By Adrienne Vogt, Aditi Sangal and Melissa Macaya, CNN
Updated 3:14 PM EDT, Tue May 17, 2022
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Buffalo pastor on shooting: We have to resist the impulse to forget
02:59 - Source: CNN
What we covered here
- President Biden condemned the “poison” of White supremacy as he honored the 10 Americans that were killed in a racist mass shooting in a Buffalo grocery store Saturday.
- The President called the mass shooting “terrorism” as he urged action on assault weapons and efforts to address the “relentless exploitation of the internet to recruit and mobilize terrorism.”
- Eleven of the 13 people shot in the rampage were Black, officials said, and the massacre is being investigated as a hate crime by the Justice Department.
- In a 180-page diatribe, the 18-year-old White suspect allegedly details how he had been radicalized and describes the attack as terrorism and himself as a White supremacist.
Our live coverage has ended. Read more about the shooting in the posts below.
15 Posts
Buffalo mayor says he is hopeful for change after meeting with Biden
From CNN’s Jamiel LynchPresident Biden and first lady Jill Biden met individually with the families of the victims in the Buffalo supermarket shooting on Tuesday, Mayor Byron Brown said.
“The President didn’t hurry through those meetings, didn’t rush through the people that were hurting and in pain and spent a lot of time individually with families, which I think shows his compassion and his commitment to change,” he said.
Brown said that he felt “a strong sense of resolve and commitment in the President to try and bring change as it relates to these kinds of situations.”
In his conversations with Biden, Brown said they talked about gun control and what could be done to end mass shootings.
“The President seemed very moved by what he saw here in this community,” he said.
Brown also visited the growing memorial outside of the Tops Friendly Markets store with the President and first lady.
“It was a somber moment. It was an emotional moment,” Brown said.
Brown said the CEO of Tops supermarket has told him they want to open the store as quickly as possible, as he understands the importance of the store to the community. Tops is helping get residents to the company’s other supermarkets for groceries and to fill prescriptions in the meantime, he said.
Key things to know about Buffalo's mayor and how he's responding to the supermarket mass shooting
From CNN's Greg KriegMayor Byron Brown greets family members of victims of the Tops Friendly Market shooting in Buffalo on Tuesday.
Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown, the city’s first Black elected leader, was alongside President Biden today as he visited a memorial for the victims of the Buffalo mass shooting and laid flowers there. Biden thanked the mayor and law enforcement during remarks later Tuesday, saying Brown has been “wonderful.”
Brown, who was also the first Black politician elected to the New York state Senate from outside New York City, told CNN on Monday night he would speak to Biden about the easy availability of guns, hate speech, especially by public figures, and its amplification on social media.
The mayor won reelection as a write-in candidate last year after losing the Democratic primary to democratic socialist India Walton. Brown has at times been a divisive figure among Buffalo Democrats, but in the aftermath of the killings he has emerged as powerful voice against the far-right conspiracy theories, including one cited in an online diatribe by the alleged Buffalo gunman, that are increasingly animating conservative political commentary and Republican Party rhetoric.
Brown was first elected as a state lawmaker in 2000. His 2005 mayoral triumph was a breakthrough for Black political leaders in Buffalo, which had seen a string of Black Democrats defeated in their attempts to win the city’s top job.
Considered a rising star in the party, Brown in 2008 was briefly considered a potential replacement for Hillary Clinton in the Senate after then-President-elect Barack Obama signaled he would nominate her for secretary of state. But then-Gov. David Paterson ultimately appointed Kirsten Gillibrand, then a House member from upstate, to the post, which she held ever since.
Brown, too, has kept hold of his job, winning re-election four more times. He recently became the city’s longest-serving mayor.
On Tuesday morning, before the Bidens arrived in Buffalo, Brown told CNN that two more people have been arrested after making threats in the aftermath of the attack.
“There have been a number of internet messages about crimes potentially being committed, phone calls made already yesterday and the day before,” Brown said.
In spite of the threats, Brown has encouraged the CEO of Tops Friendly Markets, the scene of the shootings, to quickly re-open the store, he said.
“The Tops Supermarket on Jefferson Avenue is a center for this community,” Brown told CNN Monday. “The community is loyal to the market. It is a center of community. People come here to shop. People come here for information. They come here to connect with each other.”
Brownalso singled out far-right public figures promoting “White Replacement Theory” in an interview with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, saying they were complicit in deadly violence that rocked his city over the weekend.
“Yes they are partially to blame for the radicalization of people in this country and indoctrinating them into attitudes and feelings of hatred towards others,”Brownsaid.
Pennsylvania gun store owner says Buffalo suspect legally purchased a shotgun in December 2021
From CNN's Brian Todd and Jennifer HauserThe owner of a Pennsylvania gun store told CNN that Buffalo mass shooting suspect Payton Gendron passed a background check at the store and legally purchased a Mossberg 500 shotgun in December 2021.
The shotgun was not the weapon used in Saturday’s mass shooting. However, the suspect’s online posting claims he was planning to use that shotgun to shoot other people as he drove away from the grocery store. The December 2021 date is more than a year later than the date the suspect cites in his online posting.
The owner of Pennsylvania Guns and Ammo in Great Bend, Pennsylvania, who did not want his name used, said the suspect was 18 at the time and was “normal, quiet and asked basic questions about the firearm.” The owner said the suspect claimed he wanted the gun for target practice.
The owner told CNN that in his opinion, the suspect should not have cleared the background check because of a previous mental health evaluation over a threat investigation. However, authorities have said that investigation did not rise to the level of a mental health commitment and did not involve a specific threat and therefore did not warrant further action.
Biden says there is "not much" more he can do on gun reform executive action
From CNN's Betsy KleinPresident Biden expanded upon his remarks Tuesday following meetings with Buffalo shooting victims’ families as he prepared to return to Washington.
He conceded there were limited steps left that he could take on gun reform via executive action.
“Not much on executive action,” he said, but added that he has “to convince Congress that we should go back to what I passed years ago.”
Meaningful gun reform, Biden added, is “going to be very difficult, but I’m not going to give up trying.”
During his speech Tuesday, Biden referenced the crime bill, saying “there are certain thingswecando.Wecan keep assault weapons offour streets.We’ve done it before.I did it when I passedthecrimebill last time, and violencewent down, shootings went down.”
Pressed on whether Republicans who have promoted “replacement theory” deserve blame, Biden said, “I believe that anybody who echoes replacement is to blame. Not for this particular crime. But it’s for no purpose, no purpose, except profit and or political benefit. And it’s wrong. It’s just simply wrong.”
When asked what his message was to the victims’ families on Tuesday, he said, “They’re going to be in pain for a long while but they will get to the point where … they’ll smile before they cry, and that’s when they know you’re going to make it. Until then, you’re not sure, but it will happen.”
Biden says Buffalo mass shooting is "terrorism" and calls White supremacy a "poison"
President Biden called the mass shooting at a Buffalo supermarket on Saturday “terrorism.”
“What happened here is simple andstraightforward:terrorism, terrorism, domestic terrorism, violence inflicted in theservice of hate and the viciousthirst for power that definesone group of people beinginherently inferior to any othergroup,” the President said.
The 18-year-old White shooting suspect posted a 180-page diatribe online before the shooting, which laid out his motives and showed the meticulous planning that went into the massacre. He said he subscribed to a “great replacement” theory, or the false belief that White Americans are being “replaced” by people of other races. Once a fringe idea, replacement theory has recently become a talking point forFox News’ host Tucker Carlson, as well as other prominent conservatives.
“A hate that through the mediaand politics, the internet, hasradicalized angry, alienated, lost and isolatedindividuals into falselybelieving that they will bereplaced. That’s the word, replaced by the other, by people who don’t look likethem.And who are, therefore, in aperverse ideology that theypossess and being fed, lesserbeings.… I call on all Americans toreject the lie, and I condemn those who spread the lie for power, political gain and for profit,” Biden said.
Biden also referenced the 2017 Charlottesville rally, where White nationalists carrying tiki torches chanted “you will not replace us.”
Biden made broad but brief calls on Congress for change, including an assault weapons ban and efforts to address “relentless exploitation of the internet to recruit and mobilize terrorism.”
“We just need to have the courage to do that and stand up,” he said.
Danger and hate, he warned, are “being given too much oxygen by those who pretend to love America.”
But, Biden said, the views of those committing hateful attacks “represent a hateful minority.”
“We have to refuse to live in a country where people going about a weekly grocery shopping can be gunned down by weapons of war, deployed in a racist cause. We have to refuse to live in a country where fear and lies are packaged for power and for profit,” he said.
CNN’s Betsy Klein contributed reporting to this post.
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Biden: In America, "hate will not prevail and Whitesupremacy will not have the lastword"
As President Biden said that despite the racially motivated mass shooting in Buffalo, New York, on Saturday, “hate will not prevail and Whitesupremacy will not have the lastword” in America.
The stories of the victims demonstrate “the bigger story ofwho we are as Americans — a great nation because we’regood people,” he said as he remembered them.
He acknowledged the number of mass shootings that have occurred in the United States and the racial motivations of the Buffalo mass shooting suspect.
The evil has “come to all too manyplaces” and this time, itmanifested in a “gunman who massacredinnocent people in the name ofhateful and perverse ideology,rooted in fear and racism.It’s taken so much,” he added.
Biden to supermarket shooting victims' families: "We've come to grieve with you"
President Biden spoke after meeting with families of the supermarket shooting victims in Buffalo, New York, telling them he and first lady Jill Biden came to the city to “stand with you.”
Biden talked a bit about each of the 10 who were killed in the racially motivated shooting, appearing to choke up when speaking about a man who was in the store to buy a birthday cake for his 3-year-old son.
Supermarket shooting suspect did "reconnaissance" in Buffalo area in March, according to police
From CNN'sVictor Blackwell,Amanda Watts,Eric LevensonandTravis CaldwellPeople gather at the scene of the shooting at the Tops Friendly Markets store in Buffalo on Saturday.
The 18-year-old White man accused of killing 10 people in aracist mass shootingSaturday at a supermarket in Buffalo, New York, had visited the area in early March, police commissioner Joseph Gramaglia said Monday.
The suspect, who is from the town of Conklin, about 200 miles away, opened fire Saturday at the Tops Friendly Markets store in a predominantly Black neighborhood, shooting 13 people before surrendering to police.
The massacre followsother mass shootings in recent yearsin which authorities say a White supremacist suspect was motivated by racial hatred, including inEl Paso, Texas,Charleston, South Carolina, and as far asNorwayandNew Zealand.
The commissioner said he couldn’t comment on whether the suspect was at the store in March but in social media posts, the accused shooter revealed he had been to the store March 8 and spent months planning his attack.
The suspect, Payton S. Gendron, wrote in posts on Discord that were shared on the hate-filled online forum 4Chan that he went into the store at noon, 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. during his March visit. He wrote that on his way from his home in Broome County he got a speeding ticket.
Gendron noted in his post the activity taking place inside the market, like how many Black and White people were there. He also drew a map depicting the store aisles, pharmacy, bakery and exit points of the building.
Gendron wrote that as he did his last reconnaissance visit, he was approached by a “Black armed security guard” who said, “I’ve seen you go in and out… What are you doing?” The suspect wrote that he told the security guard that he is collecting “consensus data,” for which the security guard said he needed to talk to the manager.
In a post Gendron wrote March 10, he said “I’m going to have to kill that security guard at Tops I hope he doesn’t kill me or even hurt me instantly.”
He added that the attack would take place March 15 but he ended up postponing the date several times.
Gendron also considered attacking a church or an elementary school before settling on a supermarket, he wrote.
The information comes as investigators have dug into a 180-page diatribe posted online and attributed to thesuspected gunmanthat lays out in detail his motives and plans for the attack.
President Biden and first lady visit a memorial for Buffalo mass shooting victims
President Biden and firstlady Jill Biden visited a memorial for the victims of the Buffalo mass shooting and laid flowers there.
This is one of several memorials outside the Tops Friendly Markets, the grocery store where a racially motivated mass shootingon Saturday left 10 people dead.
President Biden arrives in Buffalo
From CNN's Betsy KleinUS President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden are greeted as they arrive in Buffalo on Tuesday.
President Biden has arrived in Buffalo, New York, where he will meet with families and community members following Saturday’s mass shooting.
President Biden and first lady Jill Biden deplaned at 9:38 a.m. ET and were greeted by New York Gov. Kathy Hochul.
They spoke with several local officials assembled on the tarmac.
Biden talked to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer for several moments before boarding his motorcade at 9:44 a.m. ET. He did not respond to any shouted questions.
The motorcade is now en route to a memorial at Top Friendly Markets.
Buffalo shooter was likely radicalized through social media and online gaming platforms, NYPD analysts say
From CNN's Mark Moralesand ShimonProkupeczThe Buffalo mass shooting suspect likely became radicalized through social media and online gaming platforms, such as Twitch and Discord, analysts with the New York Police Department said. They warned that these platforms are popular with the far right and can be an effective way to mobilize violent extremists, according to an internal memo obtained by CNN on Tuesday.
The memo says the investigators came to this conclusion after poring over the alleged shooter’s diatribe where “he espoused xenophobic, anti-Semitic, and white supremacist ideological views, and outlined detailed plans to execute the attack.”
Far-right extremists have gravitated to the online gaming platforms, like Twitch and Discord, because of minimal content moderation, the memo states.
NYPD analysts highlight different points made in the suspect’s manifesto, including where he not only describes his motive for the attack being fueled by hate, but says his beliefs came “from the internet” with “little to no influence…by people I met in person,” according to the memo.
The memo also quotes him saying he became aware of his ideology “after extreme boredom,” during the pandemic and began sifting through the “politically incorrect” discussion board on 4chan.
2 people arrested after threats made following Buffalo attack, mayor says
From CNN’s Amanda WattsTwo people have been arrested after threats were made following theBuffalo supermarket attack, Mayor Byron Brown told CNN on Tuesday.
Speaking to CNN’s John Berman, Brown said “law enforcement is on the highest alert here in Buffalo, at all levels — federal, state, Buffalo police, and Erie County sheriffs — working together very seamlessly.”
On Monday, Erie County District Attorney John Flynn said there are “a lot of threats out there,” noting one arrest where a 52-year-old man called a pizzeria Sunday afternoon making threatening comments while referencing what happened at Tops.
“Law enforcement is taking this very seriously and following up on any messages put out looking like the individual or individuals are trying to copy or spread fear in our community,” Brown added.
Biden will outline how he will "continue to use executive action" on guns inBuffalospeech, adviser says
From CNN's Betsy KleinPresident Biden will grieve with theBuffalocommunity when he travels to the site of the grocery store mass shootingthis morning, where he is also expected to make a renewed push for gun safety measures through executive actions.
As for gun safety measures the President will discuss, Geltzer suggested new executive actions could be coming.
“We have a firearms problem in this country. This weekend drove that home, not just inBuffalo, but elsewhere in the country. And so you will hear more from the President about how we will continue to use executive action where we can to try to protect Americans,” Geltzer said, adding that Biden will continue to call on Congress to act.
Pressed on whether Biden would invoke his predecessor in his comments, Geltzer declined to say, but noted, “The President and others in this administration have not hesitated to point to those who can contribute to polarization, to contribute to even what becomes the justification in some quarters for violence that communities should not have descend upon them the way we saw on Saturday.”
He said tackling domestic terrorism more broadly is a “priority” for the administration and said they continue to explore whether it should be considered a federal crime.
These are the 10 victims of the Buffalo shooting
From CNN's Dakin AndoneandAmir VeraTop, left to right: Celestine Chaney, Roberta Drury, Andre Mackniel, Katherine Massey, Margus Morrison. Bottom, left to right: Heyward Patterson, Aaron Salter, Geraldine Talley, Ruth Whitfield, Pearl Young.
Thirteen people were shot— 10 fatally — at a Buffalo, New York, supermarket Saturday in a massacre authorities believe was racially motivated.
Eleven of the victims were Black and two were White, Buffalo Police Commissioner Joseph Gramaglia said Saturday. The victims range in age from 20 to 86, police said. Among them were a former police officer who tried to stop the gunman, the octogenarian mother of the city’s former fire commissioner and a long-term substitute teacher.
Buffalo police identified all of the victims late Sunday. Here are the victims’ names:
- Roberta A. Drury, 32, ofBuffalo
- Margus D. Morrison, 52, ofBuffalo
- Andre Mackniel, 53, of Auburn
- Aaron Salter, 55, of Lockport
- Geraldine Talley, 62, ofBuffalo
- Celestine Chaney, 65 ofBuffalo
- Heyward Patterson, 67, ofBuffalo
- Katherine Massey, 72, ofBuffalo
- Pearl Young, 77, ofBuffalo
- Ruth Whitfield, 86, ofBuffalo
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announced $2.8 million in funding for the victims and their families, according to a statement from her office.
Read more about the victims here.
White House previews Biden's trip to Buffalo to meet with families of the shooting victims
From CNN's Maegan VazquezWhite House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre previewed President Biden’s trip today to Buffalo, New York, to meet with individuals impacted by a recent mass shooting at a grocery store over the weekend.
Jean-Pierre went on to recognize the victims of the shooting and first responders.
“We recognize their lives today and those lost (and affected) by gun violence this weekend in Houston, in Southern California, Milwaukee and communities across the country,” she said. “And we honor the bravery of those in law enforcement who responded quickly and with professionalism in Buffalo and who risk their lives every day to protect and serve their communities.”
She named each of the victims killed in the shooting, recognizing their roles in the community, and describing how they were each remembered by their family members.
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