Politic?

This is a blog dedicated to a personal interpretation of political news of the day. I attempt to be as knowledgeable as possible before commenting and committing my thoughts to a day's communication.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Los Angeles police say no body found in cabin

Cabin where Christopher Dorner was suspected to be holed up Smoke and flames were seen rising from the cabin during the siege
Police in California have denied reports that a body was found in a burnt-out mountain cabin where a man believed to be a ex-policeman accused of three murders was holed up.

Flames were seen rising from the cabin, as a police Swat team went in.

There were initially reports that a burnt body had been found, but police say the remains of the cabin have yet to be searched.

This comes after a shoot-out in which a local sheriff's deputy was killed.
Another police officer is in hospital with injuries.

The gunman was believed to be Christopher Dorner, 33, a former member of the Los Angeles police force.

He had reportedly sworn revenge on police officers he blamed for his sacking in 2008.
But, denying earlier news reports that a body had been found, Los Angeles Police Commander

Andrew Smith said the cabin was "still too hot and no inspectors had access to it yet".

Analysis

As darkness fell here at Big Bear ski resort, police blocked the icy road leading up over the mountains and to the house where Christopher Dorner appeared to have made his last stand.
The pursuit began at a small holiday cabin near the road block - in the centre of the town where Dorner's truck was found burned out last week and where police have spent days going house to house searching for him.
It's thought he had been hiding out all that time - holding two women captive. A local said they didn't live here but were on holiday.
Dorner stole a car and headed off into the hills, dumping the vehicle and barricading himself into a lodge, exchanging fire with police.
If the forensic teams find that a body in the burnt-out house is indeed Dorner it will bring to an end one of the biggest police manhunts in Californian history.
The authorities earlier confirmed that there was gunfire in the forest before the suspect barricaded himself in the cabin. 

Reports say the police then fired tear gas into the building and used a loudspeaker to urge the gunman to surrender.

A single gunshot was later heard inside and the fire started spreading through the cabin.
At a news conference, Cindy Bachman of San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department confirmed that one of the wounded sheriff's deputies had died in an exchange of fire earlier on Tuesday.
"He was pronounced dead in hospital," she said.

Police were alerted after a man matching Mr Dorner's description reportedly broke into a house and tied two people up before making off in a stolen vehicle.

The suspect then abandoned the car and ran into the forest.
Christopher Dorner in military uniform in 2008 Dorner also had military experience
 
The search moved to the area of Big Bear Lake, a ski resort 80 miles (130km) east of Los Angeles, last Thursday after the suspect's burnt-out truck was found there.

LA officials had offered a $1m (£630,000) reward for information leading to his arrest.
The authorities earlier said that the former officer with Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) was suspected of killing three people, including a policeman.

Police have been protecting about 50 families, many belonging to former LAPD colleagues, against whom Mr Dorner had vowed revenge for allegedly ruining his career.

In an online manifesto, Mr Dorner, a former US Navy reservist, suggested that racism was rife in the LAPD.

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