CHEVERLY, Md. (AP) — Police and the public were seeking answers Monday after a gunman opened fire outside a police station in a Maryland suburb of the nation's capital, killing an officer in what the police chief called an "unprovoked attack."
The shooter opened fire on the first officer he saw outside the station around 4:30 p.m. Sunday in Landover, a suburb about 10 miles northeast of downtown Washington, D.C., according to Prince George's County police chief Hank Stawinski.
A gun battle followed, with several officers shooting at the suspect, who was wounded, Stawinski said at a news conference. On Sunday night, hours after the shooting, Stawinski had few answers for reporters about what led to the gunfire.
"It wasn't about anything," he said of the shooting, which claimed the life of a four-year veteran of the department who would have turned 29 this week.
Police were going about their business on the quiet, rainy Sunday afternoon when the gunman fired at the first officer he saw outside a Maryland police station, prompting a gunbattle that left undercover narcotics officer Jacai Colson fatally wounded, according to officials.
Colson was pronounced dead at a hospital and the suspect was wounded but expected to survive, authorities said.
Once the first shot was fired, several officers fired back at the suspect, Stawinski said. He didn't say how many shots were exchanged.
"Those officers did not shrink. They bravely advanced and engaged this individual," the chief said.
Prince George's County State's Attorney Angela Alsobrooks called the shooting an "act of cowardice" and a "horrific act of evil."
She promised an aggressive investigation and prosecution of the suspect and another suspect arrested soon after the shooting. Their names were not immediately released.
Stawinski said the second man was believed to have been present with the first suspect when the shots erupted, but fled and was later arrested.
The Washington Post (http://wapo.st/1M12KZ1) reported that one woman nearby grabbed her sleeping 14-month old baby from his playpen when she heard what she thought might be firecrackers or gunshots. The woman said she looked outside and saw a man dressed in black firing a handgun.
"He fired one shot, and then he started pacing back and forth, then fired another shot," said Lascelles Grant, a nurse. She added that police began pouring out of the station. "Just looking outside, I'm like, 'Oh my God, look at all these police officers running out, putting their lives really in danger.'"
The woman couldn't immediately be reached by The Associated Press.
Immediately after the shooting, police advised residents near the police station to stay inside and others to avoid the area because of an "active shooter" situation. They later lifted the "shelter in place" advice.
Parked police cars lined the road to the hospital where Colson was taken Sunday evening. Officers huddled in the hospital's lobby, somberly awaiting news.
"The officers are devastated," Stawinksi said after the officer was pronounced dead.
The FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are helping police in the investigation, spokesmen for the two federal agencies said.
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