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Bishop of Sacramento asks for the community to be ‘good neighbors toward one another’ in wake of deadly shooting

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A police vehicle in Sacramento, Calif., is seen after an early-morning shooting in a stretch of the downtown near the Golden 1 Center arena April 3, 2022. At least six people were killed and at least 12 were wounded as people were leaving nightclubs, authorities said. Gunfire reportedly erupted just after a fight broke out on the street, but police said they did not know if the altercation was connected to the shooting. (CNS photo/Fred Greaves, Reuters)

Bishop Jaime Soto of Sacramento, California, asked people to “invest” in being good neighbors and help restore peace after six people were fatally wounded in the worst mass shooting in California’s sixth largest city, which also left at least 12 people injured April 3.

Authorities announced the following day the arrest of Dandre Martin, 26, calling him a “related suspect” and charged him with assault with a deadly weapon, news reports said.

The event not only left death and injury, but “a community ravaged by incomprehensible rage,” said Bishop Soto in a statement posted on the Diocese of Sacramento website.

“The suffering inflicted will continue to reverberate among all of us. As senseless as these bloody acts are, let us soberly resist becoming numb to the pain we now share in common,” he said.

Bishop Jaime Soto of Sacramento, Calif., is seen in this 2019 file photo. (CNS photo/Bob Roller)

The shootings took place at 2 a.m. in California’s capital, news reports said, as people were leaving bars and entertainment facilities in the downtown area after weekend reveling and may have been related to a fight.

Bishop Soto, mentioning the proximity of the deadly event to Holy Week and Easter, said that “charitable works are the tools that Jesus gives to us so that we can cultivate our in communities a springtime of mercy and harmony.”

“Remember to invest the necessary moral capital that comes from being good neighbors toward one another,” he said in the letter addressed to his diocese.  “As neighbors we ache for the tragedy that has exploded on our streets. As neighbors we must share in the common task of healing and helping.

“Only then can we restore hope and peace our communities. This must be our unrelenting response whenever violence wreaks its havoc among us.”

The local Sacramento Bee daily newspaper reported that authorities believe multiple shooters were involved. Martin also has been charged with illegal firearm possession, police said April 4.