Buffalo shooter, 18, who killed 10 people said he targeted black community in 'clear and hateful' statement to cops after arrest: FBI reveals he was not on their radar despite threat to carry out school shooting last year - as NY Gov. calls for inquiry

  • Accused gunman Payton Gendron threatened to shoot up a high school last year
  • Police say Gendron, then 17, made a non-specific shooting threat in June 2021
  • He underwent a mental evaluation and was hospitalized for less than two days
  • After his release, Gendron had no further contact with law enforcement
  • NY Gov. Kathy Hochul has called for an investigation focusing on what could have been done to stop Gendron from shooting up a supermarket on Saturday

Advertisement

Payton Gendron, 18, threatened to shoot up Pennsylvania's Susquehanna High School last year around graduation

Payton Gendron, 18, threatened to shoot up Pennsylvania's Susquehanna High School last year around graduation

The teenager suspected of killing 10 people at a supermarket in Buffalo, New York admitted that he was targeting the black community when he carried out the massacre, authorities said.

Payton Gendron, 18, issued several 'clear and hate-filled' statements about his motive and state of mind following his arrest, an official confirmed to CNN.

Investigators, while executing a search warrant at his home on Sunday, also found evidence that Gendron had been 'studying' previous hate crimes and shootings before he carried out his own attack.

'The evidence that we have uncovered so far makes no mistake that this is an absolute racist hate crime. It will be prosecuted as a hate crime,' Buffalo police commissioner Joseph Gramaglia said. 'This is someone who has hate in their heart, soul and mind.'  

It was also revealed Sunday that Gendron was not on law enforcement's radar - despite having made a school shooting threat last year.

The teen, who surrendered to police outside a Tops grocery store in Buffalo on Saturday after firing a barrage of 50 shots at the store, underwent a mental health evaluation last summer after he threatened to open fire at his high school.

Police were called to Gendron's high school in Conklin, New York, located near the Pennsylvania border, on June 8, 2021 after he made a threatening statement, authorities revealed during a press conference Sunday. 

'The state police responded. They investigated. They interviewed the subject. And they felt at the time it was appropriate to have that individual brought in for a mental health evaluation,' Gramaglia explained.

Gramaglia said the threat was not racist and not directed at a specific person or place. However, an unnamed law enforcement source told The Associated Press Gendron, then-17, had threatened to shoot up Pennsylvania's Susquehanna High School around graduation.

The teen underwent a mental health evaluation and, after spending a day-and-a-half in the hospital, was released. Gramaglia said that after his release, Gendron had no further contact with law enforcement.

'Nobody called in,' the police commissioner said. 'Nobody called any complaints.'

New York Governor Kathy Hochul told ABC News on Sunday that an investigation would focus on what could have been done to stop Gendron, since he had advertised his views online and had been on authorities' radar.

'I want to know what people knew, and when they knew it,' she said, adding the probe would be 'calling upon our law enforcement as well as our social media platforms.'

Gendron, of Conklin, NY, pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder following Saturday's attack. Officials say more charges are likely. Gendron is being held without bail and faces life in prison. 

Police believe he planned the attack for months before driving three hours to Buffalo to carry out the vile ambush that authorities are calling an act of 'violent extremism' motivated by race. 

The alleged killer, who is due back in court on Thursday, is currently on suicide watch and is being held in a separate unit from other inmates, the sheriff of Erie County, John Garcia, said at the news conference Sunday.

Erie County District Attorney John J. Flynn said in a press release Saturday: 'My office is working closely with the U.S. Attorney's Office and our partners in law enforcement into potential terrorism and hate crimes. This is an active investigation and additional charges may be filed.'

President Joe Biden will travel to Buffalo on Tuesday to meet with the families of mass shooting victims, the White House confirmed to CNN. The president also issued condolences to the families on Sunday and said he was receiving regular updates from his team about the massacre.

'We're still gathering the facts, but already, the Justice Department has stated publicly that it's investigating the matter as a hate crime, racially-motivated act of white supremacy and violent extremism. As they do, we must all work together to address the hate that remains a stain on the soul of America. Our hearts are heavy once again, but our resolve must never waver,' Biden said. 

Gendron allegedly murdered 10 people in a 'racist hate crime ' at a supermarket in Buffalo, NY on Saturday. People are scene outside the store after the shooting

Gendron allegedly murdered 10 people in a 'racist hate crime ' at a supermarket in Buffalo, NY on Saturday. People are scene outside the store after the shooting

Buffalo police commissioner Joseph Gramaglia revealed during a press conference Sunday that Gendron had previously made a non-specific shooting threat while in high school

Buffalo police commissioner Joseph Gramaglia revealed during a press conference Sunday that Gendron had previously made a non-specific shooting threat while in high school

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is said on Sunday that an investigation would focus on what could have been done to stop Gendron, since he had advertised his views online and had been on authorities' radar

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is said on Sunday that an investigation would focus on what could have been done to stop Gendron, since he had advertised his views online and had been on authorities' radar

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

He then opened fire at the Tops grocery store using a gun that he legally purchased but had illegally modified with a high-capacity magazine.

Law enforcement personnel searched the accused gunman's Conklin home on Sunday, as well as a shed on the property.

Pictures taken at the scene show FBI agents collecting and photographing evidence from the property. 

Federal agents also interviewed Gendron's parents, Paul and Pamela, on Sunday, a law enforcement official - who asked to remain anonymous - confirmed.  

Paul and Pamela are cooperating with investigators, the official alleged. 

FBI agents are seen photographing evidence at Gendron's home in Conklin, NY on Sunday

FBI agents are seen photographing evidence at Gendron's home in Conklin, NY on Sunday

A bicycle and lawn mower are removed from the shed at Gendron's home while authorities execute their search warrant on Sunday

A bicycle and lawn mower are removed from the shed at Gendron's home while authorities execute their search warrant on Sunday

Law enforcement personnel searched the accused gunman's Conklin home on Sunday, as well as a shed on the property.

Law enforcement personnel searched the accused gunman's Conklin home on Sunday, as well as a shed on the property.

PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN TO VISIT BUFFALO 

President Joe Biden will visit Buffalo, New York on Tuesday after 10 people were killed outside a Tops supermarket in a racially motivated mass shooting.

The president will meet with the victims' families, the White House confirmed to CNN

Biden also issued condolences to the families on Sunday and said he was receiving regular updates from his team about the massacre.

'We're still gathering the facts, but already, the Justice Department has stated publicly that it's investigating the matter as a hate crime, racially-motivated act of white supremacy and violent extremism. As they do, we must all work together to address the hate that remains a stain on the soul of America. Our hearts are heavy once again, but our resolve must never waver,' the president said. 

US Attorney General Merrick Garland also confirmed Sunday that the Justice Department is investigating the mass shooting 'as a hate crime and an act of racially-motivated violent extremism.'

Advertisement

The governor said she was dismayed that the suspect managed to live-stream his attack on social media, which she blamed for hosting a 'feeding frenzy' of violent extremist ideology.

'The CEOs of those companies need to be held accountable and assure all of us that they're taking every step humanly possible to be able to monitor this information,' she told ABC News. 'How these depraved ideas are fermenting on social media, it's spreading like a virus now. 

Hochul also slammed Twitch for allowing a 'military-style execution' and 'the massacre of innocent people' to be 'viewed by other people.'

'There's not enough monitoring because clearly this information was out there. Don't they have a responsibility? I know it's a huge, vast undertaking, but these companies have a lot of money. They have resources. They have technology. Key words show up, they need to be identified, someone needs to watch this, and to shut it down the second it appears,' she said. 

'And short of that, we will protect the right to free speech, but there is a limit. There is a limit to what you can do and hate crime is not - hate speech is not protected.'

Social media and streaming platforms like Twitch, which said it removed the stream after less than two minutes, have grappled with controlling violent and extremist content for years.

'The user has been indefinitely suspended from our service, and we are taking all appropriate action, including monitoring for any accounts rebroadcasting this content,' a Twitch spokesperson said in a statement to Reuters.

Police say the rambling text of a 180-page manifesto that Payton Gendron (pictured here) posted included a plan of the attack which detailed driving several counties away to carry out the rampage the Tops Friendly Market

Police say the rambling text of a 180-page manifesto that Payton Gendron (pictured here) posted included a plan of the attack which detailed driving several counties away to carry out the rampage the Tops Friendly Market

Buffalo community members create a make-shift memorial outside the Tops Friendly Market in honor of the 10 people killed by Gendron during Saturday's massacre

Buffalo community members create a make-shift memorial outside the Tops Friendly Market in honor of the 10 people killed by Gendron during Saturday's massacre

Black Lives Matter protesters gathered outside the Tops Friendly Market in Buffalo, NY on Sunday

Black Lives Matter protesters gathered outside the Tops Friendly Market in Buffalo, NY on Sunday

People leave messages at a makeshift memorial near a Tops Grocery store in Buffalo, New York, on May 15, 2022, the day after a gunman shot dead 10 people

People leave messages at a makeshift memorial near a Tops Grocery store in Buffalo, New York, on May 15, 2022, the day after a gunman shot dead 10 people

People mourn near a Tops Grocery store in Buffalo, New York, on May 15, 2022, the day after a gunman shot dead 10 people

People mourn near a Tops Grocery store in Buffalo, New York, on May 15, 2022, the day after a gunman shot dead 10 people

Messages, ballons and flowers are pictured at a makeshift memorial near a Tops Grocery store in Buffalo, New York, on May 15, 2022, the day after a gunman shot dead 10 people

Messages, ballons and flowers are pictured at a makeshift memorial near a Tops Grocery store in Buffalo, New York, on May 15, 2022, the day after a gunman shot dead 10 people

Law enforcement remained stationed outside the supermarket on Sunday while the FBI continued processing the scene

Law enforcement remained stationed outside the supermarket on Sunday while the FBI continued processing the scene

Police said Sunday they are also investigating a 180-page manifesto that Gendron reportedly posted before going on his rampage, which included a plan to drive several counties away to carry out the shooting.

Gendron identified himself as a white supremacist in the document, explaining his fears that white people are being replaced by other races. A preliminary investigation found Gendron repeatedly visited websites espousing white supremacist ideologies and race-based conspiracy theories - and extensively researched the 2019 mosque shootings in Christchurch, New Zealand, and the man who killed dozens at a summer camp in Norway in 2011, an official said.

It wasn't immediately clear why Gendron had traveled about 200 miles to Buffalo and targeted this particular grocery store, but investigators believe Gendron had specifically researched the demographics of the population around the grocer and had been searching for communities with a high number of black residents. 

Police said Gendron, wearing military gear and livestreaming with a helmet camera, shot a total of 11 black people and two white people in Saturday's rampage before surrendering to authorities. Screenshots purporting to be from the Twitch broadcast appear to show a racial epithet scrawled on the rifle used in the attack, as well as the number 14, a likely reference to a white supremacist slogan.

Officials said the rifle Gendron used in the attack was purchased legally but the magazines he used for ammunition were not allowed to be sold in New York.

Robert Donald, the owner of Vintage Firearms in Endicott, N.Y., told the New York Times on Sunday that he recently sold a Bushmaster assault weapon to the man accused of the massacre.

Donald, 75, who primarily sells collectible firearms, said the teen bought the gun without leaving an impression and was shocked when he got a call from investigators regarding Gendron.

Retired Buffalo Police Department cop Aaron Salter, pictured right, has been named as the first victim of the tragedy. He was working as a store security guard and shot Gendron, who returned fire and killed Salter 

Ruth Witfield, 86, the mother of former Buffalo fire commissioner Garnell Witfield was also killed in the murder spree

Ruth Witfield, 86, the mother of former Buffalo fire commissioner Garnell Witfield was also killed in the murder spree

Pearly Young, 77, who fed needy residents in Buffalo's Central Park neighborhood for 25 years, was shot and killed Saturday

Pearly Young, 77, who fed needy residents in Buffalo's Central Park neighborhood for 25 years, was shot and killed Saturday

Roberta Drury, 32, who was killed in the shooting while she was shopping for dinner, was described as 'very vibrant' by her sister Amanda. 'She always was the center of attention and made the whole room smile and laugh'

Roberta Drury, 32, who was killed in the shooting while she was shopping for dinner, was described as 'very vibrant' by her sister Amanda. 'She always was the center of attention and made the whole room smile and laugh'

Katherine Massey was one of the victims killed in the grocery store shooting in Buffalo on Saturday. She is pictured in October 2011

Katherine Massey was one of the victims killed in the grocery store shooting in Buffalo on Saturday. She is pictured in October 2011

Celestine Chaney, 65, who was at the supermarket to buy strawberries for shortcake, was killed during the shooting, her son, Wayne Jones, 48, confirmed. Chaney is pictured above with her granddaughter Kay Savvy

Celestine Chaney, 65, who was at the supermarket to buy strawberries for shortcake, was killed during the shooting, her son, Wayne Jones, 48, confirmed. Chaney is pictured above with her granddaughter Kay Savvy

Heyward Patterson, who would often give people rides to and from the supermarket and help them carry their groceries, was also among the 10 people fatally shot, according to Patterson's great niece Teniqua Clark

Heyward Patterson, who would often give people rides to and from the supermarket and help them carry their groceries, was also among the 10 people fatally shot, according to Patterson's great niece Teniqua Clark

A law enforcement personnel stands outside the home of Buffalo supermarket shooting suspect Payton Gendron in Conklin, New York a day after the teen allegedly went on a deadly rampage that killed 10 people

A law enforcement personnel stands outside the home of Buffalo supermarket shooting suspect Payton Gendron in Conklin, New York a day after the teen allegedly went on a deadly rampage that killed 10 people

Payton Gendron, 18, who is accused of fatally shooting 10 people at a Buffalo supermarket on Saturday lives at this home in Conklin, New York with his parents

Payton Gendron, 18, who is accused of fatally shooting 10 people at a Buffalo supermarket on Saturday lives at this home in Conklin, New York with his parents

Federal agents interviewed the parents of Payton Gendron, the teenager accused of firing a barrage of 50 shots at the supermarket that killed 10 people, a law enforcement official said on Sunday

Federal agents interviewed the parents of Payton Gendron, the teenager accused of firing a barrage of 50 shots at the supermarket that killed 10 people, a law enforcement official said on Sunday

THE VICTIMS KILLED IN BUFFALO SUPERMARKET SHOOTING 

Ten people were killed in a mass shooting at a Tops Friendly Market in Buffalo, New York on Saturday.

Seven of of the victims had been named by family members by Sunday. 

Retired Buffalo Police Department cop Aaron Salter

Retired Buffalo Police Department cop Aaron Salter

Aaron Salter Jr., 75

Salter is a retired Buffalo police officer who worked as a security guard at the supermarket. 

He was fatally shot after confronting accused shooter Payton Gendron inside the store.

Salter's shots failed to penetrate Gendron's armored vest, officials confirmed to CBS News

After he shot at Gendron, the teen returned fire, killing Salter.  

Ruth Whitfield, 86, the mother of former Buffalo fire commissioner Garnell Whitfield

Ruth Whitfield, 86, the mother of former Buffalo fire commissioner Garnell Whitfield

Ruth Whitfield, 86

Whitfield had just visited her husband in a nursing home and decided to stop at the Tops on her way home to get something to eat, WGRZ reported.

She was also the mother of Former Buffalo Fire Commissioner Garnell Whitfield, according to the television station. 

Following the shooting, he said during an interview with the Buffalo News: 'My mom was the consummate mom. My mother was a mother to the motherless. She was a blessing to all of us. She loved God and taught us to do the same thing,' he said. 

Katherine Massey, 72, had gone to the supermarket to do her grocery shopping when she was fatally shot

Katherine Massey, 72, had gone to the supermarket to do her grocery shopping when she was fatally shot

Katherine Massey, 72

She had gone to the supermarket to do her grocery shopping when she was fatally shot. 

Her brother was supposed to pick her up after she finished her errands, but arrived to the grisly aftermath of a mass shooting.

Massey was a civil rights and education advocate.

Former Erie County Legislator Betty Jean Grant, who had known Massey for over 20 years, told The Buffalo News that she 'did everything she could to lift up Buffalo's black community.'

Last year, Massey wrote a letter calling for more federal regulation of firearms, citing both urban street violence and mass shootings.

Pearly Young, 77, who fed needy residents in Buffalo's Central Park neighborhood for 25 years

Pearly Young, 77, who fed needy residents in Buffalo's Central Park neighborhood for 25 years

Pearly Young, 77

Young fed needy residents in Buffalo's Central Park neighborhood for 25 years.

Young, originally from Alabama, moved to New York as a young adult and married a pastor.

She had gone to lunch with her sister-in-law on Saturday and was dropped off at the grocer afterwards. Her son was expected to pick her up, but when he arrived at the store, all was in chaos.

Her relatives told Alabama.com Young will be remembered for her love for God and her family.

Celestine Chaney, 65, who was at the supermarket to buy strawberries for shortcake  st the time of the shooting

Celestine Chaney, 65, who was at the supermarket to buy strawberries for shortcake  st the time of the shooting

Celestine Chaney, 65

Chaney was a breast cancer survivor, was at the supermarket with her older sister, JoAnn Daniels, because she wanted to buy strawberries for shortcake.

The loving mother and grandmother-of-six was also picking up some shrimp for her husband, Raymond.

Daniels told The Buffalo Times she never saw Gendron, but heard the sounds of his assault rifle.

She and Chaney were trying to flee when the 65-year-old was shot.

'She fell and I thought she had got up and was behind me, but she wasn't behind me,' Daniels recalled. 

Roberta Drury, 32, was at the store to buy groceries for dinner

Roberta Drury, 32, was at the store to buy groceries for dinner

Roberta Drury, 32

Drury was at the store to buy groceries for dinner when the shooting began.

She had moved to Buffalo from the Syracuse, New York, area to be with her older brother after his bone marrow transplant, her sister, Amanda Drury, told Reuters

Drury helped him with his bar, The Dalmatia, and with his family.

'She was vibrant and outgoing, could talk to anyone,' Amanda said. 

Heyward Patterson, 68, often give people rides to and from the supermarket and would help them carry their groceries

Heyward Patterson, 68, often give people rides to and from the supermarket and would help them carry their groceries

Heyward Patterson, 68

He often give people rides to and from the supermarket and would help them carry their groceries. This role earned him the nickname 'Jitney.'

He was also a church deacon and would welcome parishioners and escort them to their seats.

'He would give the shirt off his back,' his wife, Tirzah Patterson, told The Buffalo News. 'That’s who he is. He wouldn’t hurt anybody. Whatever he had, he’d give it to you.'

Advertisement

Seven of of the victims have been named by family members by Sunday, including security guard Aaron Salter - a retired Buffalo police officer - who fired multiple shots at Gendron. A bullet hit the gunman's armor, but had no effect. Gendron then killed Salter, before hunting more victims.

Shopper Ruth Whitfield, an 86-year-old grandmother, who is also the mother of former Buffalo fire commissioner Garnell Whitfield, was killed while shopping for groceries.

She had just visited her husband in a nursing home and decided to stop at the Tops on her way home to get something to eat, WGRZ reported.

Katherine Massey, 72, had gone to the supermarket to do her grocery shopping when she was fatally shot. Her brother was supposed to pick her up after she finished her errands.

Massey was a civil rights and education advocate. Former Erie County Legislator Betty Jean Grant, who had known Massey for over 20 years, told The Buffalo News that she 'did everything she could to lift up Buffalo's black community.'

Last year, Massey wrote a letter calling for more federal regulation of firearms, citing both urban street violence and mass shootings.

Pearly Young, 77, who fed needy residents in Buffalo's Central Park neighborhood for 25 years, was shot and killed during the massacre, 11Alive reporter Madison Carter tweeted.

Young, originally of Alabama, moved to New York as a young adult and married a pastor.

She had gone to lunch with her sister-in-law on Saturday and was dropped off at the grocer afterwards. Her son was expected to pick her up, but when he arrived at the store, the scene was in total chaos.

Her relatives told Alabama.com Young will be remembered for her love for God and her family.

Celestine Chaney, 65, who was at the supermarket to buy strawberries for shortcake, was killed during the shooting, her son, Wayne Jones, 48, confirmed. 

She was also picking up some shrimp her husband, Raymond. 

The loving mother and grandmother-of-six was at the supermarket with her older sister, JoAnn Daniels. 

Daniels told The Buffalo Times she never saw Gendron, but heard the sounds of his assault rifle.

She and Chaney were trying to flee when the 65-year-old was shot.

'She fell and I thought she had got up and was behind me, but she wasn't behind me,' Daniels recalled. 

Roberta Drury, 32, was at the store to buy groceries for dinner when she was fatally shot, her sister Amanda Drury, 34, said.

She had moved to Buffalo from the Syracuse, New York, area to be with her older brother after his bone marrow transplant, her sister, Amanda Drury, told Reuters

Drury helped him with his bar, The Dalmatia, and with his family.

'She was vibrant and outgoing, could talk to anyone,' Amanda said. 

Heyward Patterson, who would often give people rides to and from the supermarket and help them carry their groceries, was also among the 10 people fatally shot, according to Patterson's great niece Teniqua Clark.

He earned the nickname 'Jitney' because of his help at the grocer.

He was also a church deacon and would welcome parishioners and escort them to their seats.

'He would give the shirt off his back,' his wife, Tirzah Patterson, told The Buffalo News. 'That’s who he is. He wouldn’t hurt anybody. Whatever he had, he’d give it to you.'

Following the shooting, the entire city of Buffalo was left in a state of shock - but those who knew Gendron said there were a host of warning signs that the teen was falling into extremism and hateful beliefs.

Officials at the Susquehanna Valley High School brought in New York State Police to investigate Gendron in June of 2021 after he made statements that he would shoot fellow students.

A year later he ended up shooting 13 people - 10 of them fatally - during an attack motivated by his hatred for black people at a Top Market supermarket in Buffalo. 

'A school official reported that this very troubled young man had made statements indicating that he wanted to do a shooting, either at a graduation ceremony, or sometime after,' a government source told the Buffalo News.

After police looked into the account, Gendron was referred for mental health evaluation and counseling.

Classmates said that he often acted strangely at times and espoused extremist views on politics.

Last year, one former student recalled, Gendron wore a hazmat suit to school for a week. She believed it had something to do with protecting himself from the coronavirus, but she didn't rule out the fact that he was making a joke.

'It was the most extra thing that I ever saw him do,' a former classmate who asked not to be named said.

There were other indications of Gendron's fragile mental state.

 During a class exercise in political class in which the students created their own countries with the government of their choice, Gendron's pick was an autocratic regime that the classmate described as 'Hitler-esque.'

'His views were extreme,' the student said. 'You could pick any form of government that you wanted and he picked a totalitarian government.'

The classmate recalled that he almost collided with her head on in his car, but she brushed it off at the time to careless driving.

'He was definitely into video games - shooter games,' she said.

'It's so mind-blowing to think that it could have been us,' she said. 'I know he had his manifesto, but what if he decided to do a test run on us.' 

For the most part he was quiet, but she said he would 'smile weirdly' when he spoke to people. She said she didn't remember him every having a girlfriend.

Gendron is one of four boys born to Paul and Pamela Gendron, two civil engineers with the state who live in Conklin, NY, three and half hours south of Buffalo. Paul coached his kids in the town soccer league and at least one neighbor found him 'strange.' His mother appeared conceited, locals said.

Payton traveled from his home in Conklin, New York, to carry out the atrocity. He lived there with his father Paul (pictured unpixellated) and mom Pamela, pictured in red, both of whom are engineers for the New York Department of Transportation

Payton traveled from his home in Conklin, New York, to carry out the atrocity. He lived there with his father Paul (pictured unpixellated) and mom Pamela, pictured in red, both of whom are engineers for the New York Department of Transportation

Payton Gendron, 18, far left, holds a harmless facsimile to the automatic rifles that he used to murder 10 people in a Buffalo supermarket

Payton Gendron, 18, far left, holds a harmless facsimile to the automatic rifles that he used to murder 10 people in a Buffalo supermarket

Payton and his mom, Pamela Gendron, enjoy a day out at the amusement park. Neighbors say that outwardly they appeared to be the perfect family

Payton and his mom, Pamela Gendron, enjoy a day out at the amusement park. Neighbors say that outwardly they appeared to be the perfect family 

Payton Gendron, left rear, dining on steam crabs with his brothers and father, who works as a civil engineer for New York State

Payton Gendron, left rear, dining on steam crabs with his brothers and father, who works as a civil engineer for New York State

'He's from this pristine family,' a schoolmate said. 'They have everything together, they were just perfect.'

In photos posted by his mother on Facebook, Payton Gendron appears to tower over his father and others.

'He was 6'1' or 6'2'' his schoolmate said. 'He was a big guy.'

The family appears to be a tight-knit suburban family that played LaserTag together, when to Autumn festivals, the beach and dined together in restaurants. 

Neighbors said they were odd. 

'To be honest, the mother was kind of snooty,' a local parent who asked not to be named said. 'Like she was better than everyone else. The father was strange. Like when you meet someone and they just seem off.'

A neighbor recalled him bringing home a human-sized Brontosaurus that he build for a school project. School records show that he was a good student and made high honors in his senior year, scoring higher than 92 percent in all his classes.

Facebook photos show that Gendron went on a few college tours and spent some time enrolled in Broome County Community College. 

A college spokeswoman told he Buffalo News that he was no longer enrolled.

'They have a really nice family,' neighbor Nancy Santucci said. 'They seem like regular people. In a million years I never would think that anyone from this neighborhood would drive to Buffalo to carry out a racially motivated shooting.'

'I'm just shocked,' she said.

 

EXCLUSIVE: Sister of victim of Buffalo gunman calls for 'killer' to be locked up for 80 years with a black cell mate 'for murdering 72-year-old and nine others in his racism supermarket killing spree'

The sister of a defenseless elderly woman allegedly shot dead by white supremacist Payton Gendron wants to see him locked up for the next 80 years – with a black cell mate.

Devastated Barbara Massey said her first instinct was to call for the death penalty for 'evil' Gendron, 18, who allegedly went on the rampage at Tops Friendly Grocery in Buffalo Saturday afternoon, killing her sister Katherine, 72, and nine others.

But she now says spending the rest of his life behind bars with an African American would be a more fitting punishment for avowed racist Gendron, who detailed his hatred of blacks and Jews in a rambling 180-page manifesto.

‘I only saw his face for the first time today when it popped up on my phone,’ Massey, 64, told DailyMail.com, fighting back tears.

‘At first I wanted to kill him, to choke him out then bring him back and choke him out again. But that’s not me.'

Scroll for video 

Barbara Massey wants to see Payton Gendron, 18, who is accused of killing 10 people at  Tops Friendly Grocery in Buffalo Saturday, including her sister Katherine, 72, locked up for the next 80 years ¿ with a black cell mate

Barbara Massey wants to see Payton Gendron, 18, who is accused of killing 10 people at  Tops Friendly Grocery in Buffalo Saturday, including her sister Katherine, 72, locked up for the next 80 years – with a black cell mate

Katherine Massey, 72, was gunned down in a shooting that claimed the lives of 10 people at a Buffalo supermarket on Saturday

Katherine Massey, 72, was gunned down in a shooting that claimed the lives of 10 people at a Buffalo supermarket on Saturday 

Massey said her sister Katherine was dropped off at Tops Friendly Grocery by their brother moments before the gunman pulled up outside and started shooting

Massey said her sister Katherine was dropped off at Tops Friendly Grocery by their brother moments before the gunman pulled up outside and started shooting

‘I thought about it all night and I would like him to be in there for 70, 80 years. I want him to wake up every day with a black person or a Jewish person there next to him and have to deal with that.

‘These are your neighbors for the rest of your freaking life. You need to sit here boy. I just hope they don’t give him something to hang himself with. He shot my sister in the face, I can’t get over that.’

Massey said Katherine was dropped off at Tops Friendly Grocery by their brother Warren moments before Gendron of Conklin, New York allegedly pulled up outside and started shooting.

When Katherine didn’t answer her phone, Massey raced down to the police cordon and begged cops to let her past to search for her beloved sibling.

When a bystander offered to show her shocking social media clips showing several of the victims slumped dead in the parking lot, she refused to watch.

‘I couldn’t look at that. I was still holding out hope. I just kept begging the police, please let me find my sister,’ Massey said.

Massey said Katherine was dropped off at Tops Friendly Grocery by their brother Warren moments before Gendron of Conklin, New York allegedly started shooting

Massey said Katherine was dropped off at Tops Friendly Grocery by their brother Warren moments before Gendron of Conklin, New York allegedly started shooting

Massey said when Katherine didn¿t answer her phone, she raced down to the police cordon and begged cops to let her past to search for her beloved sibling

Massey said when Katherine didn’t answer her phone, she raced down to the police cordon and begged cops to let her past to search for her beloved sibling

Katherine's death was confirmed on Sunday, Massey said

Katherine's death was confirmed on Sunday, Massey said

As the hours ticked by she feared the worst but confirmation of Katherine’s death only came Sunday when a coroner confirmed a woman matching her description was found with a fatal gunshot to the head.

‘The coroner was wonderful, she even cried,’ Massey added.

‘She said can you describe Kat and I said, she’s small, she black but she has blue eyes, she’s fair skinned. Her hair is mostly grey, it’s cut short. She may have a little scar under her breast. She called me back 20 minutes later, it was her.’

Katherine and Massey grew up together on Cherry Street in central Buffalo, the same road where their extended family have lived for the past seven decades.

Katherine worked at Blue Cross Blue Shield for 40 years, and was never married, lavishing kindness instead on her friends, family and grand nephews and nieces, Massey explained.

After retiring ten years ago, she turned her attention to sprucing up their block, mowing the grass, cleaning up trash and successfully campaigning for new trees and road improvements.

She also contributed to the neighborhood newspaper, the Challenger – including penning an editorial about the menace of gun crime and the need for tougher controls on firearms.

‘Kat was the sweetest little thing. The heaviest her weight has ever been was 112 pounds,’ added Massey.

‘She was very intelligent, she would write letters, she would volunteer at City Hall. She would go to the Family Dollar and buy something for everybody. She was the glue. She was everything to us. If you did something for Kat she would never forget it.'

'If I know my sister, she would have said to this guy, c’mon baby, put that gun down. That’s why I think he shot my sister. We can’t even have an open casket because he shot her in the head.’

Massey said her own family is multi-cultural and she struggles to understand how anyone ¿ let alone a teenager ¿ could hate another race so badly he was willing to kill'

Massey said her own family is multi-cultural and she struggles to understand how anyone – let alone a teenager – could hate another race so badly he was willing to kill'

Family members of victims from the Tops market shooting are consoled during services at True Bethel Baptist Church on Sunday a day after 10 people were shot in Buffalo

Family members of victims from the Tops market shooting are consoled during services at True Bethel Baptist Church on Sunday a day after 10 people were shot in Buffalo

Massey said her own family is multi-cultural and she struggles to understand how anyone – let alone a teenager – could hate another race so badly he was willing to kill.‘

'Our family is a rainbow, my husband is Indian. My niece’s boyfriend is Italian. We don’t do race,’ she told DailyMail.com.

'Someone has taught it to him. I know there’s a lot of crazy people but he’s 18. You don’t just wake up and be prejudiced. He still has milk on his breath.’

Gendron has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder following Saturday's attack. He is being held without bail and faces life in prison.

Due back in court Thursday, the teen is currently on suicide watch and is being held in a separate unit from other inmates, the sheriff of Erie County, John Garcia, said at the news conference Sunday 

 

Buffalo shooter, 18, planned attack for MONTHS before driving three hours to gun down 10 in supermarket ambush motivated by his hatred of black people: Cops interview his parents as seven victims named and suspect placed on suicide watch 

A teenaged gunman who allegedly murdered 10 people at a Buffalo supermarket planned the attack for months before he drove for three hours to carry out the vile ambush that authorities are calling an act of 'violent extremism' motivated by race. 

Federal agents interviewed the parents of Payton Gendron, the teenager accused of firing a barrage of 50 shots at the store that killed 10 people, a law enforcement official said on Sunday.

Gendron, 18, of Conklin, NY, pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder following Saturday's attack. He is being held without bail and faces life in prison.

The alleged killer, who is due back in court on Thursday, is currently on suicide watch and is being held in a separate unit from other inmates, the sheriff of Erie County, John Garcia, said at the news conference Sunday.

Gendron's parents Paul and Pamela were cooperating with investigators, the official - who asked to remain anonymous - said.

Police said Sunday that they believe the attack had been planned for months and added that they are investigating a 180-page manifesto that Gendron reportedly posted before going on his rampage that included a plan to drive several counties away to carry out the shooting at the Tops Friendly Market.

Gendron identified himself as a white supremacist in the document as he explained his fears white people are being replaced by other races, police said.

'The shooter traveled hours from outside this community to perpetrate this crime on the people of Buffalo, a day when people were enjoying the sunshine, enjoying family, enjoying friends,' Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown said at a Saturday evening news conference.

'People in a supermarket, shopping and bullets raining down on them. People's lives being snuffed out in an instant for no reason.'

A law enforcement personnel stands outside the home of Buffalo supermarket shooting suspect Payton Gendron in Conklin, New York a day after the teen allegedly went on a deadly rampage that killed 10 people

A law enforcement personnel stands outside the home of Buffalo supermarket shooting suspect Payton Gendron in Conklin, New York a day after the teen allegedly went on a deadly rampage that killed 10 people

Payton Gendron, 18, who is accused of fatally shooting 10 people at a Buffalo supermarket on Saturday lives at this home in Conklin, New York with his parents

Payton Gendron, 18, who is accused of fatally shooting 10 people at a Buffalo supermarket on Saturday lives at this home in Conklin, New York with his parents

Federal agents interviewed the parents of Payton Gendron, the teenager accused of firing a barrage of 50 shots at the supermarket that killed 10 people, a law enforcement official said on Sunday

Federal agents interviewed the parents of Payton Gendron, the teenager accused of firing a barrage of 50 shots at the supermarket that killed 10 people, a law enforcement official said on Sunday

Seven of of the victims have been named by family members by Sunday, including security guard Aaron Salter - a retired Buffalo police officer - who fired multiple shots at Gendron. A bullet hit the gunman's armor, but had no effect. Gendron then killed Salter, before hunting more victims.

Shopper Ruth Whitfield, an 86-year-old grandmother, who is also the mother of former Buffalo fire commissioner Garnell Whitfield, and Katherine Massey, who had gone to the store to pick up some groceries, were also was killed, according to Buffalo News.

Pearly Young, 77, who fed needy residents in Buffalo's Central Park neighborhood for 25 years, was shot and killed during the massacre, reporter Madison Carter tweeted.

Celestine Chaney, 65, who was at the supermarket to buy strawberries for shortcake, was killed during the shooting, her son, Wayne Jones, 48, confirmed. Roberta Drury, 32, was at the store to buy groceries for dinner when she was fatally shot, her sister Amanda Drury, 34, said.

Heyward Patterson, who would often give people rides to and from the supermarket and help them carry their groceries, was also among the 10 people fatally shot, according to Patterson's great niece Teniqua Clark.

Officials said the rifle Gendron used in the attack was purchased legally but the magazines he used for ammunition were not allowed to be sold in New York.

Robert Donald, the owner of Vintage Firearms in Endicott, N.Y., told the New York Times on Sunday that he recently sold a Bushmaster assault weapon to the man accused of the massacre.

Donald, 75, who primarily sells collectible firearms, said the teen bought the gun without leaving an impression and was shocked when he got a call from investigators regarding Gendron.

Police say the rambling text of a 180-page manifesto that Payton Gendron (pictured here) posted included a plan of the attack which detailed driving several counties away to carry out the rampage the Tops Friendly Market

Police say the rambling text of a 180-page manifesto that Payton Gendron (pictured here) posted included a plan of the attack which detailed driving several counties away to carry out the rampage the Tops Friendly Market

A preliminary investigation found Gendron had repeatedly visited sites espousing white supremacist ideologies and race-based conspiracy theories and extensively researched the 2019 mosque shootings in Christchurch, New Zealand, and the man who killed dozens at a summer camp in Norway in 2011, the official said.

It wasn't immediately clear why Gendron had traveled about 200 miles from his Conklin, New York, to Buffalo and that particular grocery store, but investigators believe Gendron had specifically researched the demographics of the population around the Tops Friendly Markey and had been searching for communities with a high number of African American residents, the official said. The market is located in a predominantly black neighborhood.

Police said Gendron, wearing military gear and livestreaming with a helmet camera, shot, in total, 11 Black people and two white people Saturday in a rampage that the 18-year-old broadcast live before surrendering to authorities. Screenshots purporting to be from the Twitch broadcast appear to show a racial epithet scrawled on the rifle used in the attack, as well as the number 14, a likely reference to a white supremacist slogan.

Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown told churchgoers he saw former Buffalo fire commissioner Garnell Whitfield, the son of victim Ruth Whitfield at the shooting scene Saturday, looking for his mother.

'My mother had just gone to see my father, as she does every day, in the nursing home and stopped at the Tops to buy just a few groceries.

'And nobody has heard from her,' Whitfield told the mayor then. She was confirmed as a victim later in the day, Brown said.

Pearly Young, 77, a beloved grandmother and former missionary was mourned on social media Sunday. 'For 25 years she ran a pantry where every Saturday she fed people in Central Park. Every. Saturday.

'She loved singing, dancing, & being with family. She was mother, grandma, & missionary. Gone too soon,' reporter Madison Carter wrote in a tweet.

'YOU DID NOT DESERVE THIS!!!!' Jimmie Smith posted on Facebook with a picture of Young.

Chaney, 65, a breast cancer survivor, was visiting her sister and the two of them were at the supermarket Saturday because Chaney wanted to get strawberries to make shortcake.

'She loved those,' her son told the Times, who explained that her sister made it into the freezer, 'but my mom cannot really walk like she used to... she basically can't run.'

Drury, 32, who was killed in the shooting while she was shopping for dinner, was described as 'very vibrant' by her sister Amanda. 'She always was the center of attention and made the whole room smile and laugh.'

The shooting also claimed the life of Heyward Patterson, a deacon at State Tabernacle COGIC, who was known to give people rides to and from the Tops supermarket and help them carry their groceries, according to Patterson's great niece Teniqua Clark. 

Retired Buffalo Police Department cop Aaron Salter, pictured right, has been named as the first victim of the tragedy. He was working as a store security guard and shot Gendron, who returned fire and killed Salter 

Ruth Witfield, 86, the mother of former Buffalo fire commissioner Garnell Witfield was also killed in the murder spree

Ruth Witfield, 86, the mother of former Buffalo fire commissioner Garnell Witfield was also killed in the murder spree

Pearly Young, 77, who fed needy residents in Buffalo's Central Park neighborhood for 25 years, was shot and killed Saturday

Pearly Young, 77, who fed needy residents in Buffalo's Central Park neighborhood for 25 years, was shot and killed Saturday

Roberta Drury, 32, who was killed in the shooting while she was shopping for dinner, was described as 'very vibrant' by her sister Amanda. 'She always was the center of attention and made the whole room smile and laugh'

Roberta Drury, 32, who was killed in the shooting while she was shopping for dinner, was described as 'very vibrant' by her sister Amanda. 'She always was the center of attention and made the whole room smile and laugh'

Erie County Sheriff John Garcia expressly called the shooting a hate crime. 'This was pure evil,' Garcia said. Twitch said in a statement that it ended Gendron's transmission 'less than two minutes after the violence started.'

The mass shooting further unsettled a nation wracked with racial tensions, gun violence and a spate of hate crimes. A day before, Dallas police had said they were investigating shootings in the city's Koreatown as hate crimes.

The Buffalo attack came just a month after a shooting on a Brooklyn subway wounded 10 and just over a year after 10 were killed in a shooting at a Colorado supermarket.

President Joe Biden gave an impassioned plea during the vigil Sunday asking Americans to 'address the hate that remains a stain on the soul of America' after a racially motivated gunman opened fire at a supermarket in Buffalo.

'A lone gunman, armed with weapons of war and a hate-filled soul shot and killed 10 innocent people in cold blood in a grocery store Saturday afternoon,' Biden said during the 41st Annual National Peace Officers' Memorial Service outside the Capitol on Sunday.

The president said that while the Justice Department investigates the crime in Buffalo 'we must all work together to address the hate that remains a stain on the soul of America.'

The speech in D.C. came less than 24 hours after Gendron livestreamed his racially motivated mass shooting on Twitch at a Tops grocery store in Buffalo.

Mourners react while attending a vigil for victims of the shooting at a TOPS supermarket in Buffalo, New York on Sunday

Mourners react while attending a vigil for victims of the shooting at a TOPS supermarket in Buffalo, New York on Sunday 

People gather outside of Tops market on May 15, 2022, in Buffalo, New York following the horrific attack on Saturday afternoon

People gather outside of Tops market on May 15, 2022, in Buffalo, New York following the horrific attack on Saturday afternoon

Two people hug outside the supermarket as they mourn the deaths of ten people during the violence yesterday

Two people hug outside the supermarket as they mourn the deaths of ten people during the violence yesterday

Buffalo residents showed up in droves to mourn the victims of the supermarket shooting that killed 10 on Saturday

Buffalo residents showed up in droves to mourn the victims of the supermarket shooting that killed 10 on Saturday

Mourners gather to pay their respects to the victims at a vigil on Sunday following Saturday's deadly shooting

Mourners gather to pay their respects to the victims at a vigil on Sunday following Saturday's deadly shooting

Flowers and candles lay outside the scene of a shooting at a supermarket in Buffalo on Sunday

Flowers and candles lay outside the scene of a shooting at a supermarket in Buffalo on Sunday 

Gendron, who was confronted by police in the store's vestibule following the shooting, put a rifle to his neck but was convinced to drop it. He was arraigned later Saturday on a murder charge, appearing before a judge in a paper gown.

A witness to the shooting recalls the the horrifying moments that unfolded when she saw the gunman began firing at people in the parking lot at the supermarket across from her home on Saturday.

Katherine Crofton, a retired firefighter, told the New York Post she heard the first shot and when she turned around and 'saw him shoot the guy and the lady.' 

Crofton said she then 'immediately heard a shot,' and realized 'hero' supermarket security guard Aaron Salter Jr. had been fatally shot because of the continued gunfire. 

'I knew Aaron was dead because he kept going,' she said. She described him as a 'good security guard,' who 'didn't take no sh-t.' Crofton said the rampage continued.  

'You hear him walk into the store shooting people, just, 'pop, pop, pop,' Crofton recalled. 'He was in full combat gear – helmet, body armor, everything. He was loaded.'

When the gunman walked back out of the store, Crofton said she remembers the look on this face. 'His face was just blank. There was no expression on his face,' she said. 'It was just blank.'

Gendron was arrested Saturday after allegedly killing 10 people at a Tops Market supermarket in Buffalo, Upstate New York. Police say the massacre was motivated by the 18 year-old's hatred for black people

Gendron was arrested Saturday after allegedly killing 10 people at a Tops Market supermarket in Buffalo, Upstate New York. Police say the massacre was motivated by the 18 year-old's hatred for black people

The Tops supermarket released a statement on Sunday morning, according to NewsChannel9.

The Tops supermarket released a statement on Sunday morning, according to NewsChannel9.

The Tops supermarket released a statement on Sunday morning, according to News9.

The statement reads: 'The Tops family is heartbroken over the senseless violence that impacted associates and customers at our store on Jefferson Avenue.

'We are working quickly to make sure that all of our associates have access to counseling and support that they may need.

'Tops has been committed to this community and the city of Buffalo for decades and this tragedy will not change that commitment.

'We are working to find alternatives for our customers in this community while our store is closed and will provide updates in the near future.'

The victims killed in the shooting were remembered in a vigil service at True Bethel Baptist Church in Buffalo on Sunday morning.

As True Bethel's Darius Pridgen spoke, 'someone rushed in and caused a disturbance, appeared to yell 'put down the gun,' Jon Harris with Buffalo News tweeted. 'They rushed him out and said, 'not today.' 'Don't hurt him, just get him the help he needs,' Pridgen said.

'Before that, Pridgen said a man named Charles, who is singing today at True Bethel, was at the hospital yesterday after his grandson was among those shot,' he tweeted.

In another tweet, Harris said, 'Pridgen said he's been getting calls, saying the 18 year old shooter's brain wasn't fully developed.

'His brain was developed enough to write an entire manifesto,' he said, noting he cares more about the mental health of those who lost a loved one yesterday.' 

President Joe Biden condemned the Buffalo mass shooting as an act by 'a lone gunman, armed with weapons of war and a hate-filled soul' during an event honoring law enforcement officers who died in the line of duty in the last year

President Joe Biden condemned the Buffalo mass shooting as an act by 'a lone gunman, armed with weapons of war and a hate-filled soul' during an event honoring law enforcement officers who died in the line of duty in the last year

At the vigil Sunday at True Bethel Baptist Church, Gov. Kathy Hochul spoke about standing up to racism and ensure that a shooting like the one on Saturday never happens again

At the vigil Sunday at True Bethel Baptist Church, Gov. Kathy Hochul spoke about standing up to racism and ensure that a shooting like the one on Saturday never happens again

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul hugs Charles Everhart Sr. as service ends at True Bethel Baptist Church on Sunday, May 15, 2022, in Buffalo. Everhart's grandson, Zaire Goodman, was shot in the neck and survived during a shooting at a Buffalo supermarket on May 14. Goodman was released from the hospital last night. "I'm just grateful that God saved his life'

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul hugs Charles Everhart Sr. as service ends at True Bethel Baptist Church on Sunday, May 15, 2022, in Buffalo. Everhart's grandson, Zaire Goodman, was shot in the neck and survived during a shooting at a Buffalo supermarket on May 14. Goodman was released from the hospital last night. 'I'm just grateful that God saved his life'

Mourners comfort each other as they gather at a vigil outside a Buffalo supermarket on Sunday after 10 were killed

Mourners comfort each other as they gather at a vigil outside a Buffalo supermarket on Sunday after 10 were killed

People embrace outside the scene of a shooting at a supermarket, in Buffalo on Sunday

People embrace outside the scene of a shooting at a supermarket, in Buffalo on Sunday 

A woman wipes away tears as mourners gather outside a Buffalo supermarket where 10 people were shot and killed

A woman wipes away tears as mourners gather outside a Buffalo supermarket where 10 people were shot and killed

Buffalo residents mourn at the site of the supermarket where 10 people were fatally shot

Buffalo residents mourn at the site of the supermarket where 10 people were fatally shot 

A person pauses outside the scene of a shooting at a supermarket, in Buffalo on Sunday

A person pauses outside the scene of a shooting at a supermarket, in Buffalo on Sunday 

A woman hold back tears during a vigil for the 10 people killed at a Buffalo supermarket this weekend

A woman hold back tears during a vigil for the 10 people killed at a Buffalo supermarket this weekend

At the vigil Sunday at True Bethel Baptist Church, Gov. Kathy Hochul spoke about standing up to racism and ensure that a shooting like the one on Saturday never happens again.

'It's been a hard 24 hours. Our hearts are broken. ... Lord, forgive the anger in my heart right now,' she said.

'I want people to talk about Buffalo as the last place this ever happened,' Hochul continued. 'An attack on one of us is an attack on all of us, because we are all God's people.'

Officials at the Susquehanna Valley High School brought in New York State Police to investigate Gendron in June of 2021 after he made statements that he would shoot fellow students.

A year later he ended up shooting 13 people - 10 of them fatally - during an attack motivated by his hatred for black people at a Top Market supermarket in Buffalo. 

Mourners embrace a day after a shooting at a supermarket, in Buffalo claimed 10 lives

Mourners embrace a day after a shooting at a supermarket, in Buffalo claimed 10 lives

Sharon Doyle holds a Black Lives Matter sign as she gathers with others outside the scene of a shooting at a supermarket

Sharon Doyle holds a Black Lives Matter sign as she gathers with others outside the scene of a shooting at a supermarket

A prayer vigil was held Sunday morning outside the Tops Supermarket in Buffalo where 10 people were shot and killed

A prayer vigil was held Sunday morning outside the Tops Supermarket in Buffalo where 10 people were shot and killed

Flowers and candles were left for the victims of the Buffalo supermarket shooting

Flowers and candles were left for the victims of the Buffalo supermarket shooting

A man is seen mourning outside the Buffalo supermarket on Sunday, a day after 10 people were fatally shot

A man is seen mourning outside the Buffalo supermarket on Sunday, a day after 10 people were fatally shot

Stephanie Morris is overcome with emotions outside of a scene of a shooting at a supermarket in Buffalo on Sunday

Stephanie Morris is overcome with emotions outside of a scene of a shooting at a supermarket in Buffalo on Sunday 

People pay their respects outside the scene of a shooting at a supermarket in Buffalo

People pay their respects outside the scene of a shooting at a supermarket in Buffalo

A cyclist pauses passes the scene of a shooting at a supermarket, in Buffalo on Sunday

A cyclist pauses passes the scene of a shooting at a supermarket, in Buffalo on Sunday 

'A school official reported that this very troubled young man had made statements indicating that he wanted to do a shooting, either at a graduation ceremony, or sometime after,' a government source told the Buffalo News.

After police looked into the account, Gendron was referred for mental health evaluation and counseling.

Classmates said that he often acted strangely at times and espoused extremist views on politics.

Last year, one former student recalled, Gendron wore a hazmat suit to school for a week. She believed it had something to do with protecting himself from the coronavirus, but she didn't rule out the fact that he was making a joke.

'It was the most extra thing that I ever saw him do,' a former classmate who asked not to be named said.

There were other indications of Gendron's fragile mental state.

During a class exercise in political class in which the students created their own countries with the government of their choice, Gendron's pick was an autocratic regime that the classmate described as 'Hitler-esque.'

'His views were extreme,' the student said. 'You could pick any form of government that you wanted and he picked a totalitarian government.'

Payton Gendron is pictured at his arraignment Saturday, as disturbing details of his extremist views emerged

Payton Gendron is pictured at his arraignment Saturday, as disturbing details of his extremist views emerged 

The gunman opened fire around 2.30pm on Saturday while livestreaming the shooting

The gunman opened fire around 2.30pm on Saturday while livestreaming the shooting 

Bystanders and shoppers gathered outside the supermarket where the shooting took place

Bystanders and shoppers gathered outside the supermarket where the shooting took place

The classmate recalled that he almost collided with her head on in his car, but she brushed it off at the time to careless driving.

'He was definitely into video games - shooter games,' she said.

'It's so mind-blowing to think that it could have been us,' she said. 'I know he had his manifesto, but what if he decided to do a test run on us.'

For the most part he was quiet, but she said he would 'smile weirdly' when he spoke to people. She said she didn't remember him every having a girlfriend.

Gendron is one of four boys born to Paul and Pamela Gendron, two civil engineers with the state who live in Conklin, NY, three and half hours south of Buffalo. Paul coached his kids in the town soccer league and at least one neighbor found him 'strange.' His mother appeared conceited, locals said.

'He's from this pristine family,' a schoolmate said. 'They have everything together, they were just perfect.'

In photos posted by his mother on Facebook, Payton Gendron appears to tower over his father and others.

'He was 6'1' or 6'2'' his schoolmate said. 'He was a big guy.'

The family appears to be a tight-knit suburban family that played LaserTag together, when to Autumn festivals, the beach and dined together in restaurants. Neighbors said they were odd.

'To be honest, the mother was kind of snooty,' a local parent who asked not to be named said. 'Like she was better than everyone else. The father was strange. Like when you meet someone and they just seem off.'

A neighbor recalled him bringing home a human-sized Brontosaurus that he build for a school project. School records show that he was a good student and made high honors in his senior year, scoring higher than 92 percent in all his classes.

Facebook photos show that Gendron went on a few college tours and spent some time enrolled in Broome County Community College. A college spokeswoman told he Buffalo News that he was no longer enrolled.

'They have a really nice family,' neighbor Nancy Santucci said. 'They seem like regular people. In a million years I never would think that anyone from this neighborhood would drive to Buffalo to carry out a racially motivated shooting.'

'I'm just shocked,' she said.

Buffalo police department responded to the scene of a mass shooting that left 10 people dead and three wounded

Buffalo police department responded to the scene of a mass shooting that left 10 people dead and three wounded

The young man posted a 180-page manifesto online before the shooting espousing the paranoid white supremacist views that whites were being replaced in American by people of color.

In the screed, he says that he was radicalize by 4Chan, the same online chat group that launched Qanon. He claims that critical race theory is a Jewish plot to undermine white which he argues is a reason to kill Jews.

He also refers to other mass shootings carried out to further racist ideology like Dylan Roof, who who killed nine people in a black church in South Carolina and New Zealand lunatic Brenton Tarrant, who murdered 51 people in mosque.

Gendron also espoused the 'great replacement theory', which claims Democrats are deliberately importing illegal migrants into the US wholesale to achieve electoral dominance while driving whites to extinction.

On Saturday night, Gendron who was barefoot, masked and wearing a paper smock, told the judge that he understood the charge against and was not guilty at an arraignment Saturday evening.

He has only been charged with one count of first-degree murder. Erie County District Attorney John Flynn said the judge ordered a forensic examination and ordered him held without bail.

'We have taken the necessary steps to get him behind bars,' he said. 'That was justice. Getting that first murder charge filed immediately.'

The suspected gunman, seen here, killed ten people and wounded three others in a Buffalo supermarket

The suspected gunman, seen here, killed ten people and wounded three others in a Buffalo supermarket

The DA said that they are working with federal authorities to bring further terrorism, hate crime and murder charges.

He made no other comment, and Gendron's lawyer confirmed he planned to plead not guilty to the killings. Conklin has since been pictured in social media profiles.

Hours earlier Gendron was caught by police emerging from the Tops Friendly Supermarket, at 1275 Jefferson Avenue about 2.30pm after shooting 13 people, 10 fatally.

Survivors have since told of how they fled to the supermarket's freezer in terror. And operations manager Shonnell Harris told of how she fled out the back of the shop to what she hoped was safety - only to see Gendron gun down a victim in front of her.

Police said 11 of those shot were black, with the other two white, and suggested Gendron had walked through the supermarket looking for specific people to target, although didn't say whether this was based on the color of their skin.

Aaron Salter Jr, a former Buffalo police officer, is the first victim that's been named in the attack. The father of three is being hailed as a hero after exchanging gunfire with Gendron inside the market.

Gendron apparently scrawled the n-word on his rifle before carrying out Saturday's massacre at Tops Friendly Supermarket in Buffalo.

Gendron lived-streamed the assault as he opened fire inside the Tops Friendly Supermarket, at 1275 Jefferson Avenue, at about 2.30pm.

Police described the incident as a 'heavily armed' attack.

'He exited his vehicle. He was very heavily armed. He had tactical gear. He had a tactical helmet on. He had a camera that he was livestreaming what he was doing,' city Police Commissioner Joseph Gramaglia said at a news conference.

Payton traveled from his home in Conklin, New York, to carry out the atrocity. He lived there with his father Paul (pictured unpixellated) and mom Pamela, pictured in red, both of whom are engineers for the New York Department of Transportation

Payton traveled from his home in Conklin, New York, to carry out the atrocity. He lived there with his father Paul (pictured unpixellated) and mom Pamela, pictured in red, both of whom are engineers for the New York Department of Transportation

Payton Gendron, 18, far left, holds a harmless facsimile to the automatic rifles that he used to murder 10 people in a Buffalo supermarket

Payton Gendron, 18, far left, holds a harmless facsimile to the automatic rifles that he used to murder 10 people in a Buffalo supermarket

Payton and his mom, Pamela Gendron, enjoy a day out at the amusement park. Neighbors say that outwardly they appeared to be the perfect family

Payton and his mom, Pamela Gendron, enjoy a day out at the amusement park. Neighbors say that outwardly they appeared to be the perfect family 

Payton Gendron, left rear, dining on steam crabs with his brothers and father, who works as a civil engineer for New York State

Payton Gendron, left rear, dining on steam crabs with his brothers and father, who works as a civil engineer for New York State

Officers in riot gear secure the crime scene after 13 people were shot, three fatally, inside a Buffalo supermarket

Officers in riot gear secure the crime scene after 13 people were shot, three fatally, inside a Buffalo supermarket

Gendron shot four people outside the store, three fatally, the commissioner said. He then went into the supermarket where he exchanged gunfire with Salter. The ex-cop shot at him multiple times but the bullets hit the shooter's body arm and left him unfazed, the commissioner said.

Gendron then killed killed Salter.

A further six victims are believed to have been shot dead inside.

Salter's son, Aaron Salter Jr., hailed his father for trying to stop the maniac gunman.

'Today is a shock,' he told the Daily Beast. 'I'm pretty sure he saved some lives today. He's a hero.'

The killings were broadcast live on streaming site Twitch, although the clip was removed within two minutes of its posting.

Ruth Whitfield, the 86-year-old mother of retired Buffalo fire commissioner Garnell W. Witfield, was also killed during the shooting spree.

'My mom was the consummate mom. mother was a mother to the motherless. She was a blessing to all of us. She loved God and taught us to do the same thing,' the former commissioner told the Buffalo News.

New York Governor Kathy Hochul blasted Gendron's 'demented' killings and called for a crackdown on social media firms, who she said effectively acted as an 'accomplice' by letting mass-shooters like Gendron glorify their crimes.

President Joe Biden expressed his condolences to the families who lost loved-ones in the attack and denounced the white supremacy as 'repugnant.'

'Tonight, we grieve for the families of ten people whose lives were senselessly taken and everyone who is suffering the physical and emotional wounds of this horrific shooting,' Biden said. 'A racially motivated hate crime is abhorrent to the very fabric of this nation. Any act of domestic terrorism, including an act perpetrated in the name of a repugnant white nationalist ideology, is antithetical to everything we stand for in America. Hate must have no safe harbor. We must do everything in our power to end hate-fueled domestic terrorism.'

'This was pure evil, it was straight up a racially motivated hate crime,' the Erie County Sheriff John Garcia said.

'This is the worst nightmare that any community can face, and we are hurting and we are seething right now,' Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown said at a news conference. 'The depth of pain that families are feeling and that all of us are feeling right now cannot even be explained.'

The shooting took place on Saturday at the Tops supermarket (pictured) at 1275 Jefferson Avenue, in Buffalo, New York. At least 10 people were shot

The shooting took place on Saturday at the Tops supermarket (pictured) at 1275 Jefferson Avenue, in Buffalo, New York. At least 10 people were shot 

Buffalo gunman, 18, 'had name of a Waukesha Parade victim on his rifle when he murdered 10 in racist attack' six months after five died when SUV sped through crowd in Wisconsin 

The gunman who killed 10 people in a racist attack at an upstate New York grocery store appears to have had the name of a white woman who was run over at a Christmas parade in Wisconsin last year scrawled on his gun.

Photos of the rifle used by Payton Gendron, 18, in the live-streamed massacre show the misspelled name of Virginia Sorenson.

Sorenson, 79, was at the Waukesha Christmas to perform as part of the 'Dancing Grannies' troupe when a man in an SUV plowed into the crowd, killing her and five others.

The assailant in the November attack, Darrell Edward Brooks, is a black man who had shared social media posts promoting Black Lives Matter and violence toward white people.

Gendron shot a total of 13 people at the Tops Friendly Supermarket in Buffalo at about 2.30pm on Saturday.

The teenager, described as an outcast with extreme views, had a 180-page manifesto that focused on the 'great replacement theory,' which holds that whites are being deliberately outnumbered in the US by immigrants to skew elections in favor of Democrats.

Buffalo police did not respond to questions about the writing on the gun, the Daily Beast reports.

Photos of the rifle used in the shooting appear to show Virginia Sorenson's misspelled name along with the N-word written across the barrel.

Sorenson was killed on November 21 during the Waukesha Christmas parade attack.

She was one of four members of the 'Dancing Grannies' that were mowed down by Darrell Brooks, who had espoused his own controversial views about race.

In a Facebook post from June 9, 2020, Brooks wrote: 'LEARNED ND TAUGHT BEHAVIOR!! so when we start bakk knokkin white people TF out ion wanna hear it...the old white ppl 2, KNOKK DEM TF OUT!! PERIOD..' followed by a middle finger and expletive emoji.

The post was among several that emerged in the wake of his arrest after he drove his red Ford SUV in a crowd of kids and elderly dancing groups during the parade in the Milwaukee suburb.

Waukesha police later determined that Brooks had not planned the attack and that he did not seek to target any specific ethnic or racial group.

He is awaiting trial on 77 total charges, including six counts of first-degree intentional homicide.

On Saturday evening, Payton Gendron pled not guilty to one count of first degree murder for his supermarket rampage that killed 10 people.

Gendron, of Conklin, New York, was barefoot, masked and wearing a paper smock.

He told the judge that he understood the charge against and was not guilty at his arraignment.

He has only been charged with one count of first-degree murder.

Erie County District Attorney John Flynn said the judge ordered a forensic examination and ordered him held without bail.

'We have taken the necessary steps to get him behind bars,' he said. 'That was justice. Getting that first murder charge filed immediately.'

The DA said that they are working with federal authorities to bring further terrorism, hate crime and murder charges.

Gendron's 180-page Google Drive document detailed his twisted reasons for carrying out Saturday's massacre at the Top Market supermarket.

A large part of the manifesto focused on the 'great replacement theory.'

Gendron said he'd chosen to target the upstate New York store because it sat in the zip code 14208, which he said 'has the highest black percentage that is close to where I live.'

He included a rudimentary map of the store, but didn't name it prior to the shooting, saying he didn't want to tip anyone off should his manifesto end up in the hands of law enforcement.

The manifesto said that he'd been radicalized entirely by the internet - rather than anyone he'd met in real life - and added that he'd been inspired by Brenton Tarrant.

Tarrant is a white supremacist who live-streamed himself murdering 51 Muslims at a mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand, in 2019.

Gendron said: 'The truth is my personal life and experiences are of no value.'

Gendron said Tarrant 'radicalized him the most' while discussing what had spurred him to shoot 13 people, 10 of them fatally.

Also named as an inspiration in the manifesto was white supremacist mass-murderer Dylann Roof, who killed nine black worshippers at a South Carolina church in 2015.

And Norwegian killer Anders Breivik – who massacred 77 people in 2011 – was also cited as an inspiration by Gendron.

The Google Document that contained Gendron's manifesto remained online for several hours.

It was later taken down after Google said its contents had violated the web giant's terms of service.

Screen grabs of its contents remain online.

The gunman discussed his hatred of blacks, Jews, left-wing people and transgender people.

He also offered biographical detail of his mundane life, saying he'd grown up in Conklin, New York, around three-and-a-half-hours away from Buffalo.

Gendron added: 'I was never diagnosed with a mental disability or disorder,' he wrote. I believe to be perfectly sane.'

The troubled teenager had threatened to shoot up his high school graduation last year, according to school officials.

Officials at the Susquehanna Valley High School brought in New York State Police to investigate Gendron last June, after he made statements that he would shoot fellow students.

'A school official reported that this very troubled young man had made statements indicating that he wanted to do a shooting, either at a graduation ceremony, or sometime after,' a government source told the Buffalo News.

After police looked into the account, Gendron was referred for mental health evaluation and counseling.

Classmates said that he often acted strangely at times and espoused extremist views on politics.

Last year, one former student recalled, Gendron wore a hazmat suit to school for a week. She believed it had something to do with protecting himself from the coronavirus, but she didn't rule out the fact that he was making a joke.

'It was the most extra thing that I ever saw him do,' a former classmate who asked not to be named said.

During a class exercise in political class in which the students created their own countries with the government of their choice, Gendron's pick was an autocratic regime that the classmate described as 'Hitler-esque.'

'His views were extreme,' the student said. 'You could pick any form of government that you wanted and he picked a totalitarian government.'

The classmate recalled that he almost collided with her head on in his car, but she brushed it off at the time to careless driving.

'He was definitely into video games - shooter games,' she said.

'It's so mind-blowing to think that it could have been us,' she said. 'I know he had his manifesto, but what if he decided to do a test run on us.'

For the most part he was quiet, but she said he would 'smile weirdly' when he spoke to people. She said she didn't remember him ever having a girlfriend.

Gendron is one of four boys born to Paul and Pamela Gendron, two civil engineers with the state who live in Conklin, NY, three and half hours south of Buffalo. Paul coached his kids in the town soccer league and at least one neighbor found him 'strange.' His mother appeared conceited, locals said.

'He's from this pristine family,' a schoolmate said. 'They have everything together, they were just perfect.'

In photos posted by his mother on Facebook, Payton Gendron appears to tower over his father and others.

'He was 6'1' or 6'2'' his schoolmate said. 'He was a big guy.'

The family appears to be a tight-knit suburban family that played LaserTag together, when to Autumn festivals, the beach and dined together in restaurants.

Neighbors said they were odd.

'To be honest, the mother was kind of snooty,' a local parent who asked not to be named said. 'Like she was better than everyone else. The father was strange. Like when you meet someone and they just seem off.'

A neighbor recalled him bringing home a human-sized Brontosaurus that he build for a school project. School records show that he was a good student and made high honors in his senior year, scoring higher than 92 percent in all his classes.

Facebook photos show that Gendron went on a few college tours and spent some time enrolled in Broome County Community College. A college spokeswoman told he Buffalo News that he was no longer enrolled.

'They have a really nice family,' neighbor Nancy Santucci said. 'They seem like regular people. In a million years I never would think that anyone from this neighborhood would drive to Buffalo to carry out a racially motivated shooting.'

'I'm just shocked,' she said.

Advertisement

The young man drove hours from the white suburban town of Conklin, just outside Binghamton, to the scene of the massacre.

As the shooting unfolded, Gramaglia said, Buffalo police charged into the store and confronted the gunman in the vestibule.

'At that point the suspect put the gun to his own neck. Buffalo police personnel - two patrol officers - talked the suspect into dropping the gun. He dropped the gun, took off some of his tactical gear, surrendered at that point. And he was led outside, put in a police car,' he said.

The video of the arrest seen by DailyMail.com shows police cuffing the suspect and trying to get people away from the scene as several bodies lie motionless on the ground.

'A shooter, it's a mass shooter type s***,' one of the onlookers says as police and emergency responders detain the man in the military uniform.

'Damn, look at him, a young boy,' the onlooker adds as he comments on one of the bodies.

Police then instruct the onlookers to back up as they take control of the situation.

Hours after the shooting, Erica Pugh-Mathews waited outside the police tape wondering what happened to family members who were inside the store.

'We would like to know the status of my aunt, my mother's sister. She was in there with her fiance, they separated and went to different aisles,' she said. 'A bullet barely missed him. He was able to hide in a freezer but he was not able to get to my aunt and does not know where she is. We just would like word either way if she's OK.'

Officials speaking under the condition of anonymity cautioned the investigation was in its preliminary stages and that authorities hadn't yet discerned a clear motive, but they are looking into racial animus a possibility.

The FBI is investigating the spree as a hate crime and a 'case of racially motivated violent extremism,' Special Agent in Charge of the Buffalo field office Stephen Blodgett told the New York Times. The U.S. Attorney for the Western District of New York will also investigate the case. But he was not on their radar previously.

Heavily armed officer confer outside the Tops Friendly Supermarket located in a predominately black neighborhood just north of downtown Buffalo

Heavily armed officer confer outside the Tops Friendly Supermarket located in a predominately black neighborhood just north of downtown Buffalo

The gunman was carrying two rifles and wore a Kevlar helmet, seen here, body armor and carried two rifles

The gunman was carrying two rifles and wore a Kevlar helmet, seen here, body armor and carried two rifles

Buffalo supermarket shooter's chilling 180-page manifesto said 'great replacement theory' of whites being outnumbered drove him to kill - and New Zealand mosque shooter Brenton Tarrant was his inspiration 

The Buffalo supermarket killer says he was driven to kill by the 'great replacement theory' which claims white people are being driven to extinction by migrants.

Payton Gendron's 180 page Google Drive document detailed his twisted reasons for carrying out Saturday's massacre at the Top Market supermarket, killing 10.

A large part of the manifesto focused on the 'great replacement theory'. IT claims whites are being deliberately outnumbered in the US by migrants from other countries to skew elections in favor of the Democrats.

Gendron said he'd chosen to target the upstate New York store because it sat in the zip code 14208, which he said 'has the highest black percentage that is close to where I live.'

He included a rudimentary map of the store, but didn't name it prior to the shooting, saying he didn't want to tip anyone off should his manifesto end up in the hands of law enforcement.

The manifesto said that he'd been radicalized entirely by the internet - rather than anyone he'd met in real life - and added that he'd been inspired by Brenton Tarrant.

Tarrant is a white supremacist who live-streamed himself murdering 51 Muslims at a mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand, in 2019.

Gendron said: 'The truth is my personal life and experiences are of no value.'

Gendron said Tarrant 'radicalized him the most' while discussing what had spurred him to shoot 13 people, 10 of them fatally.

Also named as an inspiration in the manifesto was white supremacist mass-murderer Dylann Roof, who killed nine black worshippers at a South Carolina church in 2015.

And Norwegian killer Anders Breivik – who massacred 77 people in 2011 – was also cited as an inspiration by Gendron.

Police said 11 of the people he shot were black, with the other two white.

Like Tarrant, Gendron live-streamed his massacre. Tarrant used Facebook Live, while Gendron used streaming service Twitch.

It is most popular among video gamers, with Twitch removing Gendron's video less than two minutes after it was uploaded.

A Twitch spokesman said they were 'devastated' that their platform had been used.

The Google Document that contained Gendron's manifesto remained online for several hours.

It was later taken down after Google said its contents had violated the web giant's terms of service.

Screen grabs of its contents remain online.

They also include hundreds of racist memes, and grabs of liberal publications Gendron deemed offensive to his believes.

And although the manifesto is widely-believed to be authentic, with Gendron identifying himself, he used a fake photograph.

The snap he uploaded, which he claimed was him, was actually of comedian Sam Hyde.

That image of Hyde - posing outdoors while holding an assault rifle - has been repeatedly used to falsely identify other mass-shooters.

It is unclear if Gendron used Hyde's image in his own manifesto in a twisted attempt at humor.

So far two victims have been identified, both of whom are black. Grandmother Ruth Whitfield, 86, was gunned down while shopping for eggs. And store security guard Aaron Salter, a father of three, was killed after opening fire on Gendron.

Salter did so after seeing Gendron shoot other shoppers dead, but the teenage killer had worn enough body armor to protect himself from Salter's bullets.

Gendron discussed his hatred of blacks, Jews, left-wing people and transgender people in his manifesto.

He also offered biographical detail of his mundane life, saying he'd grown up in Conklin, New York, around three-and-a-half-hours away from Buffalo.

Gendron added: 'I was never diagnosed with a mental disability or disorder,' he wrote. I believe to be perfectly sane.'

The killer was arrested after walking out the front of the supermarket, and arraigned at a court Saturday night.

He has so-far been charged with one count of first-degree murder, although more charges will follow.

Gendron spoke only to confirm that he understood the charge, with his lawyer saying he'd deny it.

That comes despite him saying he'd plead guilty to his crimes in his manifesto.

Gendron also likely faces federal hate crime and terrorism charges, which could see him put to death.

Advertisement

The supermarket is located in a predominately black neighborhood, about 3 miles north of downtown Buffalo.

U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland was briefed on the shooting, according to Justice Department spokesman Anthony Coley.

Eric County Executive Mark Polonczar confirmed that there had been a shooting in the area and that residents should stay away from the supermarket.

'I have been advised of an active multiple shooting event at the Tops Markets on Jefferson Street in Buffalo,' Poloncarz tweeted. 'Police are on scene. Please stay away from the area.'

New York Governor Kathy Hochul tweeted that she was 'closely monitoring the shooting at a grocery store in Buffalo,' which is her hometown. She said the state has offered assistance to local officials.

Braedyn Kephart and Shane Hill, both 20, pulled into the parking lot just as the shooter was exiting.

They described him as a white male in his late teens or early twenties sporting full camo, a black helmet and what appeared to be a rifle.

'He was standing there with the gun to his chin. We were like what the heck is going on? Why does this kid have a gun to his face?' Kephart said.

'He dropped to his knees. He ripped off his helmet, dropped his gun, and was tackled by the police.' 

A woman and child place flowers outside the scene of a shooting at a supermarket in Buffalo

A woman and child place flowers outside the scene of a shooting at a supermarket in Buffalo

Flowers are placed outside Tops supermarket in Buffalo where White Supremacist killed 10 people in Buffalo

Flowers are placed outside Tops supermarket in Buffalo where White Supremacist killed 10 people in Buffalo

A cyclist pauses outside of a scene of a shooting at a supermarket in Buffalo on Sunday

A cyclist pauses outside of a scene of a shooting at a supermarket in Buffalo on Sunday 

Will G., a frozen dairy worker at the supermarket, said he walked out of the cooler to stock milk when the shooting occurred.

'I just heard shots. Shots and shots and shots,' he told Buffalo News. 'It sounded like things were falling over.'

He added that he hid in the cooler and that more people joined him to take shelter from the gunfire.

'I hid. I just hid,' he said. I wasn't going to leave that room.'

Police officials and a spokesperson for the supermarket chain did not immediately respond to messages from The Associated Press seeking comment.

The surrounding area is primarily residential, with a Family Dollar store and fire station near the store.

Police closed off the block, lined by spectators, and yellow police tape surrounded the full parking lot. Mayor Byron Brown was at the scene late Saturday afternoon and expected to address the media.

The shooting came little more than a year after a March 2021 attack at a King Soopers grocery in Boulder, Colorado, that killed 10 people.

Investigators have not released any information about why they believe the man charged in that attack targeted the supermarket.

Joe Biden slams 'hate-filled soul' gunman who killed 10 in Buffalo supermarket shooting and claims cops have it 'a heck of a lot harder than ever' as he honors law enforcement killed in the line of duty by demanding MORE funding 

Joe Biden gave an impassioned plea Sunday during a memorial for fallen law enforcement by asking Americans to 'address the hate that remains a stain on the soul of America' after a racially motivated gunman opened fire at a supermarket in Buffalo.

'A lone gunman, armed with weapons of war and a hate-filled soul shot and killed 10 innocent people in cold blood in a grocery store Saturday afternoon,' Biden said during the 41st Annual National Peace Officers' Memorial Service outside the Capitol on Sunday.

The president said that while the Justice Department investigates the crime in Buffalo 'we must all work together to address the hate that remains a stain on the soul of America.'

The president and first lady Jill Biden attended the event kicking off Police Week Sunday afternoon outside the Capitol honoring the lives of law enforcement who were killed in the line of duty in the last year.

'Being a cop today is a heck of a lot harder than it's ever been,' Biden said during his remarks for the event hosted by the National Fraternal Order of Police.

Biden insisted during his near 18-minute remarks Sunday that his agenda is clearly in favor of funding police, contrary to the far-left calls that began the summer of 2020 for the complete defunding of law enforcement across the country.

'We should agree, it's not to defund the police, it's to fund the police,' Biden said to cheers from the audience.

'Fund them with the resources, the training they need to protect our communities and themselves and restore trust on the police and the people,' he added.

The White House says that around 20,000 attendees are at the service and 5,000 family members of the fallen. Attorney General Merrick Garland is also in attendance.

Seated next to the President at the dais outside the Capitol were his wife, Senate sergeant at arms Karen Gibson, Senator Patrick Leahy, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta and the architect of the US Capitol Brett Blanton.

The first couple flew to D.C. Sunday morning from their home in Delaware, where they spend most of their weekends away from the nation's capital.

National Police Week begins Sunday, May 15 and turns through Saturday, May 21.

Biden closed his remarks by saying he is 'committed to remaining' a partner for law enforcement and lauding his budget for Fiscal Year 2023, which includes a doubling in funding for community policing.

The speech in D.C. came less than 24 hours after Payton Gendron, 18, livestreamed his racially motivated mass shooting on Twitch at a Tops grocery store in Buffalo, New York. Ten people were killed and three others were injured – 11 of whom were black and two who were white.

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said Sunday that he classifies the attack as an act of terrorism.

'Whether it's called that legally or not, this was terrorism, this was hate,' Buttigieg told CBS Face the Nation host Margaret Brennan during an interview Sunday.

He added: 'This would be a good day for every politician in this country left, right and center, every media figure in this country, left, right and center to come out and unequivocally condemn white nationalism, so-called replacement theory, and any other hateful ideology that could have contributed to something like this before it happens again.'

Advertisement

Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown says supermarket shooting will 'be a turning point' for the country as NY Gov. Kathy Hochul doubles down on blaming Twitch for allowing live stream of the massacre 

Mayor Byron Brown said Sunday that the shooting in his town of Buffalo, New York Saturday that left 10 people dead could be the final 'turning point' for gun legislation in the U.S. as the state's Governor Kathy Hochul doubles down on pointing blame at social media companies.

'I would like to see sensible gun control,' Brown told NBC's Meet the Press host Chuck Todd on Sunday morning, adding that 'hate speech' is not 'Free Speech.'

'I believe what happened in Buffalo, New York yesterday is going to be a turning point,' the mayor said. 'I think it's going to be different after this in terms of the energy and the activity that we see.'

Governor Hochul also spoke with NBC on Sunday morning where she again levied blame on the streaming site Twitch for being an accomplice in the massacre.

'How long was it [the Buffalo shooting] livestreamed before someone paid attention?' Hochul questioned to anchor Todd. 'These [social media] companies make a lot of money, they're very profitable. And In my judgment they have the opportunity to be doing far more monitoring and shut things down before it gets to this situation.'

Payton Gendron, 18, livestreamed his racially motivated mass shooting on Twitch, which is primarily used by video gamers to stream their virtual adventures.

Hochul praised her state on Sunday for having some of the most strict gun control laws in the nation, but insisted more needs to be done to restrict Americans' Second Amendment rights.

'It's about access to guns,' Hochul told NBC. 'And in New York we have the toughest gun laws in the nation. But right now we have a case before the Supreme Court that could be decided in a matter of weeks that could allow people to have a gun that's concealed – to walk into the Tops behind me with a concealed weapon this time.'

 'So we've got to deal with that access to guns.'

Brown also discussed on Sunday the role of social media in the massacre, claiming that there needs to be 'deliberate' action on gun control as well as ending hate speech online.

'I would like to see ending hate speech on the internet – on social media,' the mayor said. 'It is not free speech, it is not the American way. We are not a nation of hate. We need to send a message that there is no space on the internet for hate speech, for hate indoctrination, for spreading hate manifesto.'

'So I'd like to see real, deliberate action on gun control and ending hate speech on the internet,' Brown said.

'I will be a strong voice for that. I've heard from mayors all over the country in the aftermath of this incident.'

He also spoke with CBS Face the Nation host Margaret Brennan on Sunday and demanded federal resources to assist Buffalo in recovery from the incident.

'We certainly would like additional federal resources for the city of Buffalo,' Brown said, claiming he has been in contact with the White House, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and Senate Democratic Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York.

Hochul called streaming site Twitch an 'accomplice' in the murder of 10 people at a Tops supermarket in Buffalo on May 14, claiming social media has enabled killers like Gendron to glorify their crimes to huge audiences – and potentially encourage copy cats.

A source told DailyMail.com Saturday that the Twitch clip had been removed in under two minutes from when it was first uploaded.

But that cut little ice with Hochul, who said it should have been wiped within seconds.

The governor told the media in the aftermath of the shooting: 'The social media platforms that profit from their existence need to be responsible for monitoring. They can in a sense become an accomplice if not legally, but morally.'

She continued: 'These outlets must be more vigilant in monitoring social media content and certainly the fact that this act of barbarism, this execution of innocent human beings could be livestreamed on social media platforms and not taken down within a second says to me that there is a responsibility out there.

 'And we're going to continue to work on this and make sure that those who provide those platforms have a moral and ethical and I hope to have a legal responsibility to ensure that such hate cannot populate these sites.

'Because this is the result when you have individuals who use these platforms and talk to others who share these demented views and support each other and talk about the techniques that they'll engage in and post these ideas and share them with others in the hope that they can all someday rise up in their demented view of the world.'

A Twitch spokesperson told DailyMail.com that they are 'devastated' following the that was livestreamed on their platform.

According to the gaming giant, the livestream of Gendron's racist rampage was removed from their platform in less than two minutes using a combination of human review and proactive detection.

In November 2022, Hochul will stand for election for a full term as governor of New York.

Advertisement

The comments below have not been moderated.

The views expressed in the contents above are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of MailOnline.

We are no longer accepting comments on this article.