, Glass Roof, Nav, Recaros - Sold
86 SVO - Sold
'03 F150 Supercrew - Sold
01 TJ - new toy - Sold
65 F100 (460 + C6) - Sold
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Originally posted by Forever_frost View PostAnd they 'found' an ID in the burned out cabin that is Dorner's. The same one that was found last week in a trash can near Mexico. Odd isn't it?.
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LOL @ LAPD and everyone else out there.
The dude was chilling across the street from the command center.
Christopher Dorner Hid in Plain Sight
BIG BEAR — To track Christopher Dorner, police from dozens of agencies chased tips across multiple states and into Mexico. But it appears now that he found a hiding place where searchers were thickest.
It is unclear how long Dorner, 33, was hunkered down in the cabin in the 1200 block of Club View Drive, in the snowy mountains near Big Bear.
But the cabin was so close to the manhunt command post and to an adjacent press area that countless police and reporters would have fallen in his line of vision.
Questions abounded Wednesday about how Dorner managed to evade capture at the very center of the manhunt, a day after he apparently died in another cabin nearby during a police siege.
Authorities are trying to confirm whether charred remains found in the cabin, which caught fire after police lobbed incendiary tear gas inside, belonged to Dorner.
Authorities declared the manhunt over Wednesday. And the Los Angeles Police Department, which had been on frequent tactical alerts, has resumed normal operations.
Most of the protective details have been called off the 50 or so families who were threatened in an online manifesto police say Dorner wrote.
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Originally posted by VaderTT View Postsarcasm
Originally posted by Forever_frost View PostThere has been audio put up, you claim it is false. Back up your claim
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After a fiery siege at a cabin near the Big Bear ski resort appears to have brought a week-long, state-wide manhunt to its conclusion, ex-LAPD cop turned cop killer Christopher Dorner appears to be dead, but the conspiracy theories are alive.
As we pointed out, the KCAL 9 report — the one with a local reporter caught in the crossfire — contains audio from police saying "fucking burn this motherfucker." And now there's video from CBS News:
And The Guardian's Paul Owen points us to an unconfirmed recording of the police scanner on Tuesday. In the recording, there's this piece of dialogue:
All right, Steve, we're gonna go, er, we're gonna go forward with the plan, with, er, with the burn [or burner]. We want it, er, like we talked about.
Journalist Max Blumenthal heard something similar:
Hard to decipher on San Bernadino Sheriff scanner now: "We're gonna go ahead w/the plan w/the burner... Like we talked about."
— Max Blumenthal (@MaxBlumenthal) February 12, 2013
And according to the Los Angeles Times, a source in law enforcement makes it seem like the SWAT team was trying any means necessary to get into the cabin, then stopped their entry once the big flames arrived:
According to a law enforcement source, police had broken down windows, fired tear gas into the cabin and blasted over a loud speaker, urging Dorner to surrender. When they got no response, police deployed a vehicle to rip down the walls of the cabin "one by one, like peeling an onion," a law enforcement official said.
By the time they got to the last wall, authorities heard a single gunshot, the source said. Then flames began to spread through the structure, and gunshots, probably set off by the fire, were heard.
The Times adds that highly flammable gas was a kind of last resort:
Hoping to end the standoff, law enforcement authorities first lobbed "traditional" tear gas into the cabin. When that did not work, they opted to use CS gas canisters, which are known in law enforcement parlance as incendiary tear gas. These canisters have significantly more chance of starting a fire. This gas can cause humans to have burning eyes and start to feel as if they are being starved for oxygen. It is often used to drive barricaded individuals out.
Meanwhile, CNN is sticking by its law enforcement sources, which say "smoke devices" thrown inside by the police caught fire, giving way to the narrative that police, at that point, had no choice but to let the cabin burn.I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool
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