April 24, 2024
Buffalo supermarket shooter did ‘reconnaissance’ before attack targeting Black people: police

Buffalo supermarket shooter did ‘reconnaissance’ before attack targeting Black people: police

The hate-filled shooter who killed 10 at a Buffalo supermarket on Saturday spent the day before doing “reconnaissance” for his sick attack, the city’s top cop said Sunday.

“He was in the Buffalo area, he was right in this area the day before,” Buffalo Police Commissioner Joseph Gramaglia said at a press conference. “We have identified some of the locations that he was at. We know he did some reconnaissance on the area and the store.”

New details on white 18-year-old Payton Gendron’s attack targeting Black people at a Tops supermarket came to light Sunday as investigators tried to assemble a timeline of his activities.

Gramaglia declined to state whether Gendron spoke with anyone during the hours before the mayhem, which prompted the first 911 call at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, according to the commissioner.

Gendron’s parents were cooperating with authorities, Gramaglia said.

“The State Police and FBI are at his house,” he stated. “They’ve spoken with the parents. From what I’ve been told, they’re absolutely distraught, devastated, cooperating.”

Responding officers took Gendron into custody after he killed 10 and wounded several others with an AR-15 rifle, according to Gramaglia. The shooter, who was wearing armor, “put the gun under his chin” as though to shoot himself. But the officers “talked him down,” the commissioner said.

Another rifle and a shotgun not used in the attack were found in Gendron’s car, Gramaglia said.

Gendron was on “suicide watch” and being kept separate from other incarcerated people at an Erie County jail, said Erie County Sheriff John Garcia.

“He’s on direct observation from our deputies [with] video surveillance,” the sheriff said.

“He will be treated as everyone else is treated within the Erie County holding center — humanely, with respect,” Garcia added. “And he will receive the correctional help and the mental help that is needed.”

All the victims of the attack have been identified, with their families notified, said Gramaglia. He indicated all their names would be released Sunday.

Gov. Hochul denounced the attack as an act of “white supremacy terrorism,” with authorities vowing to charge Gendron with hate crimes.

Calling for stricter gun laws and a crackdown on online hate speech, the governor voiced a defiant stance.

“To anyone else … who dare break the security that every citizen’s entitled to, to make them feel victimized, you’ve just picked a fight with 20 million New Yorkers,” she said. “We’ll continue to stand up because an attack on one is an attack on all.”

Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown echoed Hochul’s remarks as he referenced the 180-page white supremacist screed Gendron posted prior to the attack.

“We won’t let hateful ideology stop the progress that we are seeing and experiencing in the city of Buffalo,” Brown told CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

Rev. Al Sharpton of the National Action Network has promised to pay for funeral costs for the victims’ families — an effort to prevent fake online fundraisers from bilking donors — according to Hochul.

The NYPD said it deployed extra security to local houses of worship in communities of color.

“While we assess there is no threat to New York City stemming from this incident, out of an abundance of caution, we have shifted counterterrorism and patrol resources to give special attention to a number of locations and areas including major houses of worship in communities of color,” Sgt. Brendan Ryan said in a statement.

With John Annese and Kate Feldman

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