A South Carolina sheriff's deputy was shot and wounded early Friday during a scuffle with an armed suspect who later barricaded himself inside a home and killed himself, authorities said.

Officers stand outside a house in North Charleston, S.C., on Friday, Feb. 26, 2016, where police say a man died of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound after wounding a Berkeley County Sheriff's Deputy earlier in nearby Goose Creek, S.C. Police say the deputy was in serious condition at a hospital after undergoing surgery. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith)
Officers stand outside a house in North Charleston, S.C., on Friday, Feb. 26, 2016, where police say a man died of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound after wounding a Berkeley County Sheriff's Deputy earlier in nearby Goose Creek, S.C. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith)
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The scuffle occurred when a female deputy from Berkley County was investigating a suspicious vehicle with two people in it behind a grocery store in nearby Goose Creek, said State Law Enforcement Division spokesman Thom Berry. She had placed a passenger in her cruiser and was returning to take the driver into custody when a fight broke out.

The deputy, identified as Cpl. Kimber Gist, was shot twice below the protective body armor she was wearing, Berry said. The deputy fired her gun at some point, but it's not clear whether she hit the suspect.

Berkeley County Chief Deputy Mike Cochran said she is in stable condition and expected to recover. Gist, who is black, worked as a correctional officer for a couple of years and had been a patrol officer for about a year.

Thirty-six-year-old Travis Smith, who was black, died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, the Charleston County Coroner's Office said in a news release.

Gist called a dispatcher shortly after 12:30 a.m. to say she had a suspect in custody and then called later to say there had been a fight. Dispatchers lost contact with the deputy, who authorities say was helped by a passer-by.

Berry said that information provided during the stop led police to an address in North Charleston, where they found Smith barricaded inside.

Three people who were in the house were able to get out safely and told officers Smith was injured and bleeding, Pryor said.

Hostage negotiators spent more than two hours talking with Smith in an attempt to convince him to surrender, said Spencer Pryor, a spokesman for the North Charleston Police Department.

The SWAT team then moved in and found him dead. The small beige house is located on a side street in an industrial area of the city not far from a rail line.

The shooting took place in an area where drugs are frequently sold, Berkeley County Sheriff Duane Lewis said.

"We do get a number of gunfire calls from the apartment complexes in that area. It's a busy place for us. We spend a lot of time there," Lewis said.

Lewis said he didn't know what Gist was looking for Friday because the State Law Enforcement Division has taken over the investigation.

It is the second time in less than a year that a Berkeley County deputy has been wounded on the job.

Last May, sheriff's Lt. Will Rogers was shot by a masked man at a gas station. The man suspected of wounding Rogers was later shot and killed by police in Charleston when he emerged from an apartment shooting at officers.

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