Christopher Dorner — nine days of vengeance ended in a burning cabin
Summary
On February 12, 2013, in a vacation cabin in the San Bernardino Mountains above Big Bear Lake, California, Christopher Jordan Dorner died of a single self-inflicted gunshot wound as the building burned around him. He was thirty-three. A former Los Angeles Police Department officer who had been fired in 2008, Dorner had spent the preceding nine days hunting current and former members of the department and their families, guided by a manifesto that named roughly forty people as targets. By the time he was cornered, he had killed four people and wounded three, and had triggered one of the largest manhunts in California history.
Dorner's grievance was specific and documented. In 2007 he reported that his training officer had kicked a mentally ill suspect during an arrest; an LAPD Board of Rights concluded that the kicking had not occurred and that Dorner had made false statements, and he was terminated in 2008. He challenged the firing in court and lost, with a California appeals court affirming the dismissal of his petition in 2011. In early February 2013 he posted a long manifesto demanding that the department publicly admit it had fired him in retaliation, and announced what he called asymmetric warfare against police and their relatives.
The violence began on February 3, when he shot Monica Quan and her fiancé Keith Lawrence in a parked car in Irvine. Quan was the daughter of Randal Quan, the retired LAPD captain who had represented Dorner at his disciplinary hearing. Four days later Dorner ambushed officers in Riverside, killing one and wounding another, before his burned pickup truck surfaced near the Big Bear ski resort. The discovery converted a regional alarm into a mountain manhunt, and for several days the search found nothing.
The end came on February 12, when Dorner — who had been hiding in a condominium near the command post the whole time — tied up a couple, stole a vehicle, and was spotted. A gunfight with San Bernardino County sheriff's deputies left one deputy dead and another gravely wounded. Surrounded, Dorner did not surrender. Deputies fired pyrotechnic tear-gas canisters into the cabin; it caught fire; a single shot was heard from inside; the structure burned to the foundation. Remains recovered from the rubble were identified as Dorner two days later, the death ruled a suicide.
Timeline
A Firing That Became a Cause
Dorner joined the LAPD in the mid-2000s after service in the Navy Reserve, and his career collided with the department within his first year on the street. In July 2007 he filed a complaint alleging that his field training officer had kicked Christopher Gettler, a mentally ill man, during an arrest. The department investigated, an administrative Board of Rights concluded the kicking had not happened, and in 2008 it found that Dorner had made false statements in his report and testimony. He was fired. He pursued a writ in Los Angeles County Superior Court, lost, and saw the dismissal affirmed by a California Court of Appeal in 2011.
To the department this was a closed personnel matter resolved through its own due process. To Dorner it was the central injustice of his life, and his manifesto rebuilt the entire chronology as proof of a corrupt institution that destroyed an honest officer for reporting misconduct. The mechanism that would soon make him so dangerous was not impulse but the opposite: a fixed, fully rationalized narrative in which violence was framed as the only remaining means of forcing an admission. He did not want money or escape. He wanted the record rewritten, and he had decided that killing people connected to the department was a legitimate way to compel it. A grievance that the system considered adjudicated had hardened, in private, into a mission.
The Manifesto and the First Blood
What separated Dorner from an ordinary disgruntled former employee was that he announced his campaign in advance and supplied a target list. The manifesto, posted online in early February 2013, named roughly forty individuals — officers involved in his case and their relatives — and declared open-ended warfare against the LAPD and the people around it unless the department publicly conceded his firing was retaliatory. He also mailed a package to a national news anchor, ensuring his account would circulate independently of the police. The document was a threat, a confession of intent, and a piece of publicity, all at once.
The killing began before most of those targets knew they were named. On February 3 he shot Monica Quan and Keith Lawrence in Irvine, selecting Quan precisely because her father had represented him at the disciplinary hearing that ended his career — a choice that broadcast the logic of the manifesto, that the families of those he blamed were now in scope. Four days later, after firing on officers in Corona, he ambushed two Riverside officers stopped at a red light, killing Michael Crain and critically wounding his partner. The response itself produced more casualties: officers assigned to protect named targets, primed for an armored attacker, opened fire on two pickup trucks that merely resembled Dorner's, wounding three uninvolved civilians. The manhunt had begun to injure the public it was meant to shield, a measure of how completely the manifesto's threat had distorted the environment around it.
Cornered at Big Bear
The search concentrated on the mountains the moment Dorner's burned truck was found near the Big Bear ski resort on February 7. For days, in deep snow and with hundreds of officers searching cabins, the effort produced nothing — in part because Dorner had broken into a condominium close to the search command and simply stayed there, hidden a short distance from the people hunting him. The standoff that ended his life began only when he moved. On February 12 he tied up a couple in the unit, took their vehicle, and was recognized on the road. A pursuit funneled him toward a cabin, where two San Bernardino County deputies who spotted tracks in the snow were met with gunfire; Deputy Jeremiah MacKay was killed and Deputy Alex Collins severely wounded.
The final phase was brief and contested. With Dorner barricaded inside and refusing to surrender, deputies deployed pyrotechnic tear-gas canisters — devices that generate heat and are known to start fires — and the cabin ignited. A single gunshot was heard from within before flames consumed the structure. The San Bernardino County sheriff insisted the fire had not been set deliberately as an execution, but police-scanner audio capturing officers discussing "burners" and the order to "burn it down" fueled lasting debate over whether the tactic was meant to flush Dorner out or to ensure he never emerged. The forensic conclusion was narrower and more certain: the remains recovered two days later were Dorner's, and he had died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, not the fire.
The Five Factors
Aftermath
Dorner's nine days left four people dead — Monica Quan, Keith Lawrence, Michael Crain, and Jeremiah MacKay — and three wounded, including two newspaper carriers shot by officers who mistook their truck for his. The mistaken shootings produced their own reckoning: the City of Los Angeles paid a multimillion-dollar settlement to the two women wounded by LAPD officers, the City of Torrance settled with a man its officers shot, and the LAPD disciplined a group of officers over the use of force. The episode became a standing case study in how a manhunt conducted under maximum threat can endanger the very public it is meant to protect.
The manner of Dorner's death left a residue of controversy that outlasted the relief at its end. Scanner recordings of deputies discussing incendiary "burners" kept alive the question of whether the cabin was burned to flush him out or to finish him, even as the autopsy established that he died by his own hand. Politically, the case forced an awkward gesture from the institution he had attacked: Chief Charlie Beck announced, while Dorner was still at large, that the LAPD would reexamine the disciplinary process that fired him — an extraordinary concession extracted, in effect, at gunpoint, and one the department was careful to frame as a defense of its own integrity rather than a validation of his claims. The reexamination ultimately upheld the original finding. What endured was not vindication of his manifesto but a grim demonstration of how much damage a single fixated insider could inflict before the system closed around him.
Lessons
- Treat a specific, pre-announced threat against named people as an active emergency, not rhetoric; the warning is the most actionable evidence a manhunt will receive.
- Recognize that an insider's grievance carries an insider's knowledge, and that protective measures built on standard procedure may already be known to the threat.
- Guard against fear-driven force during a manhunt; officers primed for an ambush can wound the public, and that harm is part of the event's true cost.
- Do not assume a fugitive flees outward — searches organized around a perimeter can be defeated by a target who hides inside the zone being searched.
- Resolve grievances with transparency before they harden; a process the institution considers closed is not closed for the person who rejects its verdict.
References
- Christopher Dorner shootings and manhunt WIKIPEDIA
- Timeline: Ex-LAPD Officer Suspected in Shooting Spree Had Sued the Department NBC LOS ANGELES
- Riverside police honor officer killed in Chris Dorner ambush ABC7 LOS ANGELES
- An Intentional Fire? Police Use of Incendiary Tear Gas Criticized in Killing of Christopher Dorner DEMOCRACY NOW