That amount should have been taken out of the police union pension account, not extracted from the taxpayers. Hit them in the pocketbook until such horrid behavior ends.
There was another person also shot at by California police during the manhunt for Dorner, but the story did not get wide attention.
Dorner manhunt: No charges against Torrance cop who shot at pickup
Dorner case mistaken identity shooting
David Perdue rests on the couch, next to his wife, Lyzzette, in their Redondo Beach home last February. His car was fired upon by Torrance police who mistook it for that of suspected killer Christopher Dorner. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times / February 9, 2013)
By Christine Mai-Duc This post has been corrected, as noted below.
January 15, 2014, 12:18 p.m.
A Torrance police officer who mistakenly shot at a man during the massive manhunt for ex-LAPD officer Christopher Dorner will not face criminal charges, prosecutors said Wednesday.
The Los Angeles County district attorneys office declined to press charges against Officer Brian McGee, who opened fire at close-range last February on an innocent driver.
In a 16-page report explaining its decision, the district attorneys office said McGee made a reasonable mistake of fact and the officer was acting under an actual belief that he needed to defend himself.
At the time, McGee and his partner were part of a massive dragnet across Southern California searching for Dorner, who had vowed to exact revenge against those he blamed for his firing at LAPD and named suspects he intended to kill.
Dorner, who authorities say killed four people, died several days later from a self-inflicted gunshot wound after he was cornered by police.
In the early morning of Feb. 7, LAPD officers were stationed in Torrance to protect an LAPD captain named in Dorner’s manifesto.
David Perdue, who was 38 at the time, was driving to pick up a friend and go surfing that morning when he was stopped by Torrance police and told to turn around.
He’d driven less than 300 feet when another Torrance police unit mistook Perdue, who is a slight white man and was driving a Honda Ridgeline, for Dorner, who was black and described as driving a Nissan Titan.
After turning around, Perdues truck was broadsided by another Torrance police cruiser, driven by McGee. The officer then shot at least three rounds at close-range into the Perdues driver side window.
Perdue was not shot, but his attorney said he sustained back and head injuries that left him unable to work.
The incident was one of two mistaken-identity shootings related to the Dorner manhunt.
That same morning, LAPD officers opened fire on a Latina mother and her adult daughter, who were delivering newspapers in a truck nearby.
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-dorner-torrance-cop-no-charges-20140115,0,7490608.story