Community leaders and residents gathered for an anti-violence vigil in Brownsville, Brooklyn, a week after a deadly shooting at a neighborhood festival and just hours after the mass shooting in El Paso.

They denounced the shooting at the Brownsville Old Timers Celebration last weekend that killed one man and wounded 11 other people.

At Saturday night's vigil Public Advocate Jumaane Williams said the attack in Brownsville and the deadly rampage in El Paso should both be considered mass shootings.

"Pandemic isn't even the right word, for what we're dealing with,” Williams said. “But it was important to put Brownsville in that same light. You can't talk about the mass shooting in El Paso, and then say, 'Oh this was just another day in Brownsville.' It's not just another day. Just because something happens frequently, doesn't make it normal."

So far, no arrests have been made.

A $10,000 reward is being offered for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible.