Teen charged with mass murder in Buffalo, N.Y., due back in court
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[May 19, 2022] By
Tyler Clifford
BUFFALO, N.Y. (Reuters) - The teenager
accused of killing 10 people in a live-streamed supermarket shooting in
a Black neighborhood of Buffalo, New York, was due back in court on
Thursday in a case spurring a national conversation about the toxic mix
of guns, hate and the internet.
Payton Gendron, 18, who is white, was initially arraigned on a single
count of first-degree murder hours after police said he opened fire on
Saturday afternoon at a Tops Friendly Markets outlet with a
semi-automatic assault-style rifle.
He pleaded not guilty and was ordered held without bond.
Thirteen people were struck by gunfire, most of them Black, and 11 of
the victims died, before the gunman surrendered to police confronting
him inside the grocery store.
The FBI immediately said it was investigating the rampage as a hate
crime and an act of "racially motivated violent extremism," and
authorities have pointed to a white supremacist manifesto he is
suspected of posting online before the shooting.
Gendron, from the small southern New York town of Conklin, near the
Pennsylvania border, was scheduled to appear for a second Erie County
court proceeding - referred to as a felony hearing - on Thursday
morning.
It was not clear whether he would immediately face additional state
charges. First-degree murder in New York state carries a maximum penalty
of life in prison without parole.
President Joe Biden, in a visit to Buffalo on Tuesday, condemned white
nationalists, as well as online platforms, media outlets and political
rhetoric he criticized for spreading racist conspiracy theories.
"What happened here is simple and straightforward - terrorism,
terrorism, domestic terrorism," Biden said.
New York state Attorney General Letitia James on Wednesday opened an
investigation into several social media platforms she said the Buffalo
grocery store gunman used to plan, promote and broadcast the attack.
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A Member of the FBI search for evidence at the scene of a weekend
shooting at a Tops supermarket in Buffalo, New York, U.S. May 18,
2022. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Governor Kathy Hochul announced additional measures
aimed at curbing domestic terrorism, including legislation to
tighten New York gun laws and a directive for state police to
exercise their authority to disarm individuals deemed a public
threat under the state's red-flag law.
She accused social media sites of allowing violent extremism to
flourish, and said the Buffalo shooting reflected an intersection
between "the mainstreaming of hate speech ... and the easy access to
military-style weapons."
Gendron is accused of having webcast video of the attack he was
committing in real time onto Twitch, a live video platform owned by
Amazon.com.
While Twitch said it took down the video within two minutes,
screenshots from the broadcast circulated on social media through
the day. And footage of the livestream could still be found on the
internet as recently as Wednesday morning.
Authorities said the suspect also is believed to have posted a
lengthy racist screed online outlining the "great replacement
theory" - the idea that minorities are replacing white people in the
United States and other countries - as well as a check list and
journal of his attack preparations.
Buffalo police said Gendron first came to the attention of local law
enforcement nearly a year before the Buffalo shooting, when police
detained him after he made a threat at his high school, and that he
was released after a mental health exam.
Hochul said the murder weapon was purchased legally, but modified
with a high-capacity magazine that is outlawed in New York.
(Reporting by Tyler Clifford in Buffalo, New York; Writing and
additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by
Bradley Perrett)
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