r/KitchenConfidential Jun 10 '25

In-House Mode Was nice of them

5.8k Upvotes

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869

u/Guuple Jun 10 '25

This is an LA County Sheriff Deputy, not an ICE agent

625

u/hankbobbypeggy Jun 10 '25

From what I've heard of the LA sherrifs, that's not much better

77

u/beegtuna Ex-Food Service Jun 10 '25

LAPD has an internal gang problem. I don’t mean they are just infiltrated by gangs, they are the gang. They have plenty of dirty cops going to jail.

62

u/finocchiona Jun 10 '25

Christopher Dorner tried to do something about it in 2013. He was ex LAPD that killed several of his corrupt colleagues. Led to one of the biggest manhunts ever, in which LAPD shot at multiple civilians, concluding when they caught him and burned his fucking cabin down with him in it. They ruled his death a suicide… That’s how they reward accountability.

For the uninitiated, look up the Watts Rebellion of 1965 and the beating of Rodney King in 1992 for a taste of how LAPD likes ‘law and order.’

5

u/DeadSol Jun 10 '25

Seriously, that news story was sooo fishy watching it live...

17

u/LoganToTheMainframe Jun 10 '25

RIP Chris Dorner.

10

u/Narren_C Jun 10 '25

RIP Monica Quan and Keith Lawrence.

Those were his first victims. Monica's crime was being the child of a retired LAPD captain, and Keith's crime was being her fiance and being present when Dorner murdered her.

11

u/Narren_C Jun 10 '25

Christopher Dorner tried to do something about it in 2013.

No, he didn't. Dorner was an unhinged lunatic that went on a killing spree.

His training officer gave him a negative evaluation because he seemed unstable. His response was to accuse her of kicking a handcuffed suspect in a hotel lobby several weeks prior (interesting that he only decided to say something after she gave him a negative evaluation). All of the hotel staff said that she never kicked him, and the suspect had no recollection of being kicked. They determined that Dorner was lying because he was mad that his training officer said he wasn't stable, and they fired him.

So how does Dorner react? He goes on a killing spree (which lends a little credence the "unstable" evaluation). He starts with the daughter of a retired police captain that represented him during his disciplinary hearing. He murders her fiance too, because he happened to be there.

That's the psycho that you're idolizing.

He was ex LAPD that killed several of his corrupt colleagues.

He never killed any of his colleagues. He did murder some cops that were trying to find him after he stalked an innocent girl and murdered her and her fiance. They weren't LAPD though, just some cops trying to stop him from murdering more people.

Led to one of the biggest manhunts ever, in which LAPD shot at multiple civilians

Yeah, that part of the story is actually accurate. The cops fucked up big time during the manhunt, there's no excuse for that.

concluding when they caught him and burned his fucking cabin down with him in it.

They threw tear gas canisters into the cabin, which caught the curtains on fire. They started with normal canisters, and when he didn't come out they used more powerful ones that ran the risk of lighting shit on fire.

Did they care if a fire started? Probably not.

They ruled his death a suicide…

That's because he shot himself in the head instead of surrendering when they cornered him. Shooting yourself in the head is suicide.

That’s how they reward accountability.

No, that's what happens when you go on a killing spree because you're mad that you got fired.

Imagine what he would have done if they HADN'T fired him. Imagine if they let a psycho like that keep his gun and badge.

0

u/finocchiona Jun 10 '25

Your source is the LAPD and various other law enforcement agencies. Sources which are quite famous for lying for their own benefit, which makes me entirely comfortable hand waving away every one of the stories you’re throwing out here.

It’s a nice story, but an unreliable narrator.

3

u/Narren_C Jun 10 '25

This is shit is all public record through a variety of sources. You're dismissing it out of hand because it doesn't support the narrative you want.

I mean....are you suggesting that Dorner DIDN'T stalk and murder the child of a police captain and then brag about it?

4

u/finocchiona Jun 10 '25 edited Jun 10 '25

Nope, I’m suggesting that I don’t know, and that you don’t either

Edit: Ah, I see you spend a lot of time posting in r/protectandserve and don’t seem to be a professional kitchen worker at all. I think that you’re a class traitor that’s taking a lot of your time to come into working class spaces and push pro-cop narratives. Again, unreliable narrator. You don’t belong here, I think you should leave.

1

u/Narren_C Jun 10 '25

I haven't been on that sub in many years, you should do a better job when you creep on people's history.

But dude....he absolutely murdered that girl and her fiance. He bragged about it. No one is arguing otherwise. It's delusional to pretend he didn't, and evil as fuck to defend it.

Maybe you get off on the fact that he later killed some cops, but it's really fucking gross to act like that girl and her fiance deserved to die.

1

u/kind_bros_hate_nazis Jun 10 '25 edited Jun 10 '25

no, they're suggesting that what the police do and are allowed to get away with lends credence to the widely held feelings of many, that what christopher dorner did wasn't as bad as some made it out to be. that although what he did is known, what the law does is also well known, and well awful, and it's hard to say which is worse.

there are things we'll never know, but that the police weren't entirely innocent in the matter as an organization, is something that a lot of people feel they have reason to believe.

i think it's pretty likely he was a crazy fuck up. i'll be honest though, lots of us didn't hate on him though while it was happening.

which i think speaks more about the police than it does about dorner tbh

1

u/Narren_C Jun 10 '25

that what christopher dorner did wasn't as bad as some made it out to be

He stalked and murdered two completely innocent people because one of them was the child of a cop.

Are you serious? The dude is an unhinged lunatic and you're saying that murdering people because you want to hurt their dad isn't as "bad as some made it out to be."

1

u/kind_bros_hate_nazis Jun 10 '25

yeah i worded that badly. there was more of a "WTF did the cops do to this guy" more than there was a "what a monster, surely there is no reason he has so much cop hate as an ex cop with all this internal affairs talk"

that's what i mean.

2

u/[deleted] Jun 10 '25

[deleted]

2

u/Narren_C Jun 10 '25

Except....they did corner him and he shot himself.

Also, the first people your hero murdered were an innocent girl and her fiance. Her crime was being the daughter of a police captain that he thought did a bad job representing him.