The Herald (South Africa)

Suspect in massacre visited Buffalo in March

● Teen’s past, meticulous research point to carefully planned attack

-

The teenager accused of the deadly mass shooting in Buffalo, New York, visited the city in March and the day before the rampage, police said, as public figures decried the suspect’s racist ideology and the spread of white supremacy.

The FBI said Payton Gendron, 18, who is white, committed an act of “racially motivated violent extremism” when he opened fire with a semi-automatic rifle on Saturday at the Tops Friendly Market in a predominan­tly African-American neighbourh­ood of Buffalo.

Eleven of the 13 people struck by gunfire were black.

Ten of the victims — nine shoppers and a retired police officer working as a store security guard who exchanged gunfire with the assailant — were killed in the rampage, part of which the gunman livestream­ed on a social media platform.

Gendron, who police said surrendere­d to officers confrontin­g him inside the store after he held the gun barrel to his own chin, has been jailed without bail on a charge of first-degree murder.

He pleaded not guilty. Investigat­ors have said they are searching through phone records, computers and online postings, as well as physical evidence, as new details about Gendron’s past and meticulous planning emerged.

The Washington Post reported on Monday that Gendron, a resident of Conklin, New York, near the Pennsylvan­ia border, roughly 320km from Buffalo, made an “apparent reconnaiss­ance” trip to the Tops store in March to map out its layout and location in preparatio­n for the attack.

He was confronted there by a store security guard who thought he looked suspicious, according to the Post, citing an account of the visit the newspaper said was posted online by an individual identifyin­g himself as Gendron.

Buffalo police commission­er Joseph Gramaglia said at a news briefing on Monday the suspect had visited Buffalo in early March, but he declined to confirm other details of the probe reported by the Washington Post or other news media.

Authoritie­s said the suspect returned to Buffalo on Friday to undertake a final “reconnaiss­ance” of the area.

Gendron came to the attention of local law enforcemen­t last June, when police detained him after he made a threat at his high school, Gramaglia told reporters said.

He was given a mental health evaluation and released after 36 hours.

The Post said the trip to Buffalo in March was detailed in messages compiled in a 589page document posted on an internet messaging platform but since removed.

The document referred to the Tops store as “attack area 1” and described two other nearby locations as targets to “shoot all blacks”, the Post reported. The writer said he counted 53 black people in the Tops at the time of his visit, according to the account.

Police confirmed they were investigat­ing Gendron’s online postings, including a 180-page manifesto he is believed to have written outlining the “Great Replacemen­t Theory” ,a racist conspiracy notion that white people are being replaced by minorities in the US and elsewhere.

Experts say the trend of mostly young white men being inspired by previous racist gun massacres is on the rise, citing such incidents as the 2015 attack at a black church in Charleston, South Carolina, a 2018 shooting at a synagogue in Pittsburgh, and a 2019 rampage at a Walmart in a Hispanic neighbourh­ood of El Paso.

US representa­tive Liz Cheney took to Twitter on Monday to call on fellow Republican­s to reject white supremacy, saying the political rhetoric of her party’s leaders in the House of Representa­tives has “enabled white nationalis­m, white supremacy, and anti-Semitism”.

President Joe Biden and his wife, Jill, planned to visit Buffalo yesterday.

At a separate news conference on Monday, civil rights attorney Ben Crump called on officials to define Saturday’s attack as an “act of domestic terrorism”.

“We can’t sugarcoat it, we can’t try to explain it away talking about mental illness,” Crump said, surrounded by the weeping family of Ruth Whitfield, 86, who was among those slain.

 ?? Picture:BRENDAN MCDERMID/REUTERS ?? GRIEVING: A woman lights a candle at a memorial for victims at the scene of a shooting at a Tops supermarke­t in Buffalo, New York
Picture:BRENDAN MCDERMID/REUTERS GRIEVING: A woman lights a candle at a memorial for victims at the scene of a shooting at a Tops supermarke­t in Buffalo, New York

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa