Pubdate: Fri, 10 Mar 2000 Source: Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (NY) Copyright: 2000sRochester Democrat and Chronicle Contact: 55 Exchange Blvd. Rochester, NY 14614 Fax: (716) 258-2356 Website: http://www.democratandchronicle.com/ Author: Patrick Flanigan and Alan Morrell Bookmark: MAP's link to New York articles is: http://www.mapinc.org/states/ny TWO TEENAGE HOMICIDES TIED TO CITY DRUG WARS Both Victims Shot In Head; 'It Was Clearly An Execution,' Says Rochester Police Chief (Mar. 10, 2000) -- Two teens who were shot to death in an apartment building stairwell yesterday appear to be the latest casualties in the city's drug war, Rochester Police Chief Robert Duffy said. "It was clearly an execution and there's little doubt it was drug-related," Duffy said. "This was not a random act." The Monroe County Medical Examiner's Office identified the dead pair as Melvin Chatman, 16, of 317 West Ave. and Raymond Hernandez, 18, of 90 Walnut St. An autopsy showed that each died of a single gunshot wound to the head. Chatman's and Hernandez's bodies were found inside a doorway at 111 Whitney St. about 5:15 a.m. The apartment building in Rochester's northwest quadrant is at the corner of Orange Street, two blocks from School 17. "They did not deserve to die," Duffy said at a news conference. "They're nothing but kids. Our hearts go out to their families." The building was known for drug dealing, Duffy said, and police had been directed there in recent months through a call to a Drug Hotline. He was unsure of the date. "From the information we gathered, drugs were being sold from the doorway," Duffy said. "The person who went there today (and discovered the bodies) had one goal in mind: to buy drugs." Some of the eight to 10 apartments in the building are occupied, but the residents have been transient, Duffy said. Police had no suspects and few leads, and Duffy pleaded for assistance from the community to solve the killings. Drug-related killings typically are more difficult to solve because people with information are reluctant to speak with police, either out of fear of retaliation or fear of being arrested themselves, Duffy said. He said 34 killings since 1998 have been classified as drug-related, and that police have made arrests in just eight of them. Another difficulty, he said, is that dealers nowadays stay at one spot for only a few days, then move on. "We're really asking for help from anyone and everyone in the community," Duffy said. "We're looking for anything at all." Duffy said he has directed his investigators to analyze other killings over the past few years that appear to be drug-related executions to see whether any may be related. He said he met with top command staff yesterday to discuss drug-related violence and said he also will talk with clergy members and others in the community. Duffy also urged parents who know their kids are involved with drugs to contact police. While their children might face jail time, Duffy said, the alternative could be far worse. "We don't know of any drug dealers who receive pensions," Duffy said. "Their life expectancy has been drastically lowered. They're going to wind up in prison or dead. And there's probably not a family in Rochester who would rather visit a son or daughter in the Monroe County Jail than at a cemetery." The deaths mark Rochester's 10th and 11th homicides of the year, five more than the city had at this time last year. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst