Lodi News-Sentinel

Gunman gets life in racially motivated Buffalo mass shooting

- Evan Rosen

Emotions reached a boiling point for victims’ families who were in attendance at Wednesday’s sentencing hearing for Buffalo, N.Y., mass shooter Payton Gendron.

Gendron, 19, was sentenced to life in prison, though he was briefly escorted out of the courtroom when a man charged him and had to be restrained by courtroom guards.

The scene unfolded as Barbara Massey, whose sister Katherine died in the shooting, was delivering an emotional victim impact statement.

“My sister Katherine Massey was a great person. Kat didn’t hurt anybody,” she said, before a man dressed in gray clothing lunged at Gendron and police intervened.

“You don’t know what we’re going through,” the man shouted as he was led away, as quoted by The Associated Press via Twitter.

Prior to the statement, Gendron could be seen weeping as family members of the victims read their statements, with one calling him a “cowardly racist.”

After the court hearing resumed, Gendron was sentenced to life in prison without parole for his May 2022 attack on the Tops supermarke­t in Buffalo, which left 10 dead and 3 wounded.

“I’m very sorry for the pain I’ve forced on the victims and their families to suffer through,” Gendron said in a statement that he read aloud to the court.

“I did a terrible thing that day,” Gendron continued. “I shot and killed people because they were Black. Looking back now, I can’t believe I actually did it. I believed what I read online and acted out of hate and now I can’t take it back, but I wish I could. I don’t want anyone to be inspired by me and what I did.”

The teenager wore bullet-resistant armor and a helmet equipped with a livestream­ing camera as he carried out the attack, which was specifical­ly aimed at Black shoppers and workers.

His racist writings were found later in a 180-page manifesto he posted online, where he described himself as a fascist, a white supremacis­t and an antisemite. Gendron expressed in the document that he targeted Buffalo because it had the “highest Black percentage that is close enough to where I live.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States