Houston Chronicle Sunday

Deadly party shooting adds new layer to Rochester’s grief

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ROCHESTER, N.Y. — Already roiled by this month’s revelation of Daniel Prude’s police suffocatio­n death, the city of Rochester, N.Y., was further traumatize­d Saturday when gunfire at a backyard party killed two people and wounded 14 others.

“Our community has been hurting enough already,” Rochester City Council Vice President Willie Lightfoot said. “This is just another thing on top of all the things that we’ve been going through.”

The shooting that started just before 12:30 a.m. has not been linked to Prude’s death in March.

But the city’s acting police chief, Mark Simmons, placed the violence that claimed the lives of a man and woman, both 19, in context.

“This is truly a tragedy of epic proportion­s,” Simmons said in a news conference held near the home. “I mean 16 victims is unheard of, and for our community, who’s right now going through so much, to have to be dealt with this tragedy, needlessly, for people who decide to act in a violent manner is unfortunat­e and shameful.”

Police believe that the two who were killed were not the intended targets.

Rochester police Capt. Frank Umbrino said during a news conference that an argument sparked the shooting.

Umbrino said investigat­ors believe there were between three and four shooters.

In recent weeks, Rochester has been rocked by daily protests, allegation­s of a cover-up and calls for the mayor’s resignatio­n and the arrests of the officers involved in Prude’s death. Body-camera video released by Prude’s family showed Rochester police officers putting a hood over the naked 41-year-old man’s head to stop him from spitting, then pushing his face into the pavement and holding him down until he stopped breathing. He was taken off life support around a week later.

Simmons has now found himself at the helm of a department in disarray after Mayor Lovely Warren fired Police Chief La’Ron Singletary on Monday, saying Singletary had initially misled her about the circumstan­ces of the death. Other senior police officials have announced their retirement­s or departures from top positions.

Simmons said police had not been aware of the party and received no complaints about noise before officers responding to gunshots found “approximat­ely 100 people” running from the scene early Saturday.

He expressed frustratio­n about the large, late-night party amid both the city’s ongoing tumult and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“This is yet another tragedy where individual­s are having these illegal, unsanction­ed house parties taking place in these properties, which — No. 1 — is not safe because of COVID, because of the conditions,” Simmons said. “And then you add in alcohol and violence and it just becomes a recipe for disaster.”

Pastor Marlowe Washington of the Seneca United Methodist Church called Saturday’s shooting “senseless” and pleaded for an end to such violence.

“I went out there in the early morning to pray quietly at the scene of the incident and to ask God, ‘Why this?’ and, ‘What did we do to our children? Why all this?’ ” Washington told WHAM-TV. “There will be no further interest in our demand for moral justice until we command the same justice from within our own community. And the outrage starts from within the community.”

The 14 wounded by gunfire were not believed to have life-threatenin­g injuries. They were all between the ages of 17 and 23, police tweeted Saturday morning.

Hours after the shooting, the Roc Freedom Riders began their previously planned ride through the city’s streets on the block where Prude was restrained. Around 3 miles to the east, captured on video, a group gathered for prayer near the shooting site.

“Oh, tell me,” voices sang in unison, “who can save me?”

 ?? Joshua Rashaad McFadden / Getty Images ?? People look on as police investigat­e a shooting that killed two people and wounded 14 at a backyard party in Rochester, N.Y.
Joshua Rashaad McFadden / Getty Images People look on as police investigat­e a shooting that killed two people and wounded 14 at a backyard party in Rochester, N.Y.

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