Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Charges Dropped Against Brian E. Dorian, Lynwood Cop Accused of Shooting Spree

The charges have been dropped and a lot of jaws are dropping with them.

Yes. The charges against Brian E. Dorian, the Lynwood police officer accused of a shooting spree that left one man dead and two men wounded - have been dropped. It took me several tries to wrap my brain around this news. In fact, I read several news articles twice, just to make sure my eyes weren't deceiving me.

Despite the Will County Sherriff department’s evidence, that lead to Dorian’s murder warrant, and a positive identification by one of the Lynwood police officer’s alleged shooting spree victims, Dorian walked out of the Will County jail a free man.

The news has a lot of people talking.

On October 8, 2010, Dorian was arrested at his Crete, Illinois home on a murder warrant. Police say his physical description and the description of his truck, matched the suspect wanted for murdering 45-year-old Rolando Alonso of Hammond, Indiana, and wounding 19-year-old Joshua Garza and 64-year-old Keith Dahl.

During the initial stages of the investigation, Dorian was pulled over and questioned by the police. But when he showed them his badge, they simply let him go.

It makes you wonder if Dorian’s magical badge is the reason these charges have been dropped, today.

Jennifer Jakubielski, a 30-year friend of Dorian‘s, made what I consider to be a ridiculous statement to the press, "Could you imagine your 95-year-old grandma being accused of something like this? That's what this is like. He's just a kind hearted, gentle man."

Well, Jen. Dorian is not 95-years-old. He is not a woman and he’s not my grandmother. Furthermore, even a penny has more than one side to it.


 

2 comments:

  1. Hey, what about the computer records that show he was home writing email?? This is an idiotic post.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Umm, unless you saw him sitting at the computer how do you know it was him and not his mother, sister, girlfriend....? I'm not saying he did it or didn't, but evidence that an e-mail was sent from your account doesn't mean you were home. Shoot, I can schedule my e-mails to be delivered when I'm not home as long as my computer is on.

    ReplyDelete

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