CAMERON, N.Y. (WENY) -- The Office of New York State Attorney General released body cam and drone footage on Thursday, Nov. 21st, of a fatal officer involved shooting that happened in Steuben County on Oct. 21st. During the shooting, 50-year-old Allan Hoad was shot and killed by police following a 12-hour standoff. 

According to Steuben County Sheriff Jim Allard, the investigation into the shooting continues. He added that there are still interviews to conduct in the case, and that the earliest a report could be issued would be Jan., 2025. 

When reached by WENY News, a spokesperson with the Attorney General's Office said the decision to release the video was part of a larger effort to improve transparency with investigations into police involved shootings. In a release, the Attorney General's Office said releasing the video is not an implication of the guilty or innocence of anyone in the video. 

In the drone footage, you can see the pick up being drive by Hoad after police say found a way through a police barricade after a 12 hour stand off. Hoad can be seen reversing his pick up truck down the road and directly into a police vehicle as police repeatedly fire at him. 

Hoad then exits the vehicle after the crash along with two dogs, and was almost immediately shot by police, who later said they found a gun in the vehicle. Along with the drone footage, two different body cams were also released from SWAT team members. In the body cam footage, you can hear officers say that a dog has been shot after police fired on Hoad's vehicle. 

After Hoad was shot and collapsed to the ground, police can be seen placing him in handcuffs before the body cam footage cuts out. At the time of the incident, the Steuben County Sheriff's said that when Hoad exited the vehicle after he crashed into police, he attempted to fight police. 

The incident started on Oct. 21st as a welfare check that police say was initiated by Hoad's family. Allard previously said that when police arrived, Hoad fired at officers, and went back inside his home. 

That started a 12-hour standoff, where police say they tried to negotiate with Hoad for him to surrender while police set up a perimeter. Police say during the standoff, Hoad threatened to carry out a mass casualty event. 

Police say Hoad was seen leaving his home with a gun, got into a pick up truck, and evaded the police perimeter by driving through a field. It was at this point that police say Hoad tried to force entry into an occupied home, failed, and then back his pick up into a police vehicle, and he was then subsequently shot.

Police say Hoad was pronounced dead at a local hospital.