Reacting to a string of shootings that left three men dead in less than 12 hours, St. Paul Police Chief Todd Axtell is calling for a "full department mobilization," including beefing up patrols citywide by bringing in officers who would normally be off.
The nine-hour stretch of violence between Monday afternoon and early Tuesday unfolded across three different neighborhoods and in one case took the life of a man attempting to act as a good Samaritan. Axtell, at a news conference with Mayor Melvin Carter and community leaders Tuesday, called the events unprecedented in his 30 years with the department.
"I simply can't remember a time where our city and our police officers have faced three separate homicides in such a short period of time," Axtell said. "It was shocking, it was outrageous and it was an anomaly."
While unusual in their rapidity, the shootings are part of a rising trend in the city, and activists and community members renewed calls for a strong community response.
"We cannot afford to lose another life," said Dora Jones-Robinson, executive director of Mentoring Young Adults and founder of the Guns Down St. Paul movement. "We cannot afford to bury another baby."

Police identified the men killed Monday and Tuesday as Raumez Ross, 18, who was walking in the North End neighborhood; Nickey Taylor, 27, who was in a car in the Frogtown neighborhood; and Javier Sanmiguel, 31, who left his Payne-Phalen home to help after a multivehicle crash.
The three deaths raised St. Paul's homicide total for 2019 to 19. Of those victims, 17 were shot, according to police.
In addition to adding extra patrols, the police department is establishing a task force to help with homicide and gang investigations and plans to employ new technology to better analyze surveillance video related to gun crimes, Axtell said. The Department of Justice is awarding the department a $750,000 grant to expand the use of the Crime Gun Intelligence Center in partnership with the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives' St. Paul Field Division, he said.