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Baltimore Police Release Body Camera Footage From Fatal Park Heights Hostage Standoff

Officer Brian Loiero was shot in the leg before a BPD sniper killed suspect Jonathan Ingram in a Park Heights hostage standoff. Bodycam footage released.

Ellie Harper2 min read
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Baltimore Police Release Body Camera Footage From Fatal Park Heights Hostage Standoff
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BPD Officer Brian Loiero was shot in the leg, a woman jumped from a second-floor window to escape, and 33-year-old Jonathan Ingram ended up dead inside a Park Heights home on March 10. The Baltimore Police Department released body-worn camera footage of the fatal standoff on March 26, offering the public its first detailed look at how a reported burglary on the 6200 block of Park Heights Avenue unraveled into a multi-hour hostage crisis.

The footage opens with the first officer approaching the home and radioing that shots have been fired. As additional officers arrive, the video shows them pulling a wounded colleague from behind a tree where he had taken cover, locating his leg wound, and providing initial emergency medical care before evacuating him from the scene. Loiero has since recovered, according to reports.

Behind the house, officers found a woman who had jumped from a second-floor window to escape Ingram's grasp. The body-worn video captures officers carrying her to a police vehicle as she tells them she has not been shot and asks for her mother. A second woman remained inside the home and sustained non-life-threatening injuries; both were transported to a hospital for treatment.

The video also includes footage from Foxtrot, BPD's helicopter unit, showing Ingram in a window and indicating he was down. SWAT officers had been deployed and a police sniper ultimately shot and killed Ingram. That moment does not appear in the released footage: sniper officers do not wear body cameras, and the shooter was positioned at a distance. The video ends with officers entering the home, locating the second victim, and finding Ingram dead with his gun nearby.

The Maryland Office of the Attorney General is still investigating the police shooting. No official determination on use-of-force compliance has been issued, and the investigation remains open.

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