The Black Lives Matter chapter in Washington, D.C., expressed indignation that police officers who are shot in the line of duty are automatically treated as "heroes" after an officer was shot and wounded Sunday night in Northwest D.C.

A suspect is still at large after opening fire on officers on the street in D.C.’s Petworth neighborhood, the Metropolitan Police Department said. One officer, who has not been named, suffered non-life threatening injuries from being shot and was treated and released from the hospital, police said.

DC POLICE OFFICER RUSHED TO HOSPITAL AFTER GETTING SHOT, COPS SEEK GUNMAN

As the scene was still unfolding, Black Lives Matter D.C. took the opportunity to promote its #StopMPD campaign and warn against the spread of "copaganda." 

"This is the point we’ve been making for months," the group tweeted Sunday night. "Look at the reaction and coverage tonight. Tear jerker press conferences and proclamations of heroes coming soon. Imagine if people knew these folks’ names. Being Black in DC is more dangerous than any job."

"This isn’t to say these scenarios represent what happened tonight, but it does explain our skepticism, interest in details, and highlights the difference in how people talk and act when an officer is hurt vs when they hurt a Black person. No one asks what the cop did wrong," the group wrote.

BLACK LIVES MATTER CLAIMS AMERICA IS ‘STOLEN LAND’ IN THANKSGIVING TWEET

A Black Lives Matter banner hangs above the US Embassy in Spain

A banner in support of the Black Lives Matter movement hangs on the building of the U.S. Embassy in Spain on May 25, 2021, in Madrid, Spain. (Oscar Cañas/Europa Press via Getty Images)

A description of the #StopMPD campaign on the group’s website claims that D.C. is an "occupied police state" that was "never meant to protect" Black people.

"In the fight for Black lives, one of the many rebuffs we receive when demanding an end to police violence and terror is that ‘not all cops are bad cops,’" the page reads. "This assertion is almost always coupled with examples of law enforcement officials who step outside of their assigned duties to ‘help’ Black people and champions the belief that we can change systems by changing the individuals who work within this system, but not the system. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

"We’ve seen time and again that doesn’t work," it continues. "Policing and the system under which police work exists is bound to the enslavement, degradation, and murder of Black people and was never meant to protect us, but instead to exploit our bodies and labor to fill prisons and bolster capitalism. No amount of feel-good videos can deny that truth – no dancing, ice cream peddling, dance videos, BBQ eating COPAGANDA can change that."

The group also tried to cast doubt on how the situation ended Sunday night, after police said no arrests had been made following a barricade.