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World / Americas

Gunman who killed 10 in NY supermarket attack was on authorities' radar

Published: 15 May 2022 - 08:31 pm | Last Updated: 15 May 2022 - 08:36 pm
Mourners react while attending a vigil for victims of the shooting at a TOPS supermarket in BUFFALO, New York, U.S. May 15, 2022. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

Mourners react while attending a vigil for victims of the shooting at a TOPS supermarket in BUFFALO, New York, U.S. May 15, 2022. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

Reuters

BUFFALO, N.Y - New York authorities on Sunday were investigating how a white 18-year-old, who the governor said had been on the radar of authorities since high school, was able to shoot 10 people to death in a Black neighborhood grocery store.

The suspect, Payton Gendron, surrendered to police on Saturday at the Buffalo, New York, store after what authorities called an act of "racially motivated violent extremism." He apparently publicized a racist manifesto on the internet.

"The evidence that we have uncovered so far makes no mistake this is an absolute racist hate crime that will be prosecuted as a hate crime," Buffalo Police Commissioner Joseph Gramaglia told reporters on Sunday.

Eleven people struck by gunfire were Black and two were white, officials said. The racial breakdown of the dead was not made clear.

The Buffalo shooting follows other racially motivated mass murders in recent years, including a Pittsburgh synagogue attack that left 11 dead in October 2018, and the Atlanta spa shootings in March 2021 in which a white man killed eight people, targeting Asians.

Authorities said Gendron drove to Buffalo from his home several hours away to launch the afternoon attack, which he broadcast in real time on social media platform Twitch, a live video service owned by Amazon.com.

New York Governor Kathy Hochul said the firearm used in the killings was legally purchased but had been illegally modified with a high-capacity magazine.

On Sunday, several dozen community members held an emotional vigil for the victims outside the Tops grocery store. Nearby at True Bethel Baptist Church, a reverend led a solemn service for a large crowd of worshipers, including some family of the victims and some who had been at the store at the time of the shooting.

One was Charles Everhart Sr., 65, whose grandson Zaire Goodman, 20, worked at the store. Goodman was shot in the neck but survived.

"He was pushing the carts back to the store and he was one of the first to get hit,” Everhart said.

U.S. President Biden decried the shooting as "abhorrent to the very fabric of this nation" in a statement on Saturday.