Lawyers for Payton Gendron, 19, moved to seek a plea agreement
at a court hearing on Friday, less than two weeks after he
pleaded guilty to state charges of murder and domestic
terrorism.
An avowed white supremacist, he faces 27 federal hate crimes and
firearms offenses related to the racist massacre at a Tops
Friendly Markets store. Authorities said he targeted the
supermarket because it was in a predominantly Black neighborhood
of Buffalo, New York.
Gendron pleaded not guilty to the federal accusations in July. A
conviction would make him eligible for the death penalty.
Gendron, who is from Conklin, New York, faces life in prison
without parole on those counts.
"Just as Payton Gendron entered a plea of guilty to the
indictment in county court, he is prepared to enter a plea of
guilty in federal court in exchange of the same sentence, which
is the sentence of life in prison, without parole,” defense
attorney Sonya Zoghlin said, according to CNN.
Federal prosecutors are expected to discuss the issue with
defense team early next year, the outlet reported.
The Justice Department has not decided what punishment it would
seek.
Gendron, who was 18 at the time of the shooting, is set to be
sentenced for state charges in February. He was indicted on 10
counts of first-degree murder and 10 counts of second-degree
murder, all of them as hate crimes, as well as three counts of
attempted murder and a single count of illegal weapon
possession.
Gendron additionally faced one count of domestic terrorism
motivated by hate, becoming the first person charged under a
newly enacted New York statute.
The gunman streamed live video of the May 14 assault to the
social media platform Twitch after posting material online
showing he had drawn inspiration from other racially motivated
mass killings, authorities said.
(Reporting by Tyler Clifford; Editing by Josie Kao)
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