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The hunt for Christopher Dorner: Do reward offers help or hinder?

More than 1,000 tips have been received since the offer of a $1 million reward for information leading to the capture of former Los Angeles cop Christopher Dorner.?

By Allison Terry,?Correspondent / February 12, 2013

A digital billboard along Santa Monica Boulevard shows a 'wanted' alert for former Los Angeles police officer Christopher Dorner, suspected in a spree of violence as part of a vendetta against law enforcement after being fired by the department.

Reed Saxon/AP

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With the hunt for Christopher Dorner, a former Los Angeles police officer suspected of three killings, in its second week, local officials have offered $1 million for information that could lead to his capture.

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As of Tuesday morning, more than 1,000 tips have been received since the reward was announced Sunday afternoon, police officials said. Yet what is the likelihood that the offer of a reward will lead law enforcement officials to Mr. Dorner?

Offering such high rewards can help, but it tends to do more harm than good, says James Alan Fox, a professor of criminology at Northeastern University in Boston.

?The problem is that it tends to create work for investigators, trying to figure out good leads from long shots,? Professor Fox says. ?If someone has information that is valuable, they generally call it in even in the absence of a reward.?

There has been no specific research to show the effectiveness of high-priced rewards leading to arrests, says Robert McCrie, professor of security management at John Jay College of Criminal Justice at the City University of New York.

?In effect, rewards like this get attention,? Professor McCrie says. ?Certainly there are some people in society for whom this will be tipping inducement to pick up the phone, but nobody who follows this field is saying that this will lead to [Dorner?s] capture.?

In these high-profile cases, McCrie says, law enforcement officials want to show aggrieved families and communities the extent they are willing to go in order to bring the wanted person into custody.

Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck said the $1 million reward is the largest ever offered in the Los Angels area, and the main reason for the high reward is to prevent further violence.

?Every day that Dorner is loose ? an attack on either a uniformed police officer or a family of a police officer is likely,? Beck said at a press conference on Sunday. ?That's why we rush to make this offer.?

As in the Dorner case, law enforcement agencies offer large rewards for high-profile criminals. Currently the FBI?s Top 10 Most Wanted list includes rewards ranging from $100,000 to $1 million.

The highest reward offered for a domestic fugitive ? $2 million ? was for James ?Whitey? Bulger, a former Boston gangster who had been on the run since 1996.

He was arrested June 22, 2011, two days after the FBI had unleashed a nationwide publicity campaign that led to a tip about his whereabouts. Mr. Bulger?s trial is scheduled to begin in Boston in June. He is charged in connection with 19 murders.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/QSXqwUFVMus/The-hunt-for-Christopher-Dorner-Do-reward-offers-help-or-hinder

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