This story has been corrected to indicate the shooting happened on North Salina Street.

Gunshots were fired into a crowd of roughly 200 people in Syracuse on Saturday night, according to Syracuse Police. 

It happened around 1400 North Salina Street outside of Lookers Showclub. Officers spotted a man, now identified as 24-year-old Devonaire King, firing a gun in the crowd. King was taken into custody, where police recovered a loaded 9-millimeter handgun.

There are no reported injuries, though two vehicles were hit with gunfire.

"I see blood on the ground. Somebody obviously got shot, because this wasn't here 2 o'clock in the morning as I walked down here. There are liquor bottles everywhere on the ground. My house, I sleep over there, and one of the bullets hit that car, somebody was shooting from the corner in my direction, and this is what I'm tired of and can't stand anymore," said Syracuse resident Michael Musick.

At a press conference relative to the renewal of the Syracuse Police Benevolent Association contract on Tuesday, Mayor Ben Walsh responded to questions about the weekend shooting. 

"It's a problem, We've been having problems with that particular establishment - Lookers - for, really, the last 18 months. We understand that they can't control everything that happens outside of their business, but often times what's going on inside a business influences what goes on outside a business," said Walsh.

"Whether you have 19 officers, or 28 officers, coming up, rolling up on a crowd like that when the best that you can do is issue an appearance ticket, it's a really difficult situation. I appreciate the way the officers handle it but it is not sustainable, it is not acceptable and we're going work with the business owner and with the community to make sure those types of things do not continue to happen in our city."

According to Walsh, the Syracuse Police Department and the owners at Lookers are in contact with the hopes that the owners will be part of a resolution to an problem that has been continuous. 

Syracuse mayoral candidate Khalid Bey (D) responded to the incident in a statement, saying, "Fortunately, police officers were on the scene and equally as fortunate, is the fact that no one was injured. Naturally, when you have a certain type of activity taking place, with a large number of people, there is a potential for danger. We have to give consideration to the causes of those dangers, or the activity that may attract those kinds of dangers.”

Republican challenger Janet Burman also released a statement regarding the incident, saying in part, "This is unacceptable. As mayor, my first priority will be public safety. Noisy and potentially dangerous situations will not be allowed to escalate in any neighborhood."

The investigation into the incident is still ongoing. Anyone with information of the incident is asked to contact Syracuse Police.