Login

Register | Forgot Your Password? | Close

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A surfer who was shot at by police during the manhunt for rogue ex-cop Christopher Dorner has filed a lawsuit against a Los Angeles suburb and its police department.

David Perdue, 38, was driving his black Honda pickup early Feb. 7 on his way to pick up a friend to go surfing when he was stopped by officers looking for Dorner, an ex-Los Angeles police officer who had promised to bring "warfare" to his former department's officers and their families.

Authorities say Dorner killed four people, including two law enforcement officers, during a weeklong rampage that involved a massive manhunt and ended with his apparent suicide in a mountain cabin following a gunbattle with police.

At the time officers stopped Perdue, Dorner had already killed two people, and officers throughout the area were protecting people he named as targets. Authorities believed he was driving a pickup, although it was a different make and color than Perdue's truck.

The officers who stopped Perdue asked him a few questions, then told him to turn around and go back the way he came, according to the lawsuit.

Soon after, a second police car driving toward him accelerated to 25-30 mph "without any warning," and rammed his pickup, spinning him around and tearing off the rear axle. Air bags deployed and Perdue's upper body was jolted over the center console, he says in his complaint.

Perdue says the two officers fired at least three bullets into the open driver's side window, sending them into the side air bags, past his head and through the front windshield.

Perdue was ordered out of the pickup with a gun to his head and forced to lie face-down on the pavement. He was detained for an hour.

The lawsuit, filed Monday in federal court, says Perdue has suffered "physical injuries, severe emotional distress and mental suffering."

The complaint alleges that the city and its police department refused to accept responsibility for what happened and instead published false and conflicting accounts. It also states that the officers involved were allowed to return to duty without any discipline. Torrance police Sgt. Robert Watt said he can't comment on discipline issues, but the two officers involved returned to duty after a psychological evaluation, which is routine after such an incident.

The suit notes that Perdue, who is white, was much shorter and smaller and looked nothing like Dorner, who was black.

A statement from the city said they could not comment on specifics of the lawsuit. Watt said the department is in mediation and had a four hour session Thursday with Perdue's attorneys; no future date is yet set. The Los Angeles district attorney's office is investigating.

The Perdue shooting was not the only case of mistaken identity that morning. Two women delivering newspapers in Torrance were also shot at by Los Angeles police officers; the city reached a $4.2 million settlement with the women in April in addition to the $40,000 settlement for the loss of their pickup truck.

The eight officers involved in that incident are still working "non-field" assignments and Police Chief Charlie Beck will decide if and when they return to the field, said LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith.

___

Tami Abdollah can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/latams


(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

KTAR Newsroom,

share this story:
facebook

36 Comments   |   Join the conversation »
  • Add A Comment 
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    Thanks, Decepticon.
    In other words you pull your numbers out of thin air. No surprise there. Criminals turned down by the background check system go to sellers like yourself who don't believe background checks do any good, get all the guns and ammo they need, and then skip down the street to commit their crimes. I can understand how universal background checks can cut into your business.
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    Hey Joe,
    where you goin' with that gun in your hand? Hey Joe, I said where you goin' with that gun in your hand? Alright. I'm goin down to shoot my old lady, you know I caught her messin' 'round with another man. Hey Joe, where'd you get that gun in your hand? I tried to get one at the gun store but they turned me away because of the order. Hey Joe, what'd you do then? I got it from the gun nut down the street, 'cuz he don't ask no questions, no man, no questions at all.
  • Abuse
    OneWonders wrote...
    Micho, why would
    someone want to do away with laws for a child molester conviction? To apply your analogy correctly, this means you are accusing yrreta and others that they want to do away with laws for murder convictions. I have never seen "KTAR brethren" express this. To quote you, "don't be ridiculous"!!!
    Equal Justice, Not Social Justice.
  • Abuse
    OneWonders wrote...
    lol you crack me up Micho
    So you quote Jimi Hendrix and make up your own version. But in reality the song is about a murderer who runs to Mexico. So weird that I have seen this same story acted out in real life numerous times with illegal immigrants running back to Mexico after committing a crime or killing someone. Ok Ok, it's fair to say that USA citizens wanted for a crime have run to Mexico too but in this day and age I hear more about illegals that do this vs citizens that do. Good choice of songs to quote Micho!
    Equal Justice, Not Social Justice.
  • Abuse
    yrreta wrote...
    Now that thar is some funny
    sheet! ...Where you gonna run to now where you gonna go I'm goin' way down south Way down to mexico way...Alright...
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    Gun nuts assure us that there is no particularly
    good social outcome that results from expanding background checks to prevent the private sale of firearms to violence oriented illegal immigrants. Selling guns to illegal immigrants is a time honored tradition in the no questions asked gun nut community. The profitability of this sort of trafficking, they insist, is the greater social good. Besides, laws enacted to prevent illegal gun sales to violent illegal immigrants won't stop some of them from getting guns, so why bother, they tell us.
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    Remember the fuss about Fast and Furious?
    The conservative complaints about the federal government letting some thousands of guns walk south of the border has been deafening. Oddly, there seems to be no problem from these same gun nuts with private sellers and corrupt dealers letting millions of guns work their way into the hands of the people that want to do us harm. Did I say odd? Let's say perverse instead.
  • Abuse
    yrreta wrote...
    Wow, we've gone from
    drone attacks, to background checks, to doughnuts and Oprah, to Jimi Hendrix, to perverse illegal aliens with guns. What's next? Chipmonks....The devils hand mittens!
  • Abuse
    OneWonders wrote...
    I have a problem
    with guns getting into the wrong hands period! What the problem is that the government is attempting to take away rights from responsible people. I know you don't understand that there is a difference. Oh and fast and furious was going against the law, making law abiding gun shop owners go against the law and their own will and run by the government. You seem to confuse laws and what they actually do and what they don't actually do. Try learning about them before looking like an idiot.
    Equal Justice, Not Social Justice.
  • Abuse
    yrreta wrote...
    "The Los Angeles Police Department said
    they cannot confirm a body found in a California cabin is that of ex-police officer Christopher Dorner" Now wouldn't that be something if the body is not him, and he in fact slipped out during the fire...probably not, but it would make for a far more interesting story than the massive vowel movements of Micho.