HOUSTON (AP) 鈥 A suspect led Houston police on a chase Thursday that ended with him wounding three officers in a shootout, stealing a car and barricading himself inside a home for hours before surrendering, authorities said.
The incident began about 2:40 p.m. as officers responded to a family disturbance call at a home in northeast Houston, Police Chief Troy Finner said at a news conference.
All three injured officers were in stable condition after being taken to Memorial Hermann Hospital. Two officers were transported by another patrol officer鈥檚 vehicle while the Houston Fire Department took the third.
One of the officers was shot in the arm, another was shot in the leg and the third was shot in the foot, said Doug Griffith, president of the Houston Police Officers鈥 Union.
鈥淲e are just grateful to God they are all right,鈥 Finner said.
Police had responded to a report of a shooting at the home of the suspect鈥檚 girlfriend, according to Griffith. When officers arrived, the suspect, whose name had not been released by authorities, fled in a vehicle and led police on a chase for several miles.
The chase ended when the suspect鈥檚 vehicle crashed at an intersection in a residential neighborhood just off Interstate 69 on the southeastern edge of downtown Houston.
鈥淥fficers, as they got out of vehicle, the suspect immediately fired upon officers, striking three officers. All the officers returned fire,鈥 Finner said.
It was not known if the officers鈥 gunfire injured the suspect. Finner said it鈥檚 possible the suspect fired more than 50 rounds. Officers described the gun the suspect used as 鈥渁 fully automatic weapon,鈥 he said.
The suspect fled the scene and carjacked at gunpoint a white Mercedes, Finner said. He then drove to a home located several miles northeast of where the crash occurred.
Officers surrounded the home. The suspect fired multiple times but did not hit any of the officers, who returned fire, Finner said.
The suspect remained barricaded in the home until about 7:45 p.m. Thursday when he emerged with hands up from the unit where police believed he lived, Finner said. The man, whose identity police did not immediately release, was taken to the hospital with a gunshot wound to the neck, the chief said.
The suspect was believed to be the only person in the home. It was not immediately known why he went there, Finner said.
Mayor Sylvester Turner said he visited the wounded officers and found them talkative and in good spirits.
Turner said Thursday鈥檚 shooting highlighted the dangers law enforcement faces each day and the rising violent crime that has affected Houston and other U.S. cities the last couple of years.
Finner said it鈥檚 been 鈥渁 tough week for law enforcement鈥 in Houston. On Sunday, a Houston-area deputy constable during a traffic stop, and a Harris County Sheriff鈥檚 Office deputy by a vehicle early Monday as he stood by his motorcycle while blocking a Houston highway exit ramp during an off-duty job escorting heavy machinery.
Turner said that he and Finner planned to announce next week 鈥渟ome additional steps鈥 the city will take to address rising crime in Houston.
鈥淚t鈥檚 going to take all of us working together to have a very safe city,鈥 Turner said.
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Wallace reported from Dallas.
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Juan A. Lozano And Terry Wallace , The Associated Press