Updated

Police in Sacramento, Calif., released dramatic body-camera footage Friday in connection with the fatal shooting of a 26-year-old rookie cop.

Officer Tara O’Sullivan was shot several times, with at least one of her wounds being "non-survivable,” after she and her training officer, Daniel Chip, were ambushed Wednesday during a domestic violence call, FOX 40 Sacramento reported.

“You OK? You OK?” Chip is heard shouting in the video.

SACRAMENTO COP FATALLY SHOT BY GUNMAN IN AMBUSH, SUSPECT SURRENDERS AFTER 8-HOUR STANDOFF: REPORT

“This is a high-powered rifle. Get out here now,” the officer says into his radio. “We’ve got one down.”

“Officer down! Officer down!” he continues.

"Stay down,” he says as more shots are heard.

“Yeah, he’s still shooting,” Chip whispers. “He’s changing clips.”

"Stay down. Yeah, he’s still shooting. He’s changing clips.”

— Sacramento police officer heard on bodycam video

Earlier, the camera had captured Chip trying to convince the suspect that approaching officers meant him no harm.

"Hey, Adel, Police Department," Chip calls out. "You're not under arrest, you're not in trouble. You’re not in trouble, dude."

Suddenly, more than 20 shots ring out from inside the door, FOX 40 reported. Chip hurries away from the doorway and takes cover in an adjacent carport.

O'Sullivan had been helping an unidentified woman move her belongings out of the garage of a home when she was shot, police said.

"This was an ambush-style attack on Sacramento police officers that lasted for hours," Sacramento police Chief Daniel Hahn said. "Under the most dangerous and trying circumstances, our officers performed admirably."

On Friday, suspect Adel Sambrano Ramos, 45, was charged with murder, attempted murder and possessing illegal weapons. He was arrested after an eight-hour standoff.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Hahn said the suspect had multiple firearms, including two assault rifles.

The department has been criticized for taking 45 minutes to rescue O’Sullivan, who later died at the hospital. Hahn said officers needed to wait until an armored vehicle arrived, or "we would have additional officers murdered that day," the Associated Press reported.

The officers had come to Ramos' home because he had failed to appear in court for a domestic violence charge.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.