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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Paul Walsh

Assault, 2 shootings this week push St. Paul's annual homicide record to 38

MINNEAPOLIS — St. Paul's annual record for homicides has grown by three this week to 38 after two men were shot and another man died from an assault many days earlier, police said Wednesday.

The city's one-year record had been 34, set in 1992 and matched last year.

No arrests have been announced in any of these latest killings.

A man in his 30s was shot about 10:15 p.m. Tuesday in a house in the 500 block of Blair Avenue, police said.

Officers arrived to "a chaotic scene," where they located a man with a gunshot wound, a statement from police said. He was taken by emergency responders to Regions Hospital, where he was pronounced dead, according to police. His identity has yet to be released.

A day earlier, a man was shot in the chest shortly before 10 p.m. in the 900 block of Rice Street, police said.

He was taken to Regions and died there several hours later, according to police. He was identified Wednesday afternoon as Kenneth L. Davis Jr., 44. Police did not provide a city of residence for Davis.

On Monday, a 51-year-old man was found dead in his apartment in 600 block of North Snelling Avenue.

Carlos Venceslado Rocha called police to his apartment on Dec. 20 to report he'd been punched by someone in the building. At the time, officers took a report and medics responded, but the Rocha was not taken to a hospital.

On Monday, Fire Department personnel checking on him located his body. The Ramsey County Medical Examiner's Office determined that he died due to injuries from the assault.

"Investigators with the department's homicide, forensic services and video management units are working to piece together what led to the altercation and who is responsible for the man's death," said a police statement issued Wednesday afternoon. "Investigators do not believe the incident was random and say there is no immediate threat to the public."

Anyone with information about any of these cases is urged to call police at 651-266-5650.

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