Ohio police officer shot in head after responding to domestic violence call: police chief

Police lights are pictured in a file image.

A police officer who was shot in the head in Warren County, Ohio, was in "stable but critical condition," according to the local police chief. 

Clearcreek Township Chief of Police John Terrill told a group of reporters Tuesday evening that two police officers responded to a domestic violence call and ended up getting into a shootout with a suspect. He said the suspect was killed.

The officer who was shot in the head was taken to Miami Valley Hospital for treatment. He is in "stable but critical condition in the ICU," Terrill said. The other officer was not injured.

The injured officer was not identified other than he is a male who has been with the precinct for "about 14 years," Terrill said. He was transported via helicopter and was breathing on his own, WXIX reported.

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The other officer, a female sergeant, shot and killed the suspect, according to the police chief.

When asked about a potential recovery, Terrill said the officer was "shot in the head, so we’re not quite sure how this is going to turn out yet."

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The Clearcreek Township officers were initially called to the residence after a man was ramming his wife’s car with an ATV, the police chief said.

It was not immediately clear what provoked the shooting. The Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigations was at the scene assisting in the investigation.

This is the first police shooting for the Clearcreek Township Police Department in its 47-year history, WXIX reported. The department has lost two officers in non-shooting incidents in recent years. Sgt. Larry Cornett died unexpectedly in June 2018 and Officer Jerrid Lee died in a car crash in January 2019.

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