A federal judge Wednesday ordered the city of Torrance to turn over the name of the police officer who shot at a Redondo Beach surfer during the manhunt for rogue Los Angeles police Officer Christopher Dorner.

U.S. District Court Judge Consuelo Marshall gave the city 30 days to provide the name to David Perdue and his attorneys, who are suing the city over the Feb. 7 mistaken-identity shooting that Perdue and his wife allege has left him unable to work.

“Torrance is still concealing the identity of the officer who fired the actual shots at Mr. Perdue’s head,” said Perdue’s attorney, Robert Sheahen.

Marshall also ordered Torrance to turn over data from the officer’s “black box” on his police car and set a trial date in the case for Aug. 12, 2014.

The order Wednesday came as Perdue’s lawsuit against Torrance and its Police Department makes its way through the court system. Perdue, 48, alleges officers nearly killed him when they rammed his truck and fired three shots at him on Flagler Lane near Beryl Street. The bullets missed.

Police said officers believed Perdue was Dorner fleeing from a shooting on nearby Redbeam Avenue. In reality, Perdue was on his way to pick up a friend to go surfing just as eight Los Angeles police officers opened fire on two newspaper carriers they mistakenly believed might be Dorner on nearby Redbeam Avenue.

Those officers were protecting the home of a high-ranking Los Angeles police official who Dorner had targeted for revenge for firing him from the force in 2008.

By the time Los Angeles and Torrance officers were involved in the mistaken-identity shootings in Torrance, Dorner was suspected of killing an LAPD officer’s daughter and her boyfriend in Irvine, and shooting two Riverside County police officers, killing one. Dorner was never in Torrance, but police officers feared he might head there.

Dorner ultimately died in a gunbattle with San Bernardino County sheriff’s deputies in Big Bear, apparently of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Before he died, Dorner killed one deputy and wounded another.

Sheahen said Torrance has offered to settle the case for $500,000. Perdue’s attorneys, however, want a payment more in line with what the newspaper carriers received from the city of Los Angeles. They each received $2.1 million.

Court documents have already identified one Torrance officer involved in the case as Erin Sooper. Sheahen said she is suspected of pulling Perdue from his truck after the shooting.

Sooper graduated from the Sheriff’s Department academy in July 2010, according to a news release at the time. Sooper was named Honor and Academic Recruit for Class No. 381, a recognition given to the sheriff’s academy recruit “who achieves the highest numerical average based upon leadership qualities, academics, marksmanship and physical performance throughout the training period.”

Sheahen said the officer had three years of experience when the shooting occurred.

It was not clear when Torrance would comply with the judge’s order.

Torrance police had no comment because of the pending litigation.