Ex-cop reported dead in burning US mountain cabin

Ex-cop reported dead in burning US mountain cabin

A former US cop wanted for multiple murders was reported dead in a burning mountain cabin, after a six-day manhunt that jangled nerves in southern California and beyond.

A sign announces the closure of Highway 38 to Big Bear Lake, California near San Bernardino, California, February 12, 2013. A former US cop wanted for multiple murders has been reported dead in a burning mountain cabin, after a six-day manhunt.

Christopher Dorner's body was found inside the cabin near the California ski resort of Big Bear, where he had barricaded himself in after a shootout with police that left one officer dead and injured another.

The embittered 33-year-old had allegedly already killed three people before going on the run last week, after posting a chilling online manifesto threatening to kill more officers.

He was cornered in the snow-covered San Bernardino mountains after nearly a week-long manhunt, which focused on Big Bear before expanding amid reported sightings elsewhere in California and a suggestion that he had fled to Mexico.

The LA Times said a single shot was heard as police moved in on the cabin, suggesting Dorner may have taken his own life, although that was not immediately confirmed.

Officers broke the cabin windows, pumped in tear gas and called for Dorner to surrender over a loudspeaker, the LA Times said. When they got no reply, they deployed a vehicle to rip down the cabin walls.

It did so "one by one, like peeling an onion," a law enforcement official told the newspaper. When it got to the last wall, a single gunshot was heard, before flames began to spread through the structure.

NBC and local KTLA 5 television both reported that a body believed to be Dorner's had been found in the cabin.

KTLA 5 television cited LA Police Department (LAPD) spokesman Commander Andrew Smith as saying: "We believe he is dead. We believe he was in that cabin. We believe he was burned up in that cabin."

Police launched a massive manhunt last week for Dorner, after he allegedly killed a couple and a policeman, and injured another three officers, while pledging online to kill officers in revenge for his 2008 sacking.

Smith, the LAPD spokesman, said the confrontation got underway after a vehicle was reported stolen from another cabin near Big Bear by someone who looked like Dorner.

The San Bernardino County Sheriff's office immediately launched a ground and air search, and located the vehicle nearby.

"Shortly thereafter, this individual barricaded himself in one of the cabins there and an exchange of gunfire occurred. During that exchange of gunfire, two officers were injured," Smith said.

KTLA 5 said more than 200 officers had surrounded the cabin near Big Bear, where Dorner's pickup truck was found last week shortly after the manhunt was launched.

Earlier, local media reported that the suspect had initially tied up a couple in a cabin, before fleeing. Smith did not confirm those details.

The disgruntled ex-cop threatened to murder police and their families in his rambling manifesto, pledging to "bring unconventional and asymmetrical warfare to those in LAPD uniform whether on or off duty."

Some 50 LAPD officers and families had been placed under special protection. The couple murdered two weeks ago included the daughter of a former LAPD officer linked to Dorner's dismissal.

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