think that was an interesting case. Clearly, Dorner was coping with emotional trauma of some kind but his manifesto reveals a man who was trying to abide by principles and a moral code and was fairly intelligent but may have been lying to himself in part and couldn't live up to his ideals. Although I didn't interview the guy nor am I familiar with the case, it reminds me a lot of borderline disorder cases I have known, coupled with a depression. The guy wasn't as organized or badass as he liked to pretend or he could have had a much longer and effective run. As far as the corruption he alludes to, I'm kind of pissed that more reporters haven't started fact-checking the manifesto in its entirety. Yeah, I know I shouldn't be disappointed because reporters rarely do their job but you'd expect in a case like this, they would go beyond the fluff. This is an opportunity handed on a silver platter for any investigative journalist to make his or her mark. I don't know how much of what he says was truth, lies and misconceptions.