The Mercury News

Police: At least 18 shot, with four dead overnight

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CINCINNATI >> At least 18 people were shot, including four killed, as gunfire erupted in several places around the city overnight, authoritie­s said Sunday.

Officers responded just after 12:30 a.m. Sunday to the Avondale neighborho­od and found 21-yearold Antonio Blair with gunshot wounds, police said in a statement. He was taken to University Hospital and died there, they said. Three other gunshot victims were also taken to the hospital.

About 2:15 a.m., officers responded to a report of gunfire in the Over-the-Rhine neighborho­od where 10 people were shot, police said. One died at the scene and another at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center; they were identified in a statement as 34-yearold Robert Rogers and 30-year-old Jaquiez Grant.

Three people were shot at about midnight Saturday in the Walnut Hills neighborho­od, about a block away from the Harriet Beecher Stowe house, police said.

News outlets reported the shootings took place within 60 to 90 minutes of each other, but Assistant Police Chief Paul Neudigate told reporters that they “seem to be separate independen­t incidents but horrific and tragic.”

Police didn’t immediatel­y provide details about the fourth fatal shooting but confirmed that it occurred on the city’s West End, where television news reports indicated that one person was shot later Sunday morning and was pronounced dead at the scene.

No suspect informatio­n was immediatel­y available in any of the cases.

“One extremely violent night in the city of Cincinnati,” Neudigate had said before the fourth shooting was announced. “Why? That’s going to be the question.”

Cincinnati’s police chief later Sunday called the level of violence “unacceptab­le.”

“I am calling on all citizens of this great city to say enough is enough! We must not sit by silently and say we can’t do anything to end gun violence,” Chief Eliot Isaac said in a statement. “We all have a moral obligation to stop the violence and stop the killing in our communitie­s.”

Police said the department would shift officers from other assignment­s to beef up the number of uniformed officers in the affected communitie­s and would call on federal prosecutor­s and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives “to focus on repeat shooters and aggressive­ly bring illegal gun charges.”

Mayor John Cranley called it “senseless gun violence that ruined lives and will cause immeasurab­le suffering” at a time the city was facing “unpreceden­ted circumstan­ces and challenges” in fighting crime during the COVID-19 pandemic. He said the city has seen an uptick as people gather in private homes and public places when the bars close.

“Guns are far too prevalent at these gatherings. Please do not attend gatherings because you could end up as an innocent victim,” he said in a statement.

He stressed, however, that those firing were responsibl­e for the shootings — which he called “attempted or actual murder” — and vowed to bring them to justice.

“I am also calling on everyone to help put an end this culture of resolving personal disputes with guns as well as to reduce the far too prevalent availabili­ty of illegal guns on our streets,” he said. “The very sad reality is people are getting in trouble when they have nowhere to go and nothing to do.”

In July, the Enquirer reported that the city had experience­d a rise in shootings and homicides from gun violence during the first half of the year as compared to the same time period in 2019.

 ?? SAM GREENE — THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER VIA AP ?? Cincinnati firefighte­rs use bleach and a hose to clean up pools of blood left at the scene of a shooting near Grant Park in the Over-the-Rhine neighborho­od of Cincinnati on Sunday.
SAM GREENE — THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER VIA AP Cincinnati firefighte­rs use bleach and a hose to clean up pools of blood left at the scene of a shooting near Grant Park in the Over-the-Rhine neighborho­od of Cincinnati on Sunday.

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