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To: null and void
"So burning him alive was an appropriate police response? "

He had several opportunities to surrender didn't he? He chose not to, and the building was torched. I see no difference between this and the military torching the tobacco barn on Garrett's Farm where John Wilkes Booth and David Herold were hiding. Even after the barn was on fire, Booth refused to give up and planned to fight on. If it wasn't for Boston Corbett, Booth would have died of smoke inhalation, and burned to a crisp. And unless Dorner committed suicide before he caught fire, he probably died of smoke inhalation as well.

147 posted on 02/13/2013 10:26:57 AM PST by mass55th (Courage is being scared to death - but saddling up anyway...John Wayne)
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To: mass55th
Yes. There was simply no way to smoke him out (to coin a phrase) without burning down the whole house.

It worked for a whole city block in Boston, the SLA, Booth, Waco, etc.

Arson is an acceptable the preferred police technique in your book.

Got it.

161 posted on 02/13/2013 10:44:39 AM PST by null and void (Gun confiscation enables tyranny. Don't enable tyranny.)
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