Investigation is ongoing into an officer-involved shooting that took place early Tuesday morning in northwest Calgary.

Sometime early Tuesday morning, police observed a stolen vehicle in Huntington Hills and called HAWCS for support in tracking it.

A short time later, at about 2:20 a.m., police observed a meeting between that vehicle and another parked near the intersection of 12 Mile Coulee Road and Blueridge Rise N.W.

CPS Superintendent James Hardy said that officers then moved in to secure the vehicle.

"At that time, the driver of the second vehicle surrendered to police," Hardy said. "The driver of the vehicle seen in Huntington Hills got out of his truck and got into the second vehicle. It was at this time that the driver maneuvered his vehicle in close proximity to the officers. One officer fired his service weapon at the vehicle. The truck then fled at a high rate of speed."

Hardy says it is still early in the investigation, but believe the vehicle was hit once.

The suspect was not hit.

The vehicle was tracked to Cochrane by HAWCS where the suspect was spotted stopping the truck and getting out.

Calgary police, in conjunction with the RCMP, found the vehicle and arrested the suspect a short time later.

No one was injured in the incident.

The suspect has not been identified and charges are pending.

Police are continuing to investigate and the Alberta Serious Incident Response Team (ASIRT) has also been called to review the incident.

Hardy says the surveillance video obtained by HAWCS and by dashboard cameras in the CPS cruisers will be invaluable to the investigation.

"HAWCS was overhead the entire time so we have video from HAWCS and we also have in-car video available. The surveillance video will clarify a lot for us."

He said that there were four officers involved in the incident as it unfolded and the officer who opened fire had three and a half to four years of service.

That officer will be off for 30 days administrative leave while the investigation is conducted.

Hardy says that the investigation into the incident will be very complex.

"There's a couple things you'll look at here. One is you'll go through each of the files where shots are fired. We look at each of them and find out what uniqueness is there and if there is anything that needs to be adjusted for our training policies, all that goes and that's a broader piece, obviously. We'd like to go through and never have to fire our firearms. That's not necessarily the reality of policing in 2016."

Anyone with information about these incidents is asked to contact police at 403-266-1234 or Crime Stoppers anonymously using one of the following methods:

TALK: 1-800-222-8477

TYPE: www.calgarycrimestoppers.org

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