Marin Independent Journal

Nearly a month after mass shooting, Rochester seeks answers, suspects

- ByMichaelR. Sisak and CarolynTho­mpson

ROCHESTER, N.Y. » It’s the big question looming over one of this year’s bloodiest mass shootings: Who opened fire at a crowded house party in Rochester, New York, on the lastweeken­d of summer, killing two teenagers and wounding 14 other people?

Nearly a month after gunshots rang out just after midnight on Sept. 19, there have been no arrests, no rewards offered and little word from authoritie­s on where the investigat­ion stands. If the police have suspects inmind, they haven’t said so publicly. Nor have they told people who lost loved ones or were wounded themselves.

“I’m sure they’ll figure something out, but I don’t really know what informatio­n they have or anything else — what evidence they found on the scene,” said Emar Bouie, a 23-year- old recent college graduate who still struggles with movement in the arm where he was shot.

Rochester, a post-industrial city of about 206,000 people on the shores of Lake Ontario, is still reeling from the revelation last month that police officers killed a Black man, Daniel Prude, in March by pressing him into the ground until he stopped breathing. City officials stoked outrage by stayingqui­et about thedeath for months.

Prude’s death exacerbate­d residents’ mistrust of the police department. The shooting— which ended the lives of Jaquayla Young and Jarvis Alexander, both 19— has only added to the city’s collective pain.

“In terms of the city healing, we’re not there yet,” said Marlowe Washington, the pastor of Seneca United Methodist Church. “We’re nowhere near any form of healing and I don’t know how we’re going to get there yet.”

A police spokespers­on, Jacqueline Shuman, said the shooting investigat­ion is progressin­g and that detectives “are still in the process of sorting through the voluminous evidence.”

Shuman said the police department is working on the case with the county’s crime lab and prosecutor­s, as well as federal agencies including theU.S. attorney’s office and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, which typically helps local police trace guns.

The party was supposed to be a small gathering, but people from two other nearby parties went there in the early morning and an argument broke out. Three or four people opened fire, and police found more than 40 bullet casings at the scene. Thewounded and the dead were all between the ages of 17 and 23.

Young, who was attending Monroe Community College, was captain of her high school’s cheerleadi­ng team and a member of the track team. Alexander, a sophomore at Alfred University, was on his high school’s football and track teams and won a state championsh­ip in the 4x100meter relay.

“What happened to my son is just devastatin­g. It doesn’t even seem real at this point,” said Alexander’s

father, James Alexander. “He touched the heart of somany people and that’s reallywhat I’mtrying to absorb right now. Because his legacy is just amazing.”

Since the shooting, the city has been rocked further by Mayor Lovely Warren’s indictment on state campaign finance fraud charges, related to her last reelection campaign. The city council recently issued subpoenas in its investigat­ion into Prude’s death. Protesters have continued to demonstrat­e in the city’s streets.

OnWednesda­y, there was another big developmen­t: Cynthia Herriott- Sullivan, who retired from the police department in 2009 as a lieutenant, took over as the city’s interimpol­ice chief. In addition to the Herculean chore of reforming a force with a tattered reputation, she’ll be tasked with solving a shooting that has been described in localmedia as one of themost violent crimes in the city’s history.

Speaking at her swearing-in ceremony, she told residents: “We rise and fall together.”

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