Tag Archives: Christopher Dorner

Dorner transcripts show deputies held fire at end

Sheriff’s transcripts show that during the final two hours of the manhunt for ex-cop Christopher Dorner deputies didn’t fire a shot while he was inside a mountain cabin.

There was a furious gunbattle shortly after Dorner arrived at the cabin on February 12. One deputy was killed and another injured.

San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department radio dispatch transcripts released Friday show law enforcement poured in but deputies were told not to fire unless they saw Dorner. They tried using tear gas to force him out and when that failed, incendiary gas was used.

Flames broke out. Minutes later a single gunshot was heard from inside. Authorities believe it was Dorner taking his life.

Dorner killed four people to avenge what he called an unfair firing from the LA police department.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/wXnKMrGelYI/

Gun owned by cop killer Christopher Dorner being auctioned at Las Vegas pawn shop

A Las Vegas pawn shop is auctioning off a gun that once belonged to cop killer Christopher Dorner, the ex-LAPD officer who led authorities on the largest manhunt in California history when he gunned down four people.

Three weeks prior to the February rampage, Dorner sold a gun for $50 to a Las Vegas pawn shop dealer. Now, the shop is auctioning off the gun with the intent of giving the proceeds to families of the victims. The highest bid is currently at $400, according to local reports.

“It’s a .38 Special revolver, which is one of the most popular calibers,” George Bramlett, the owner of Bargain Pawn Shop, told KLAS-TV. Bramlett told the station that he suspected Dormer, who owned a home in Las Vegas, “Just needed money.” Bramlett described him as “real nice and professional” when he visited the store, according to the station.

Fox affiliate KTTV reports that the auction listing includes photos of the paperwork from the sale, as well as a surveillance image of Dorner in the store.

“The coward and murderer Christopher Dorner frequented many gun shops in Las Vegas and sold us this revolver on January 15, 2013,” the listing reads. “We were visited by local police and turned over the video surveillance we had. We have attached a picture of the original ‘buy’ ticket with Dorner’s signature. We would like to donate any proceeds to the families of the victims, so please let us know if there have been any funds set up.

“Astra model 960 revolver in .38 Spl and with 4″ barrel. Action and bore are very good. Appears to have been refinished and exterior is in very nice shape. Appears to be fully functional,” the store writes.

While the store’s intent appears good-natured, some cannot fathom buying the gun as a collector’s item.

“To me it’s revolting. Why would somebody want to own a killer’s gun?” Melinda Parschall told KLAS-TV.

Click for more on this story from MyFoxLA.com

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/fqAkMY7SejU/

911 audio released from couple tied up by fugitive ex-LA cop

Authorities on Tuesday released audio of a February 911 call from a California couple bound in their condo by fugitive ex-police officer Christopher Dorner, who fled in their SUV and would die during a shootout with deputies just hours later.

“We were tied up by Dorner,” Karen Reynolds says, her husband Jim shouting in the background, during the roughly 21-minute recording from Feb. 12 released by San Bernardino County after a public records request by The Associated Press.

“We’re still tied up!” she says shortly after.

The couple arrived to work on their mountain condominium that day and found Dorner, who had eluded a massive manhunt for a week.

Minutes after Dorner departed, Karen Reynolds freed herself enough to get to her cellphone, calling 911 in speaker mode with her hands still bound.

She told the operator she believed Dorner had been holed up in her condo just across from the manhunt’s command center during much of the search.

“I’m pretty sure he’s been here the whole time,” Reynolds says.

“You guys are just across from the command center?” the operator says, sounding surprised.

The couple stayed on the call while they waited for deputies. Karen Reynolds at one point falls over and groans in pain.

The operator asks Reynolds to yell out for deputies so they could locate the couple, and they arrived 19 minutes into the call.

Dorner would be spotted again just after he fled, and hours later would die from what authorities called a self-inflicted gunshot wound during a shootout with deputies, ending a rampage that left four people dead.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

911 audio released from fugitive ex-LA cop manhunt

Authorities on Tuesday released audio of a February 911 call from a California couple bound in their condo by fugitive ex-police officer Christopher Dorner, who fled in their SUV and would die during a shootout with deputies just hours later.

“We were tied up by Dorner,” Karen Reynolds says, her husband Jim shouting in the background, during the roughly 21-minute recording from Feb. 12 released by San Bernardino County after a public records request by The Associated Press.

“We’re still tied up!” she says shortly after.

The couple arrived to work on their mountain condominium that day and found Dorner, who had eluded a massive manhunt for a week.

Minutes after Dorner departed, Karen Reynolds freed herself enough to get to her cellphone, calling 911 in speaker mode with her hands still bound.

She told the operator she believed Dorner had been holed up in her condo just across from the manhunt’s command center during much of the search.

“I’m pretty sure he’s been here the whole time,” Reynolds says.

“You guys are just across from the command center?” the operator says, sounding surprised.

The couple stayed on the call while they waited for deputies. Karen Reynolds at one point falls over and groans in pain.

The operator asks Reynolds to yell out for deputies so they could locate the couple, and they arrived 19 minutes into the call.

Dorner would be spotted again just after he fled, and hours later would die from what authorities called a self-inflicted gunshot wound during a shootout with deputies, ending a rampage that left four people dead.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Rogue ex-cop's victim makes 1st public appearance

A Riverside police officer nearly killed in an ambush by rogue ex-cop Christopher Dorner made his first public appearance since the shooting, at an emotional dinner where he was greeted warmly by friends and admirers and shared a table with the wife of his late training officer.

Officer Andrew Tachias was sitting in his patrol car with Officer Michael Crain on Feb. 7 when Dorner pulled alongside them at a stoplight and opened fire.

Crain was killed. Tachias, who is still recovering, was shot eight times.

“I think he’s like all of us. It’s ups and downs,” Crain’s widow, Regina, said of Tachias. “One minute you’re fine, and the next you are in a hole.”

She added the dinner was the first time she and Tachias, 27, had met.

The officer, whose wounded hands were encased in protective coverings, has said he wants to return to work.

“I’m absolutely speechless for him to be back in this environment,” said Officer Scott Levesque, who was among those at the event at Riverside’s Original Roadhouse Grill.

The dinner capped a daylong fundraiser for the families of Tachias and Crain. It drew so many people that at one point, the restaurant ran out of silverware, the Riverside Press-Enterprise reported (http://bit.ly/X4bhPe).

Tachias, dressed in a gray and black striped hoodie and sporting a beard, was greeted with hugs when he arrived at about 8 p.m. and took a table with Crain’s widow.

“To be close to the person who was with him last is comforting to me,” Regina Crain said.

Crain’s father also attended the event, along with Riverside Police Chief Sergio Diaz and Lt. Larry Gonzalez, the watch commander on duty when Crain and Tachias were attacked.

Dorner went on a rampage after he was fired by the Los Angeles Police Department for filing a false report.

He killed four people and wounded Tachias before committing suicide Feb. 12 after he was cornered in a mountain cabin near Big Bear Lake.

Authorities surrounded the …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Another group pulls contribution to Dorner reward

An umbrella group for California police unions says it is pulling its contribution to a $1.2 million reward offered in the hunt for rogue ex-cop Christopher Dorner.

The president of the 64,000-member Peace Officers Research Association of California says the organization’s board of directors voted Thursday to withdraw $50,000 from the huge amount collected from more than two dozen entities.

Ron Cottingham says the conditions for the reward to be issued — Dorner’s arrest and conviction — don’t apply.

The city of Riverside said earlier this week it cannot pay the $100,000 it offered because the arrest-and-conviction conditions weren’t met.

Authorities say Dorner killed four people, including two police officers, before apparently killing himself last month.

A couple and a man who encountered Dorner have made claims for the reward.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

$1M reward for cop killer Dorner shrinks as contributors cite fine print

By Joshua Rhett Miller

When cop killer Christopher Dorner was on the loose and terrorizing southern California, some 30 groups joined together to put a $1 million price on his head. But after the former LAPD officer killed himself while barricaded in a mountain cabin in February, some of those groups have gotten stingy.

A law enforcement union became the latest of the contributors to voice second thoughts about its $60,000 share of the reward, following a similar decision by the city of Riverside to withdraw its pledge of $100,000. With Dorner dead and no shortage of prospective claims to the pot, it seems some of the groups behind the reward have developed an appreciation for fine print. Specifically, the part that authorized a payout for information leading to the “arrest” and “conviction.”

“It’s on hold,” Ron Cottingham, president of the 64,000-member Peace Officers Research Association of California, told FoxNews.com. “The authorization for that pledge came from the board of directors. And since the circumstances under which they offered the pledge toward the reward do not seem to have been fulfilled, it’s still on hold.”

A couple who was bound in their mountain condo by Dorner and a camp caretaker he carjacked have laid claim to the reward, which officials have said they hope to dole out by mid-April. Both parties say they provided authorities the crucial tip that allowed police to corner Dorner in a vacant mountain cabin before killing himself after a shootout on Feb. 12. Dorner, 33, killed four people, including two police officers, during his weeklong rampage.

During that manhunt — portions of which were broadcast live on national television — LAPD Chief Charlie Beck and Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa coordinated a $1 million reward from more than 30 agencies, corporations and associations including the FBI, the U.S. Marshals Service, the Los Angeles Dodgers, AEG and the University of Southern California. And while crime rewards typically lead tipsters to protect their identities, the well-publicized killing spree had the opposite effect, according to LAPD detective.

“Everybody’s coming out of the woodwork on this one,” LAPD Detective Andy Neiman told the Associated Press. “These people are being very public about it because they know Dorner can’t come after them.”

Both Beck and Villaraigosa have said they’d like to see the reward paid out. LAPD spokesman Richard French told FoxNews.com that authorities from the relevant agencies will meet in the next two weeks to correlate their findings regarding the reward and determine who was ultimately responsible for Dorner’s capture.

“It is a very unique situation because we have so many jurisdictions involved and so many people pledging rewards,” French told FoxNews.com.

The city of Riverside, however, which saw one of its officers gunned down by Dorner, has announced its pledge of $100,000 is no longer on the table.

City spokeswoman Cindie Perry, who did not return requests for comment, told the Los Angeles Times that the City Council resolution indicated that the reward money was for information leading to an arrest and conviction — neither of which were met.

“Because conditions were …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

LA compensates 2 for truck mistakenly shot by LAPD

The city has agreed to give $40,000 to two women whose pickup was shot up by a Police Department protection detail that mistook their newspaper delivery vehicle for the truck driven by rogue ex-cop Christopher Dorner during his rampage, officials announced Thursday.

The tax-free settlement covering the pickup and other property came quickly after the women’s attorney, Glen Jonas, rejected Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck’s offer of a replacement truck because the women would have had to pay taxes. The deal specified no admission of liability.

Margie Carranza and her 71-year-old mother, Emma Hernandez, were delivering papers around 5 a.m. Feb. 7 when LAPD officers guarding the suburban Torrance home of a Dorner target blasted at least 100 rounds into their Toyota pickup. Hernandez was shot in the back and Carranza had minor injuries.

Jonas said the women were still not doing well.

“Margie’s still very emotionally impacted and Emma is suffering from her injuries,” Jonas said.

Jonas, who noted he has waived all his fees, said he hoped that all other issues including personal injury can be resolved without the need to file a lawsuit or have a trial.

City Attorney Carmen Trutanich said the truck compensation was one of the fastest resolutions of a case he can remember in his term.

The women were expected to receive the money in two to four days.

The errant shooting in Torrance occurred just hours after Dorner shot and wounded a Los Angeles police officer in Riverside County and then ambushed two police officers in the city of Riverside, killing one and wounding the other.

Dorner was on the run in a Nissan Titan pickup after being named as the suspect in the murders of a retired LAPD captain’s daughter and her fiance. The former captain had represented Dorner at an LAPD disciplinary hearing that led to his firing. The double-murder investigation led to discovery of a manifesto posted online by Dorner that vowed to wage war on Los Angeles police.

Dorner hid out in the San Bernardino Mountains until Feb. 12, when he tried to flee but law enforcement converged on him. Dorner killed one sheriff’s deputy and wounded another in a gunbattle that ended with fire consuming the …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Women Shot by LAPD Still Waiting for New Truck

By John Johnson In the heat of last month’s manhunt for Christopher Dorner, the LAPD put 102 bullets into an SUV driven by mother-and-daughter paper carriers in a case of mistaken identity. Emma Hernandez, 71, and Margie Carranza, 47, survived but are still waiting for a new truck as promised from the department,… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

This Man Says He Deserves Entire $1.2M Dorner Reward

By Mark Russell The manhunt for killer Christopher Dorner last month spurred more than two dozen donors—from local governments to private individuals—to offer $1.2 million in reward money to capture the former cop. And carjacked camp ranger Rick Heltebrake thinks he deserves it all, reports the Los Angeles Times . Heltebrake… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Racial Profiling Or Realistic Profiling?

By capblack

Nadra Enzi Racial Profiling Or Realistic Profiling?

“ewest305″ says:

You are a disgrace to your own race. Whites commit more category of crimes than blacks. This does not mean that we should target whites for these crime nor target blacks, middle easterners, etc. for other crimes. In other words, you are basing a small percentage of crime in the United States to justify racial profiling. You are not considering domestic violence, kidnapping, white collar crime, child abuse, etc. You can’t pick and choose which crimes should be racially profiled. You just can’t! Get an education, respect your race and quit being lead to believe racial profiling will make us safe because it wont (sic).

This latest political love note was sent as a reply to my affirmative answer on a Politix poll about racial profiling.

Racial profiling is a phrase sure to set self-righteous progressives off on new lows in criminal coddling disguised as civil rights.

I often wonder if another term, perhaps “realistic profiling”, could be inserted to soothe their savage breasts?

But it wouldn’t, not when dealing with a philosophy that supports street thugs, cop killers, killer ex-cops like Christopher Dorner, and foreign terrorists as morally equivalent to 1960s civil rights marchers.

Racism in law enforcement and homeland security isn’t what I’m promoting and not even debating in this advocacy.

Realism in law enforcement and homeland security, complemented by realism (responsibility) from profiled groups and their popular culture is my goal.

Where are the young Black men and older leaders loudly and proudly distinguishing themselves on air, musically and as activists, from thugs I call chocolate Klansmen and enablers excusing their crimes by blaming conservative White people for it?

Our clothing, songs, videos, and snivel rights spokespersons all proclaim that Black crime is a product of external injustice and thus won’t be denounced by the majority of the community.

I’ve always marveled at this position since it supports every stereotype created about us in the past.

Even Minister Farrakhan, self-proclaimed inheritor to the late Elijah Muhammad’s mantle of America’s top Black Muslim reformer, has sunk to enabling thugs, by calling gangs “street organizations” and judging them the “best generation we’ve (Americans Blacks) ever produced.”

This from someone whose spiritual father said decades ago our larcenous condition proved “the so-called American Negro is totally unfit for self ” and thus required the highly regimented, military-themed rehabilitation he proscribed.

While many American Blacks tilt left on our criminals, law enforcement doesn’t.

Inner cities from coast to coast are subjected to field interviews, check points, probation/parole inspections, and the New York Police Department’s “Stop and Frisk” program based upon rampant gun violence and other serious crime committed by residents.

Is it racism to point out who the majority suspects are in the national Hood’s daily murder rate?

My counter charge is it’s racism not to! Silence when we kill each other makes high profile marches, when a cop or a George Zimmerman does it, illegitimate!

Realistic profiling strips our crime rate of all external blame mechanisms and places scrutiny where it belongs!

All my life, I’ve heard how racist police are. I’ve even met some officers …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Half-dozen ex-LAPD officers seek firing reviews since Dorner investigation

At least six former officers have requested a reopening of their termination cases since the Los Angeles Police Department started investigating allegations by a former officer who left a trail of violence to avenge his firing.

Police Chief Charlie Beck reopened the case of Christopher Dorner and ordered a review of the LAPD disciplinary system after Dorner released a manifesto accusing the department of unjustly firing him. He also vowed to wage warfare on its officers and their families.

Police Protective League President Tyler Izen said he will ask the chief to review the new requests. He called the decision in Dorner’s case unprecedented and said it “has left many of our members in absolute limbo.”

“Because, if the department does investigations and they’re satisfied with those investigations, then what do they hope to learn from this review?” Izen said. “And if they are not satisfied with those investigations, why are they doing them without being satisfied in the first place?”

The department has conducted “biopsies” on cases in the past, but the officers involved were usually unaware of the action, he said.

Such internal decisions are often made to provide training or learning opportunities, Izen added.

In the Dorner case, Beck has said the review is being conducted to ensure public confidence in the department.

At Tuesday’s Police Commission meeting, Beck said he expects that review to be completed in several months. The department has also started a series of internal audits and held meetings to look at the overall disciplinary system, Beck said.

“We’re doing additional work within the department to discuss what the perception of fairness is for the discipline system,” Beck said.

That process will look at perceptions of fairness when dealing with race, gender and rank, and will involve input from officers, Beck said.’

He said many requests for reviews from former officers involve files that are old, but the department will look nonetheless.

“If people bring forward issues relative to their boards of rights or their firing that appear to have substance, I’ll have somebody look at them, do a biopsy, and make sure they were done the way that they should have been done,” Beck said.

Some people in the department have said the reopening of the Dorner case is a no-win situation.

The results will ultimately be reported to the Police Commission, the department’s civilian oversight board.

Commission President Andrea Sheridan Ordin acknowledged the difficulty involved in reopening the Dorner case but said the review is necessary.

“There will be people who said we shouldn’t have said anything at all; then you have a group of people say they don’t talk to us, they don’t care about us, and we have legitimate concerns, and no one’s answering them,” Ordin said.

“I’m not saying there’s any single right answer, but we just have to believe that more information, accurate information, well-thought-through information and recommendations are better than ignoring it,” she added.

Ordin, a longtime attorney, was a member of the Christopher Commission, which examined the LAPD after the beating of Rodney King.

“What you want is a department that can police …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Video: Cop-Killer Christopher Dorner Gets Love From CNN

By Daniel Noe

Molotov Mitchell says Christopher Dorner took irony to a whole new level…

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

LAPD chief: Review of Dorner firing under way

Los Angeles police Chief Charlie Beck says the review of ex-officer Christopher Dorner‘s firing is under way, but it’s too early to comment on the re-examination.

Beck told a press conference Tuesday that he doesn’t discount the effect that Dorner’s manifesto has had on the reputation of the Police Department.

Dorner, who was black, claimed he was subjected to racism and was targeted for reporting misconduct. He died of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot during a mountain cabin siege that followed a spree of violence in which authorities say he killed four people and wounded three.

Beck says he hopes the $1 million reward offered during the manhunt will be paid. But he says it has to be done fairly, whether it goes to one individual or is split among several.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

LAPD To Review Dorner Firing Case: Chief Charlie Beck Admits Manifesto’s Effect On Police Reputation

By The Huffington Post News Editors

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles police Chief Charlie Beck says the review of ex-officer Christopher Dorner‘s firing is under way, but it’s too early to comment on the re-examination.

Beck told a press conference Tuesday that he doesn’t discount the effect that Dorner’s manifesto has had on the reputation of the Police Department.

Read More…

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Crowd Protests Manhunt of Fugitive Ex-Cop

Dozens of protesters rallied outside Los Angeles police headquarters yesterday in support of Christopher Dorner, the former LAPD officer and suspected killer of four who died after a shootout and fire this week at a mountain cabin following one of the biggest manhunts in recent memory. Protesters told the LA …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Dozens of pro-Dorner protesters rally at LAPD HQ

Dozens of protesters rallied outside Los Angeles police headquarters in support of Christopher Dorner, the ex-LAPD officer and suspected killer of four who died after a shootout and fire this week at a mountain cabin.

Protesters told the Los Angeles Times (http://lat.ms/11Ndm6i ) at the Saturday rally that they did not support Dorner’s deadly methods, but objected to police corruption and brutality, and believed Dorner’s claims of racism and unfair treatment by the department that he said led to the rampage.

Thirty-year-old protester Michael Nam held a sign with a flaming tombstone and the inscription “RIP Habeas Corpus.” He and others said they were angered by the conduct of the manhunt that led to Dorner’s death and injuries to innocent bystanders who were mistaken for him.

___

Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Chris Dorner supporters rally in front of LAPD headquarters

Dozens of protesters rallied outside Los Angeles police headquarters Saturday in support of Christopher Dorner, the former LAPD officer and suspected killer of four who died after a shootout and fire this week at a mountain cabin following one of the biggest manhunts in recent memory.

Protesters told the Los Angeles Times they didn’t support Dorner’s deadly methods, but objected to police corruption and brutality, and believed Dorner’s claims of racism and unfair treatment by the department. Many said they were angered by the conduct of the manhunt that led to Dorner’s death and injuries to innocent bystanders who were mistaken for him.

Michael Nam, 30, who held a sign with a flaming tombstone and the inscription “RIP Habeas Corpus,” said it was “pretty obvious” police had no intention of bringing Dorner in alive.

“They were the judge, the jury and the executioner,” Nam said. “As an American citizen, you have the right to a trial and due process by law.”

During the hunt for Dorner, LAPD Chief Charlie Beck called for Dorner’s surrender and said he didn’t want to see the suspect or anyone else injured.

Dorner was already believed to have killed three people when he was cornered Tuesday at the cabin near Big Bear Lake, and during the standoff shot and killed a San Bernardino County sheriff’s deputy, authorities said.

Only after calls for surrender and use of milder tear gas did deputies launch pyrotechnic gas canisters into the cabin, and the subsequent fire was not intentional, the Sheriff’s Department said.

Dorner died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound at the end of the standoff, sheriff’s officials said.

The 33-year-old has already inspired a burgeoning subculture of followers. While most don’t condone killing, they see him as an outlaw hero who raged against powerful forces of authority, and some even question whether he really died.

Tributes include a ballad titled “El Matapolicias,” or “The Police Killer,” penned by a Mexican crooner with lyrics paying homage to Dorner, and a YouTube clip showing excerpts from a video game titled “Christopher Dorner‘s Last Stand Survival Game” whose opening frame declares him “A True American Hero.”

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

New Orleans Independent Police Monitor Solution

By capblack

Police SC New Orleans Independent Police Monitor Solution

If there’s a glimmer of light for liberty lovers in the wake of the Christopher Dorner tragedy, it’s this: strong Independent police monitors (IPM) are a safeguard against discontent that can undermine delivery of justice.

Civilian oversight of law enforcement is often opposed by police unions, internal affairs units, and citizens who are law-and-order advocates.

While murder is always an unacceptable response for dissatisfaction with departmental disciplinary hearing results, an outside IPM investigation is a solution more municipalities should welcome.

The flip side of IPMs exposing bad cops is exonerating good ones. Civilian oversight isn’t a police officer “witch hunt,” as critics charge.

The LAPD has re-opened Mr. Dorner’s case, and New Orleans should note that our present Independent Police Monitor, Susan Hutson, came from Los Angles.

The Crescent City has the expertise of an expert attorney who helped provide civilian oversight at one of America’s most troubled, complex police agencies.

New Orleans has its own troubled, complex police agency, one facing a federal consent decree. Details await hammering out on just how said decree will be implemented.

Given the city’s Katrina-related police offenses alone, observers await implementation with bated breath.

Empowering the independent police monitor solution may be the missing key in silencing cries of cover-up made by citizens and ex-officers alike.

Properly mandated, funded, and staffed, the IPM here can save the city millions in damages and heartache as an upgraded NOPD wins public trust.

IPMs should become a norm nationwide, not just in headline-making cities.

Liberty lovers should add this new chant to our arsenal:

“We Can’t Win Without A Strong IPM!”

Support the independent police monitor solution in your city!

Donate/Stop Socialist Hate: http://www.gofundme.com/197xk8

Photo credit: Sumi-l (Creative Commons)

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism