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FILE - In this undated photo released by the Los Angeles Police Department shows suspect Christopher Dorner, a former Los Angeles officer. Dorner, who was fired from the LAPD in 2008 for making false statements, is linked to a weekend killing in which one of the victims was the daughter of a former police captain who had represented him during the disciplinary hearing. An internal review by the LAPD concluded that rogue ex-cop Christopher Dorner was justifiably fired, a lawyer who reviewed the findings told The Associated Press on Tuesday. Civil rights attorney Connie Rice said the lengthy examination found no basis for allegations of racism and bias that Dorner made in a manifesto vowing revenge on his former colleagues and their families. (AP Photo/Los Angeles Police Department, File)

LOS ANGELES (AP) - An internal review by the Los Angeles Police Department concluded that rogue ex-officer Christopher Dorner was justifiably fired, a lawyer who reviewed the findings told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

Civil rights attorney Connie Rice said the lengthy examination found no basis for allegations of racism and bias that Dorner made in a manifesto vowing revenge on his former colleagues and their families.

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

The findings, which are expected to be made public this month at a Los Angeles Police Commission meeting, concluded that Dorner had a history of embellishing stories, misperceiving slights and making bogus complaints against his fellow officers, Rice said.

He took more than twice as long as most officers to complete his training, was nearly incomprehensible during the hearing over his firing, and only filed a complaint against his training officer when he learned she gave him a bad performance review, Rice said.

The department said in a statement the review had not been finalized.

"Any comments or conclusions about the contents of the review are premature," it said. "The LAPD will announce the review once finalized."

Police Commission President Andrea Ordin said the report still needed to go to the inspector general for review and then to the Police Commission.

Chief Charlie Beck ordered the review as Dorner was on the run after being accused of killing the daughter of his former union lawyer and her fiance and releasing the manifesto saying he would get even for being unfairly fired because he was black.

Rice, a longtime department watchdog and frequent critic, was allowed to review the findings.

"The firing was justified and his allegations are completely unfounded," said Rice, who spent two weeks reviewing the findings. "This guy needed to go. And the question was, even if he needed to go, did the LAPD get rid of him in a way that was illegitimate? And the answer for me was no."

The roughly 40-page report relied on about 80 documents, including 900 pages of transcripts from the Board of Rights hearing that concluded Dorner lied when he claimed a training officer had brutally kicked a mentally ill man during an arrest. He was fired for making a false report and a Los Angeles Superior Court judge sided with the department during a 2010 appeal.

The internal LAPD review conducted by Gerry Chaleff, the department's special assistant for constitutional policing, also re-examined at least 10 complaints Dorner officially lodged with the department while he was an officer, Rice said.

In his manifesto, Dorner said the LAPD had tarnished his reputation, ruined the former Navy reserve's military career, and destroyed his life.

"He raised all that racism stuff in my mind because he knew he'd get a rise out of them," Rice said. "He did everything he could to hurt the department."

The department is also conducting a review of the overall discipline system and will also review the cases of a handful of former officers who have since formally requested reviews of their firings.

Rice said she spoke with many black officers in the department who said that though the department still had issues with racism, it had changed a great deal over the past decades.

"Just because racism didn't play a leading role in what happened to Dorner doesn't mean the LAPD is now an inter-racial nirvana," Rice said. "It does still have serious problems like every department does and we shouldn't forget that."

___

Follow Tami Abdollah at http://www.twitter.com/latams


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

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  • 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.