6.32pm ET
The LA Times has spoken to the owner of the cabin where Christopher Dorner has apparently taken shelter.
Candy Martin said she was "in a state of shock" after seeing her vacation cabin in Big Bear surrounded by police. The cabin is in a cluster of seven cabins close to Highway 38. Dorner had reportedly stolen a vehicle from a different cabin earlier in the day.
Local media are reporting 200 police officers have surrounded the cabin.
From the Times:
Candy Martin was sitting down for an episode of "Walking Dead" with her daughter when she turned on the news and saw her Big Bear-area vacation cabin surrounded by police amid reports of a shootout involving the wanted fugitive Christopher Dorner.
Her son called police to let them know she was the owner of the 85-year-old cabin, one in a cluster of seven cabins that she owns along California 38 near the community of Seven Oaks. Martin talked to police, telling them the cabins were supposed to be empty Monday and had no cable, phone or Internet service. There were also no firearms inside, she said.
"I was basically in a state of shock," Martin said.
Martin said her sisters spent time in the main cabin over the weekend. She said she wasn't surprised Dorner was able to make his way inside -- the old cabins "are easy to get into," she said.
"It's quite shocking," she said. "I mean, it's good and bad news. If it is him, I hope that they catch him and this whole horrible thing is put to rest. At the same time, who wants this happening on their property?"