At
a hearing at Erie County Court, Payton Gendron, 19, pleaded
guilty to multiple counts related to the shooting, including a
charge of domestic terrorism motivated by hate.
Gendron was accused of carrying out the attack, which also
wounded three other people, with the intention of killing as
many African Americans as he could.
"It was established beyond a reasonable doubt that he had this
gruesome motive, that in just over two minutes he murdered as
many African Americans as he could," Erie County District
Attorney John Flynn said at a press conference after the plea.
"Justice has been done today."
Gendron, who was 18 at the time of the attack, initially pleaded
not guilty after a grand jury returned an indictment in June.
He faces a mandatory sentence of life in prison without parole
on the domestic terrorism charge alone. New York does not have a
death penalty. Sentencing is scheduled for Feb. 15, according to
media reports.
Gendron was the first defendant in New York ever to be indicted
for a domestic act of terrorism motivated by hate in the first
degree.
He drove three hours from his home near Binghamton, New York, to
the Tops Friendly Markets store in Buffalo after planning the
attack for weeks, authorities said. He was looking for a public
location in an area where many Black people lived.
At the supermarket, he shot 13 people with a semi-automatic,
assault-style rifle. Eleven of the victims were Black.
Police say he left a racist manifesto online before the attack
and live-streamed the shooting on social media.
A separate indictment returned in U.S. District Court in July
charged Gendron with 27 federal hate crimes and firearms
offenses, for which he could face the death penalty if
convicted.
At a press conference following the court proceeding, civil
rights attorney Ben Crump described the hearing as a
"gut-wrenching" experience for the victims' families he
represents. He called for Gendron to be given the "most-harsh
sentence" for the crimes.
"We don't want it to be marginalized because these were Black
people. We want the whole world to never let this be swept under
the rug," Crump said. "We want the same justice if the (races)
were reversed."
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; Editing by Frank McGurty
and Lisa Shumaker)
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