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Texas deputy shot 4 times in ambush attack near Houston

Posted at 9:23 AM, Apr 14, 2016
and last updated 2016-04-14 09:23:33-04

A Texas deputy constable talking to his partner was shot multiple times in the back — for no obvious reason.

Harris County Deputy Constable Alden Clopton and his partner, a reserve deputy, were making a traffic stop late Wednesday night, authorities said.

“After the citizen was told they were free to go, the female deputy was talking to her partner, who was standing and talking to her through her open passenger window,” Houston police spokesman Kese Smith said. She hears multiple gunshots and sees that her partner had been struck.”

The female deputy got of her car and saw the suspect across the street, Smith said. “Fearing for her safety, and that of her partner, who had already been shot, she returned fire,” he said.

It’s not clear whether the assailant was struck.

But shortly afterward, someone matching the gunman’s description showed up at a local fire station. Homicide investigators were questioning him, Smith said.

“He was not injured, but as to why he showed up at the station, [homicide investigators have] to question him to find out,” Smith said.

Despite still having four bullets lodged in his body Thursday, Clopton is expected to survive, Harris County Precinct 7 Constable May Walker said.

“He’s doing well … we think he’s going to be OK,” Walker said.

Ambush attacks against police

Clopton’s shooting spurred memories of another Texas deputy shot in an ambush attack.

Last year, Deputy Sheriff Darren H. Goforth — who also worked in Harris County — was shot in the back while filling up his patrol car at a gas station.

Goforth appeared to have been targeted “because he wore a uniform,” Harris County Sheriff Ron Hickman said.

And in 2014, New York City police officer Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos were ambushed and killed while sitting in their patrol car.

The gunman in that attack, Ismaaiyl Brinsley, shot and killed himself at a subway station shortly later. Authorities discovered he had posted angry messages on social media against police and government, citing two black men killed by officers.