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Baltimore Officer Shot in Leg During Active Shooter Incident on Park Heights Avenue

A Baltimore officer was shot responding to a burglary call Tuesday; a suspect was also hit as tactical units swarmed northwest Baltimore's Park Heights neighborhood.

Lisa Park3 min read
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Baltimore Officer Shot in Leg During Active Shooter Incident on Park Heights Avenue
Source: img.hoodline.com

A Baltimore police officer was shot in the leg Tuesday and transported to the University of Maryland Shock Trauma unit after an active shooter incident on the 6200 block of Park Heights Avenue in northwest Baltimore, authorities confirmed.

The officer was responding to a burglary call when a gunman opened fire, according to the Associated Press. A second officer then shot the suspect; AP reported the gunman was killed, though Baltimore Police's initial public statement said only that "a suspect was also shot" without specifying a condition. That discrepancy had not been officially resolved as of early Tuesday afternoon, and Baltimore Police did not immediately respond to requests for additional information.

Baltimore Police posted on X: "An officer has been shot and transported to Shock Trauma. A suspect was also shot. Avoid the surrounding areas. More information will be provided as it becomes available." The officer's injuries were described as non-life-threatening.

Tactical units flooded the neighborhood as investigators established a perimeter and set up a mobile command center near the scene. Multiple streets around Park Heights Avenue were closed as officers worked the scene Tuesday afternoon. The Baltimore City Fraternal Order of Police offered a brief reassurance, saying "all involved members are in good spirits."

Neither the officer nor the suspect was publicly identified. No additional suspects were reported, and no arrests beyond the shooting itself were announced.

The incident drew attention partly due to its location near Agudath Israel of Baltimore and Tiferes Yisroel synagogues. Baltimore Police moved quickly to address any community alarm, telling Fox News in an email that the shooting "was NOT at a synagogue or religious institution." The clarification reflects a heightened awareness in the department around incidents occurring near houses of worship, particularly in historically Jewish neighborhoods.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The University of Maryland Shock Trauma center, which receives many of the region's most critical trauma cases, was treating the officer as of early afternoon. No further medical update was available.

Mayor Brandon Scott's office did not respond to messages seeking comment, and calls and emails to the Baltimore Police Department press office went unanswered in the immediate hours after the shooting.

The incident adds to a difficult year for Baltimore law enforcement. Officers shot in the line of duty face not only physical trauma but prolonged administrative uncertainty, particularly when a second officer discharges a weapon. It was not immediately clear whether the officer who shot the suspect had been placed on administrative leave or whether the department's internal affairs or special investigations unit had opened a review, standard practice in officer-involved shootings.

Baltimore Police said a formal update would be issued as more information became available. The questions that matter most now are whether the suspect died from his injuries, what prompted the alleged gunman to open fire during what began as a burglary call, and whether any additional accountability processes will be publicly disclosed.

For a department that has worked in recent years to rebuild community trust through transparency reforms, how it handles the next 24 hours of disclosure will be as closely watched as the investigation itself.

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