
Courtesy NBC News
Ex-LAPD officer-turned-fugitive Christopher Dorner, who went on a deadly
shooting rampage and then
died after a shootout and fire last week, first tried to charm fishermen in
San Diego's Driscoll Wharf into giving him a ride to Mexico, sources said.
Dorner, 33, led authorities on a massive manhunt after allegedly killing an
Irvine couple and a Riverside police officer in a crime spree across Southern
California that began on Feb. 3.
Dorner's deadly crimes were allegedly part of a revenge-filled plot he
outlined in an online manifesto targeting law enforcement officers and their
families.
Authorities searched for Dorner all over Southern California -- from Irvine
to National City -- and led extensive checkpoints at the San Ysidro border,
believing Dorner was trying to flee into Mexico.
Fishermen at Driscoll Wharf told NBC 7 exclusively that Dorner was on the
pier near Nimitz and Harbor Island Drive on Feb. 5 trying to charm his way into
a boat ride to Mexico.
"He kept saying he wanted to go fishing off Mexico. I said ‘Mexico? That's
kinda weird. You could go fishing on the bay,'" said Jeremy Smith, a local
commercial fisherman.
Smith spoke exclusively with NBC 7 on Saturday night.
Smith and others at the dock said Dorner was willing to pay $200 to $400 for
someone to take him out to sea. He told the fishermen he was going to be
deployed to Afghanistan and just wanted to go fishing in Mexico first.
But at this pier, far away from popular fishing charters, most people were
making repairs on their boats, not ready to go to sea.
Smith offered to show him around a luxury yacht that was for sale docked at
the pier. But he asked him to remove the military style boots Dorner was wearing
to keep the white carpeting clean. Dorner declined.
"Maybe he had a gun," Smith guessed. "Usually people want to see inside."
Dorner's request for a ride surprised some local fishermen, including Roy
Sherman.
"I've been down here for 40 years and he's the first guy that came down here
and asked for a ride," said Sherman.
San Diego Police Lt. Andra Brown said she was not aware of this particular
Dorner sighting in San Diego.
"We're not going to discuss details of an ongoing investigation," Brown said,
and referred questions about the incident to the Irvine Police Department.
Several other law enforcement sources -- not in the San Diego Police
Department -- confirmed the man described by local fishermen was likely
Dorner.
Dorner did spend time in San Diego between Feb. 4 and Feb. 6.
Gift of fish tacos
A surveillance video taken behind an
auto parts store in National City on Feb. 4 shows Dorner tossing bullets, a
uniform and other items that linked him to the Irvine double-homicide into a
dumpster.
After spending an hour at the pier the next day, the fishermen said Dorner
left, but returned with fish tacos for Smith, hoping that would convince the
fisherman to help him find a charter.
The witnesses reported Dorner was very friendly, always with a smile on his
face, calling himself "Mike."
The man who called himself "Mike" told Smith a story about a friend who was
having problems with the police and said his friend had been fired.
"I think he was talking about himself, now that I think about it," added
Smith.
Dorner eventually left peacefully without his ride to Mexico, the group of
fisherman said.
Driscoll Wharf is adjacent to Naval Base San Diego on North Harbor drive.
Smith said Dorner returned to the wharf on Feb. 6 but still couldn't find
anyone to take him to Mexican waters.
That same day, a man fitting Dorner's description tried to steal a boat from
a San Diego marina, according to officials. An 81-year-old man on the boat was
tied up but uninjured. The would-be boat thief was unable to steal the boat and
fled.
Later that night, police issued Dorner's description, and the fishermen said
they notified authorities of their encounter.
On Sunday, fishermen on Pier 6 at Driscoll Wharf are amazed the kind man who
brought them fish tacos on Feb. 5 was the dangerous fugitive accused of fatally
shooting four people, including a police officer and a sheriff's deputy.
The 10-day manhunt for Dorner ended on Feb. 12.
After barricading himself in a Big Bear-area cabin, he died of what appeared
to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head, San Bernardino County
Sheriff's Department officials said. That cabin went up in flames during a
shootout between Dorner and officers, and the fugitive's charred remains were
later found inside.