One of three Philadelphia police officers wounded in an exchange of gunfire that left a retired firefighter dead in West Philadelphia late Saturday was released from the hospital Monday, as authorities continued to investigate the shooting.

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The officer, whom police did not identify, left Penn Presbyterian Medical Center shortly after 1 p.m. Monday, 6abc reported. Dozens of uniformed officers lined the emergency department entrance and saluted as their colleague was pushed outside in a wheelchair and helped into a silver SUV. The crowd erupted in applause as the vehicle pulled away.

His release came nearly two days after authorities say Eric Franks, 57, opened fire on officers who were responding to an unrelated report of gunfire near 54th and Arlington Streets in Wynnefield around 10:30 p.m.

As the investigation entered its second day, police declined to provide details about what led to the confrontation, and had not publicly identified the officers who were injured or those who fired their weapons.

According to police, officers were responding to reports of gunfire when Franks approached them. Video obtained by The Inquirer appears to show Franks yelling at officers, then pushing one, before stepping back and brandishing a handgun.

Franks began shooting, according to the video and police accounts, and four officers returned fire. Three officers — including a sergeant — were struck by gunfire. Franks was shot in the chest and leg and later died at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital.

Police said Franks had a license to carry a firearm. Commissioner Kevin Bethel said investigators are trying to determine why Franks confronted the officers.

District Attorney Larry Krasner said at a news conference Monday that his office is investigating. He said representatives of his office had spoken with Franks’ family, and had visited the scene and begun reviewing evidence, including video footage that captured the events leading up to the fatal encounter.

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Krasner declined to provide additional details about what brought officers to the block, describing the investigation as “very active” and saying he could not divulge further information in order to “preserve the integrity of the investigation.”

The district attorney said his “thoughts are with all the people who have been affected and harmed,” but added that his office — like Franks’ family and members of the community — has questions about what transpired.

He joined Mayor Cherelle L. Parker in a promise to “make sure officers receive the support they need as they heal and process the trauma connected to the shooting.” At the same time, he said, “We also stand in solidarity with all Philadelphians who want to make sure we get the truth, and that we apply the law appropriately.”

He encouraged anyone with information about the shooting — including police officers — to contact his office and speak with investigators.

Franks’ wife, Michele, described her husband as a longtime Wynnefield resident, business owner and former Marine who spent nearly two decades with the Philadelphia Fire Department before retiring last year.

“He cared very much about community, and about Wynnefield,” she said.

The retired firefighter was also a community activist, an attorney representing Franks’ family said, adding that Franks had met with City Councilmember Curtis Jones Jr. about an uptick in drug-related crimes in the neighborhood.

In a letter posted Sunday on Facebook that did not mention Franks by name, Jones wrote that he was “deeply saddened and heartbroken” by the shooting, and called for a continued commitment to “building a safer, and more peaceful Wynnefield for all.”

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