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A police officer in West Virginia who was shot Tuesday while responding to a traffic complaint died Thursday evening, Charleston city officials announced, according to a report.

Charleston police Officer Cassie Johnson, 28, had been removed from life support Wednesday after it was determined she was not expected to recover from her wounds. Her organs will be donated, officials said.

"To say we are heartbroken is an understatement," Mayor Amy Shuler Goodwin said Thursday, according to the Charleston Gazette-Mail. "We are at a loss because we have lost one of our sisters in blue."

Johnson was responding to a traffic complaint on Garrison Avenue around 3 p.m. Tuesday when a suspect identified as 38-year-old Joshua Phillips allegedly shot her, Kanawha County Sheriff Mike Rutherford said at a news conference Wednesday evening.

The officer was wounded in her neck. Initial reports that Johnson was shot in the face were not accurate, Sgt. Brian Humphreys of the Kanawha County Sheriff's Office said in an email to Fox News.

Johnson was hospitalized in critical condition and underwent surgery until it was determined her body could not long sustain life by itself and she would be taken off life support.

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“With a heavy heart, I hate to say she is not going to be able to pull through this,” police Chief Tyke Hunt told reporters outside Charleston Area Medical Center General Hospital on Wednesday, according to the Gazette-Mail. “She is still fighting but her body is unable to sustain life by itself.”

Hunt commended Johnson “for even in her passing still being a true hero.”

“As one final parting gift to continue to help others, she is an organ donor,” Hunt said. “The doctors are working with the family to determine eligibility and work out some donorship there.”

Investigators believe Johnson also fired at Phillips, who was sent to the hospital with gunshot wounds.

Phillips remained hospitalized Thursday and was still undergoing surgeries, Hunt said Thursday, according to the Gazette-Mail.

The incident remains under investigation by the sheriff’s office.

Rutherford declined to provide further information about the incident until witness statements and evidence collection is completed. He said the sheriff’s office will turn over that information to the Charleston Police Department and the Kanawha County Prosecutor’s Office, which will determine possible charges to be filed against Phillips.

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“I really can’t get into more detail, I’m sorry,” he said. “We want the full extent of the law to apply in this case. We’re going to do this right and we’re going to do a thorough and conclusive investigation.”

Johnson was the first city police officer sworn in by Mayor Amy Shuler Goodwin after she began her term in January 2019. Goodwin said Wednesday that Johnson “is a wonderful, bright young woman who is going to leave an amazing legacy for every woman in this city.”

“Her family still needs your prayers, and to this community, we still need your strength,” she said.

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The CPD Citizen Police Academy Alumni Association set up a crowdfunding page, which had raised $28,000 as of Thursday evening to assist Johnson’s family with medical expenses.