March 14, 2025

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Gun violence state of emergency declared in Rochester: What it means

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The bloodshed continues.

After a record-breaking year with city homicides, the rash of deadly violence has not waned. And, on Thursday, Mayor Malik Evans declared a “gun violence state of emergency” in Rochester.

Former Mayor Lovely Warren in November took a similar step − an action designed to mobilize police from multiple agencies, as well as mental health and other preventive services. As history has proven − at least the past eight months of it − gun violence has not been dented.

“I don’t have a magic wand,” Evans said at a news conference Thursday. “I want to be clear. … What I do have, like carpenters have, are various tools.”

Rochester police shooting:Two RPD officers shot in city. What to know

What does declaring a gun violence state of emergency mean for Rochester?

Evans said Thursday that some violence is the offspring of petty beefs over social media.

“We’re seeing groups that are at war with each other,” he said. “They’re at war oftentimes because they don’t like what someone said to them on Instagram or Facebook.”

The increasing participation of younger people in violence has been evident of late.

This week, two teenagers were sentenced for the attempted carjacking and murder last year of 71-year-old Richard Sciascia. And on Thursday, 17-year-old Elijah Rosa pleaded guilty to second-degree murder for the shooting death of 19-year-old Johnel Ravenell.



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