Baltimore County police officer, suspect killed in Catonsville shootout
Police-involved shooting follows other recent gunfire in area
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The suspect in the fatal Catonsville shooting of a Baltimore County police officer has died from injuries he suffered in the gunfight, police said.
The officer was identified as Jason Schneider, 36, a 13-year-veteran of the force and with the tactical unit since 2004. Officials said he was a married father of two.
Police said he and other officers had been going room-to-room while serving a warrant in a home, Schneider returned fire, police said, and hit Tevon Smith, 25.
"During a well-prepared police event, Officer Schneider was killed in the line of duty and we deeply mourn his loss," said County Executive Kevin Kamenetz. "I can only tell you that we don't always appreciate what our police do for us every day but it's times like this when we know how grateful we are for their bravery and their sacrifice."
Chief James W. Johnson said Schneider was "a leader within that unit. This is a terrible loss for Baltimore County."
The officers were attempting to apprehend an individual wanted for a shooting a week earlier on Aug. 19 in the 100 block of Winters Lane where a 29-year-old man suffered non life-threatening injuries.
The investigation led police to a home on the unit block of Roberts Ave. Initially, police gave a second address on Winters Lane.
Johnson said a county tactical team entered a home on Roberts Avenue at daybreak, "after an extensive tactical briefing and much planning."
Schneider and other tactical officers entered the home where people began to flee, Johnson said. The suspects clearly knew that the officers were police, he said. At least one person inside was armed with a handgun.
When Schneider turned a corner inside the home, he was shot multiple times. "As he was going down, he returns fire striking the suspect several times," Johnson said.
Another officer also discharged his weapon, the department said in a statement. That officer will be placed on administrative leave pending the investigation, the statement said.
Johnson said detectives are continuing to investigate where the guns came from and other circumstances of this shooting.
Gov. Martin O'Malley on Wednesday ordered the Maryland State Flag flown at half-staff in honor of Schneider.
The last Baltimore County officer who was killed by gunfire was in 2000. Sgt. Bruce Allen Prothero was working off-duty as a security guard when he chased suspects from a Pikesvillejewelry store. Officer John W. Stem Sr. died the same year as a result of gunshot wound from a shooting in 1977. The last city officer shot by a suspect and killed in the line of duty was Troy Lamont Chesley in 2007. Officer William Torbit was killed in January 2011, by fellow officers.
Johnson, who held back tears as he spoke about coping with the loss of an officer, said "these things hurt terribly," he said, as police officers depend on each other and become especially close. "You're dependent upon your coworkers."
Johnson said the county has seen an overall decline in violent crime over the past five years, but the shooting is the fourth incident of gunfire in the larger Catonsville area in the last month. In addition to the Aug. 19 shooting, police were called on Aug. 21, an area north of Route 40 and the Westview Shopping Center where a 16-year-old boy was shot in the arm.
On Aug. 17, two men were shot in the 5300 block of Edmondson Ave. near the city line.
In July 2012, another county tactical officer was attacked by a resident with a sword in a Reisterstown home when police attempted to execute a search warrant in an attempted murder case. The resident was killed and the officer was uninjured.
"On behalf of the 817,000 residents of Baltimore County, my thoughts and prayers go out to the family of Tactical Officer Jason Schneider who was shot and killed this morning while doing what our police officers do fearlessly each and every day — protecting our Baltimore County neighborhoods," Kamenetz said in a statement issued later.
The statement continues to address the rest of the police department, "please know that we appreciate your service and know that you are in great pain having lost a brother in arms this morning," and asked everyone in Baltimore County to take a moment of silence for Schneider.
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