Shot from the Rear? From [HERE] and [HERE] An attorney representing two Latino women who were delivering newspapers when they were shot by police during a massive manhunt for an ex-LAPD officer called the incident "unacceptable," saying his clients looked nothing like the suspect. The women were driving a blue Toyota Tacoma. Dorner is allegedly by himself in a blue Nissan Titan. (In a white supremacy system Non-white people absolutely cannot kill 1. white people and/or 2. cops. Dorner did both.
(Black History Fact In the history of modern law enforcement there has never been a single instance of a Black police officer shooting or killing an unarmed white person.[MORE] In fact, according to Roger Aber, until now no Black police officer has ever shot or killed a white police officer [MORE])
A team of Los Angeles police officers protecting the home of a high-ranking officer in the 19500 block of Redbeam Avenue believed a pickup truck that stopped in front of the house matched Dorner's blue Nissan Titan. Police opened fire. A neighbor said he heard as many as 20 shots.
Emma Hernandez, 71, was delivering the Los Angeles Times with her daughter, Margie Carranza, 47, in the 19500 block of Redbeam Avenue in Torrance on Thursday morning when Los Angeles police detectives apparently mistook their pickup for that of Christopher Dorner, the 33-year-old fugitive suspected of killing three people and injuring two others. Hernandez, who attorney Glen T. Jonas said was shot twice in the back, was in stable condition late Thursday. Carranza received stitches on her finger.
"The problem with the situation is it looked like the police had the goal of administering street justice and in so doing, didn't take the time to notice that these two older, small Latina women don't look like a large black man," Jonas said. Officials seeking Dorner describe him as black, 6 feet tall and weighing 270 pounds (narrowing him down to thousands of brown skinned males.)
Looking for a brown skin man: Police officers search a vehicle for former Los Angeles police officer Christopher Dorner at a checkpoint near Big Bear Lake, California. Killed Cop Exception to 4th Amendment During "an emergency" (such as the alleged murder of a white person by a non-white person) can the rights of non-whites be suspended and can police detain & kill suspect non-whites?
Television images from the scene of the shooting showed newspapers scattered alongside the blue pickup and in the bed of the bullet-ridden vehicle, which sat on the street for hours after the shooting. Jonas said the vehicle was also "the wrong color and the wrong model," compared to Dorner's.
Sources said the Los Angeles police detectives involved in the Torrance shooting were on protective detail for a police official named in an online manifesto that authorities say was posted to a Facebook page they believe belongs to Dorner. "Tragically, we believe this is a case of mistaken identity," LAPD Chief Charlie Beck told reporters earlier Thursday about the shooting.
Shooting #2 (Killing Every N***** in sight): Cops Purposefully Crash into truck & Open Fire on driver of Blue Honda. Dorner was allegedly driving a blue Nissan truck. (so why should only cops have guns again?)
From [HERE] The second shooting involved Torrance police officers, who were stationed nearby in the event LAPD needed them. About 25 minutes after the first shooting, Torrance police opened fire after spotting another truck similar to Dorner's at Flagler Lane and Beryl Street. Police shot to kill. No one was reported hurt.
Police say they saw a driver in another blue pickup truck driving on Flagler Lane near Beryl Street. Officers, suspecting it was Dorner (because it was blue), purposely collided with the truck and shot at him. The driver wasn't hurt, avoiding bullets that had ripped through his windshield.
"I heard some man yell at somebody and I saw this argument on the street," said Ana Filova, a woman living in her car near Dominguez Park.
Filova said she heard someone yell "cuffs" and then heard two shots, followed by a pause and a third shot.
Torrance police Sgt. Chris Roosen said the officers were unhurt. He thanked the driver for cooperating in the investigation. Officers did not identify the driver. Records showed the 2006 Honda pickup truck was registered to Lizzette Perdue of Redondo Beach. Purdue declined to talk to a reporter about who was driving her truck.