Cop-on-Cop Crime in LA
American Blowback
by GEORGE CICCARIELLO-MAHER and MIKE KING
Yesterday was not simply a day like any other, and yet an entire 
system is grinding into motion to ensure that the peculiarities of the 
day be promptly forgotten: another crazy person lost it and committed 
unthinkable acts. The act of killing stands in and speaks for the 
person: look what he has done, of course he must be crazy. Case closed.
What they want you to see is just another Adam Lanza, just another 
inexplicable act, and when the act speaks for the assailant, words are 
secondary and there is no need to listen. But this is not, and has never been, 
a good way to understand reality.
What they want you to forget is the sheer strangeness of what is 
happening in Los Angeles. Christopher Dorner allegedly killed a police 
officer and two civilians. This was not a random shooting by a 
right-wing gun-nut mourning the loss of the “Real America.” Here is a 
man with good things to say about liberal democrats, a supporter of 
heightened gun control, a former LAPD officer and Navy reservist, 
targeting his own institution, which he accused of racism, violence, and 
corruption.
Dorner’s “Last Resort”
We know all of these things because what is most peculiar about this 
entire case is the written testament that Dorner has left us. In a letter 
titled only “Last Resort” and addressed to “America,” he makes clear his 
grievances, his objectives, and the rationale behind his actions – a 
chilling declaration of war on the Los Angeles Police Department.
The press is busy citing only those bits of the statement which make 
Dorner seem crazy: when he addresses Tim Tebow or Larry David, for 
example, or when he laments the fact that he will not survive to see The 
Hangover 3. (See for example, Buzzfeed’s “Everything You Need to Know,” which 
conspicuously says very little). But the vast majority of the 
letter paints a picture of someone who, while clearly undergoing some 
sort of mental break, is astonishingly lucid as to the causes and candid as to 
what he intends to do about it. These causes and these 
intentions, regardless of what you may hear on MSNBC or Entertainment Tonight 
(both will essentially carry the same message), begin and end with the LAPD.
The LAPD has long played a vanguard role in white supremacist 
policing in the United States. Whether it be the conscious recruitment 
of racist cops from the south in the 1960s under William Parker 
(sparking the 1965 Watts Rebellion) or the continuity of well-worn 
brutal methods under Darryl Gates (sparking the massive 1992 L.A. 
Rebellions), there has been little new under the sun. Even after 1992, 
when change seemed for a moment inevitable and when the Bloods and Crips had, 
themselves, laid down arms and put forth a plan to rebuild the 
city, this long-needed transformation didn’t materialize. Instead, South 
Central became South L.A., Gates was canned, and the LAPD forcibly 
destroyed the gang truce. Nothing had changed.
It wasn’t long before the next scandal. Toward the end of the 1990s, 
what many had already known became public knowledge: that the LAPD, and 
especially the Rampart Division, routinely brutalized suspects and 
planted evidence. As a result of this revelation, the LAPD was charged 
under the RICO Act (as a Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization) 
and placed under the federal oversight of a consent decree that would 
only be lifted in 2009.
Not coincidentally, “Globocop” Bill Bratton, currently en route to 
advise the Oakland Police Department, amidst widespread public 
opposition, is credited with cleaning up the LAPD, and Dorner’s 
statement appears on many websites alongside a picture of the former 
officer beaming alongside Bratton (it has emerged that Dorner mailed 
evidence to Anderson Cooper last week, including a gift from Bratton, on which 
he wrote “Thanks, but no thanks Will Bratton”).
According to Dorner’s statement:
“The department has not changed since the Rampart and 
Rodney King days. It has gotten worse. The consent decree should never 
have been lifted. The only thing that has evolved from the consent 
decree is those officers involved in the Rampart scandal and Rodney King 
incidents have since promoted to supervisor, commanders, and command 
staff, and executive positions… Are you aware that an officer… seen on 
the Rodney King videotape striking Mr. King multiple times with a baton 
on 3/3/91 is still employed by the LAPD and is now a Captain on the 
police department? … As a commanding officer, he is now responsible for 
over 200 officers. Do you trust him to enforce department policy and 
investigate use of force investigations on arrestees by his officers?”
One indication of this is the fact that, during the course of more 
than a decade of investigation of the Rampart case, only five officers 
were terminated, which suggests just how shallow the investigation 
efforts were. Dorner ominously adds that “I will correct this error,” 
and deems his actions a “necessary evil” not only to clear his own name, but to 
force “substantial change” within the LAPD.
According to Dorner, he was suspended in 2008 after reporting a 
superior for use of excessive force against a suspect, and eventually 
terminated in 2009. Dorner goes on to describe the prevalence of white 
supremacy in the police force: from anti-Semitic taunting to openly 
anti-black sentiment. After one incident involving use of the n-word, 
Dorner recalls confronting other officers physically, for which he was 
reprimanded. In retrospect, he reflects, with regard to the speaker of 
the word, “What I should have done, was put a Winchester Ranger SXT 9mm 
147 grain bullet in his skull.” On the day that his fellow officers were given 
what were effectively paid suspensions, “That day, the LAPD 
stated that it is acceptable for fellow officers to call black officers 
niggers to their face and you will receive a slap on the wrist.”
A Bloody Fight for Honor on the Other Side of the Blue Line
“I am an American by choice, I am a son, I am a brother, I am a military 
service member, I am a man who has lost complete faith in the system, when the 
system betrayed, slandered, and libeled me. I 
lived a good life and though not a religious man I always stuck to my 
own personal code of ethics, ethos and always stuck to my shoreline and 
true North. I didn’t need the US Navy to instill Honor, Courage, and 
Commitment in me but I thank them for re-enforcing it. It’s in my DNA.”
>–Christopher Dorner
It is clear from Dorner’s communiqué that he feels that he is 
following a code of honor against an unlawful body that has sullied his 
name; his objective being to reclaim his honor. Through his spectacle of 
violence he is also overtly drawing attention to his self-identity – as a black 
man, as an “honest officer”/ conscientious worker, and as a 
veteran – counter-posed against institutions of corruption, deceit and 
abuse. In an effort that he clearly self-defines as terrorism, Dorner 
invokes old-West, rugged
individualism: “Unfortunately, I will not be alive to see my name cleared. 
That’s what this is about, my name. A man is nothing without his name.” At 
length, 
Dorner goes through ideal-types of various officers’ grouped by race, 
and explicitly cites their role in reproducing white supremacy. He makes clear 
that he is patriotic and loves the government (and Chris 
Christie); his war is with the LAPD.
Not unlike many mass killers, Dorner’s writing exhibits a 
hyper-vigilant(e) feeling of betrayal and unwavering need for revenge. 
His writing reflects a self-conscious awareness of this role, a 
self-forged morality that invokes clear Zarathustra-like qualities of 
the Overman imposing his will on weak and vile petty tyrants. Dorner 
says:
“I am here to change and make policy. The culture of LAPD versus the community 
and honest/good officers needs to and will change. I am here to correct and 
calibrate your morale (sic) compasses to true 
north.”
Dorner’s writing also features a list of thanks to everyone from 
George H.W. Bush to Charlie Sheen. The following quote has extensively 
repeated in the press, and bears some interrogation: “If possible, I 
want my brain preserved for science/research to study the effects of 
severe depression on an individual’s brain.” To dismiss this as simple 
madness, is to individualize this man and his actions (however they are 
interpreted) as apolitical and random, another tragic coupling of broken people 
with fully-functional weapons. It is clear, through his 
chronicling of long-past slights un-avenged, interspersed with calls for more 
gun control and an endorsement for Hillary Clinton for President, 
that he is troubled. Dorner writes, “Ask yourselves what would cause 
somebody to take these drastic measures like I did. That’s what is 
important.”
This is surely a discussion the LAPD would not pine over if it did 
not happen. It is a discourse that is foreign to the press, even the 
likes of liberals like Chris Matthews, that Dorner lauds. 
Soldier-Officer Dorner sits, using his training against the force that 
trained him, waiting to unleash his next attack. The extent to which we 
go to Dr. Drew for helpful insights in the next few days and not victims of 
police brutality or whistle-blower cops or to analyses of race and 
policing in our cities, the extent to which we talk about gun control 
and not how and why the men who beat Rodney King got to run the LAPD 
instead of being run out of it, is the extent to which we sit and wait, 
feeding ammunition to the next Christopher Dorner.
A Defection in the Occupation Forces
Now Dorner has declared war on the LAPD and he has named targets: 
“The enemy combatants in LA are not the citizens and suspects, it’s the 
police officers.” To a list of different offenders, he adds the ominous 
promise: “You are a high value target.” The parameters of the violence 
he has seen meted out to everyday poor residents of Los Angeles 
structures his own response, such as when he urges:
“Citizens/non-combatants, do not render medical aid to 
downed officers/enemy combatants. They would not do the same for you. 
They will let you bleed out… don’t honor these fallen officers/dirtbags. When 
your family members die, they just see you as extra overtime at a 
crime scene and at a perimeter. Why would you value their lives when 
they clearly don’t value yours or your family members lives?”
He has studied the new counterinsurgency doctrine, as rewritten in 
2006 by General David Petraeus, and he turns its language against its 
authors, comparing himself to insurgent forces in Afghanistan and Iraq. 
“I will bring unconventional and asymmetrical warfare to those in LAPD 
uniform whether on or off duty. ISR [Intelligence, Surveillance, and 
Reconnaissance] is my strength and your weakness. You will now live the 
life of the prey.”
Frantz Fanon argued pointedly that exploitation, occupation, and 
colonization simply cannot exist without racism and torture of one form 
or another. As a result, it is useless to oppose the violence of 
occupation, or the torture made so palpable in Zero Dark Thirty, without 
opposing the occupation itself, of Iraq, of Afghanistan, of South 
Central L.A. Yes, something similar could be said of the LAPD, and here 
we begin to grasp why this most violent of institutions has so rigidly 
resisted change: because its historically brutal and terroristic 
tactics, the daily oppression and humiliation exerted most directly at 
poor black and brown Angelinos, are merely symptoms of the LAPD’s structural 
function.
When Fanon resigned his post as a psychiatrist to join the Algerian 
Revolution, he was merely putting into revolutionary practice what he 
had practiced in the analyst’s chair for years. For Fanon, mental 
neuroses, especially among people of color, were the result not of any 
inherent trait or familial trauma, but of the profound trauma imposed by white 
supremacist and colonial society. And since social structures 
generate many mental illnesses, we cannot hope to cure these without 
destroying the institutions that make people sick in the first place.
It was this imperative that led Fanon to throw himself into the armed struggle, 
and when he did so, he wrote that: “A society that drives its members to 
desperate solutions is a non-viable society, a society to be replaced.” There 
can be no more powerful symptom of desperation, no 
more direct indicator of the non-viability of existing institutions, 
than this hunted man named Christopher Dorner.
There’s nothing pretty about the desperate actions of a 
soon-to-be-dead man, but we owe it to ourselves, and to the world, to at least 
attempt to understand. To be clear: Dorner’s statement is not a 
revolutionary manifesto, and he certainly didn’t grasp the structural 
relationship between occupation and LAPD brutality, but his statement 
and his actions are deeply symptomatic of a social illness that 
it does not name. If the adage “you reap what you sow” were not already 
the slogan of the week when unrepentant Navy SEAL sniper Chris Kyle, who 
embraced the murderous dehumanization of his profession, was killed at a Texas 
gun range last Saturday, this is now undeniable.
Shoot to Kill: Counterinsurgency and Collateral Damage
Given its social function, the LAPD simply cannot be anything but 
racist and brutal, and as though attempting to prove Dorner’s point, the 
response to his attacks has been as brutal as anything. The thin blue 
line of secrecy among officers has been replaced by a thick blue line, 
protecting officers and their families while unleashing unrestrained 
violence on southern California. In only the most infamous incident of 
yesterday, two women delivering newspapers were shot by trigger-happy officers 
who, it seems, mistook their royal blue truck for Dorner’s gray one. 
Dozens of bullet holes riddled the back of the pickup, their clusters 
suggesting a clear intent to kill without identifying. Within the 
context of legitimate, open threats to officers, the “shoot anything 
that moves” approach is perhaps an accentuation, but hardly an 
aberration, from the norm.
The application of a counterinsurgency model of urban policing in 
cities like Los Angeles is longstanding. In Los Angeles alone, from 
bulldozed houses in “Operation Hammer” and the invention of gang 
injunctions in the mid-late 1980s, to the racialized use of checkpoints, and 
the routine abuses Dorner points to today, the “War on Crime” is a 
war in every sense of the word. The LAPD gang unit trains troops headed 
to Afghanistan in how to develop informants and use counterinsurgency tactics 
to control “hostile” populations and spaces. The abuses that Dorner 
lists are the effects of this logic of occupation, a term officers 
themselves use to describe their work. As with criminal Ramparts 
officers getting promotions, Dorner sees the daily routines of abuse as 
morally wrong, but without seeing the logic of the broader structures in which 
those practices are embedded.
The violent overlap between modern warfare and domestic policing, of 
which Dorner is a strange byproduct of, is especially acute among police 
officers that are returning veterans from Afghanistan and Iraq. The 
increased levels of PTSD and violence among veterans in general, is 
amplified, not only by holding a job that empowers, and sometimes 
requires, the use of deadly force, but because the current methods of 
contemporary urban policing have become enmeshed with the overall 
objectives, strategic logic, and daily practice of counterinsurgency.
As Oakland brings on former LAPD Chief William Bratton to add a play 
or two to Oakland’s counterinsurgency manual, the OPD, City Council, and 
District Attorney continue to refuse to fire and criminally charge 
Miguel Masso, an Iraq veteran who had previously tortured a man in 
custody when with the NYPD, before shooting and killing 18-year old Alan 
Blueford in East Oakland last May, as he laid on the ground and cried “I didn’t 
do anything.” Despite 
Masso’s account of what happened seriously conflicting with the 
coroner’s report and witness accounts, Masso still has his job. Without 
pathologizing veterans it is clear that there are serious concerns here. For 
the time being, Masso is another one of those cops who gets 
paid leave, who gets to walk the streets, who may get a medal or a 
promotion down the line – though there are many people in Oakland 
continuing to try and see otherwise. It is the commonness of excuses for police 
abuse/murder, the erasure of the victims as collateral damage 
that should be highlighted when trying to make sense of this broken, 
rogue former-LA cop.
A Gravedigger in Uniform
“I am the walking exigent circumstance you created.” 
>– Christopher Dorner
Much like Dan Freeman, the main character in Stan Greenlee’s classic book and 
film, The Spook Who Sat By the Door, Christopher Dorner is the dialectical 
gravedigger of a dying system: 
armed, trained, and prepared by a system which prizes cop culture, which 
massively arms the police and unleashes them on the poor and 
racialized, and which in its late stages demands that black people do 
the work of white supremacy. In this circumstance, those skills are 
being utilized against the police. Riverside Police Chief Sergio Diaz said, 
“This is a somewhat unprecedented, or at least rare occurrence – a trained, 
heavily armed person who is hunting for police officers.” 
 LAPD Chief Charlie Beck added, “Of course he knows what he’s doing; we trained 
him. He was also a member of the Armed Forces… It is extremely worrisome and 
scary.”
For Marx, capitalism would sow the seeds of its own destruction and 
produce its own gravedigger, the proletariat. Fanon recognized, however, that 
this gravedigger might be characterized more by the “desperate 
solutions” to which they turn than by their class consciousness. In the 
United States today, late capitalism is equally shot through with white 
supremacy and upheld by brute force by increasingly heavy-handed police. It 
should not surprise us when the gravediggers assume an ominously 
different form.
George Ciccariello-Maher is assistant professor of political science at Drexel 
University. He is the author of We Created Chávez: A People’s History of the 
Venezuelan Revolution and can be reached at gjcm(at)drexel.edu. 
Mike King is a Ph.D candidate in sociology at UC Santa Cruz, and can be reached 
at mikeking0101(at)gmail.com. Both study policing and counterinsurgency.

http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/02/08/american-blowback/


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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