Maryland authorities on Friday released the name of a 70-year-old woman who was fatally shot by Baltimore Police on Wednesday and the names of the officers involved.

The state attorney general’s office identified the involved Baltimore Police officers as eight-year veteran Stephen Colbert and three-year veteran Stephen Galewski, both of the patrol division.

Officials identified the woman as Pytorcarcha Brooks, who allegedly lunged at an officer with a knife during a mental health crisis on Wednesday, according to the office’s preliminary investigation.

Police had been to the home on the 2700 block of Mosher Street about 20 times before, Commissioner Richard Worley said.

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Brooks was taken to the hospital, where she died from her injuries.

This is the second fatal police-involved shooting in West Baltimore in less than a week. Earlier on Wednesday, a man who was experiencing a mental health crisis died in police custody.

Baltimore City Council President Zeke Cohen is calling for a hearing on the city’s response to behavioral health crises in the wake of the death of three city residents at the hands of Baltimore Police.

Cohen, a Democrat who has spearheaded legislation addressing mental health during his time on the council, called for a yet-to-be-scheduled hearing in response to the deaths which he called a “heartbreaking reminder that far too many Baltimoreans suffer in silence.”

Earlier this week after the release of body-worn camera footage arabber Bilal Abdullah’s fatal encounter with city police, Cohen chose not to weigh in on whether he believed the shooting to be justified, saying he would prefer to wait until a full investigation could be completed.

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On Friday, following the death of the 70-year-old woman and another man who was in police custody, Cohen said law enforcement alone cannot be expected to solve the city’s mental health crisis. He touted work by the City Council to financially support Baltimore Crisis Response.

“Now is the time for effective oversight to make sure all of our systems work together,” Cohen said. “We owe it to all Baltimoreans whose lives have been shattered in these moments of crisis to take action and get this right.”

This article will be updated.