Milwaukee police released body camera video Tuesday of a June shootout between officers and a Milwaukee man now charged with attempted murder.

A Milwaukee officer shot Javon Lewis, 34, in the shoulder after police responded June 8 to the 4300 block of North 84th Street for a call about a fight between Lewis and his girlfriend, according to police.

The bodycam footage released is just over a minute long. It begins when two officers walk up to Lewis and a woman standing on the sidewalk. One officer approaches Lewis and says, “Where were you in all this?”

Lewis begins to walk away and the officer follows him and asks him for an ID. Lewis tells the officer he doesn’t have to give his ID because he’s a neighbor.

“No, come here,” the officer says in the video. “Stop.”

Lewis breaks out into a run and appears to reach for a gun. According to Capt. Thomas Casper of the department’s homicide division, who narrates the video, Lewis turned and fired four shots at the officers and one officer returned fire.

It’s six seconds from the time Lewis begins running to the moment he is seen lying in the roadway shot. Part of the footage is obscured by the officer’s ear as he lifts his arms to fire shots at Lewis.

In individual video frames, Lewis can be seen holding his gun with two hands and pointing it at the officer. Investigators after the shooting found four spent casings from Lewis’ loaded gun, Casper said.

The officer fired nine rounds at Lewis, while the other officer dived to the ground to avoid Lewis’ bullets, according to a criminal complaint.

One bullet apparently hit an officer’s gun holster at his waist and cracked it, according to the complaint. Another passed through a nearby home’s picture window and lodged in a living room wall.

Police arrested Lewis. He was treated at a hospital, police said.

Prosecutors charged Lewis with two counts of attempted first-degree intentional homicide, strangulation and suffocation and misdemeanor battery, all with the use of a dangerous weapon, in the shooting.

Lewis, who served six years in prison after a 2001 first-degree reckless homicide conviction, is also charged with possessing a firearm as a convicted felon.

Police originally responded to the apartment building because a relative told dispatchers that Lewis was outside, sitting on top of his girlfriend and punching her.

Milwaukee police are continuing to investigate whether the officer's use of force was justified.

Lewis was on extended supervision for his 2001 reckless homicide conviction. If convicted of all charges, he faces up to 136 years in prison.

Contact Sophie Carson at (414) 223-5512 or scarson@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter at @SCarson_News.