Oakland, already notorious for violent crime and for hostility toward law enforcement, had now become a powderkeg, one that would explode on March 21.
Given the conditions, no one was quite sure how the people of Oakland would respond to the murders of four officers. But for the most part, the people of Oakland grieved. Still, a small, but vocal, group of anti-police demonstrators marched in support of the gunman, despite the fact that DNA had linked him with the rape of a 12-year-old a month before and the rapes of two women the morning of the tragedy.
Of course, the outpouring of well wishes and condolences for the OPD from the law enforcement community was overwhelming, as evidenced by the 20,000-plus law enforcement officers who attended the combined funeral service for the four OPD officers.
But the most important part of this story is how the OPD recovered after the memorials were over and the slain officers were laid to rest.
OPD has undergone a tremendous transformation, while also grieving for its fallen. It now has a new chief, Anthony Batts, who comes to the post from the Long Beach (Calif.) Police Department where he served on the SWAT team.