The Columbus Dispatch

VP attends last funeral for Buffalo victims

- Susan Haigh

Saturday marked the last funeral for victims of an alleged racially motivated attack on Black people at a Buffalo, New York, supermarke­t, with a service that became a call to action and an emotional plea to end the hate and violence that has wracked the nation in pain.

The funeral for 86-year-old Ruth Whitfield – the oldest of the 10 people who were killed – included a speech by Vice President Kamala Harris, who attended the service at Mount Olive Baptist Church in Buffalo. She addressed mourners at the insistence of the Rev. Al Sharpton, and said this is a moment in time for “all good people” to stand up to the injustice that happened at the Tops Friendly Market on May 14, as well as the Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, last week and other mass shootings.

“We will not allow small people to create fear in our community,” she said. “We will not be afraid to stand up for what’s right, to speak truth even when it may be difficult to hear and speak.”

Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who delivered a fiery tribute to Whitfield at the beginning of the funeral service, called for all “accomplice­s” who aided and abetted “this monster” who opened fire in the supermarke­t to be held accountabl­e, from the gun manufactur­ers and distributo­rs to the parents of the suspect.

Crump said those who “instructed and radicalize­d this young, insecure individual” should also be held to account for taking Whitfield from her family and the Buffalo community. He called her “one of the most angelic figures that we have ever known.”

“It is a sin that this young depraved man, not a boy, went and killed Ruth Whitfield and the ‘Buffalo 10,’ ” Crump said, referring to the victims.

Whitfield had been inside the supermarke­t after visiting her husband of 68 years in a nursing home when a gunman identified by police as 18year-old Payton Gendron began the deadly onslaught.

In all, 13 people were shot in the attack which federal authoritie­s are investigat­ing as a hate crime. Three people survived.

Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff visited a memorial outside the Tops Friendly Market after the funeral. The vice president laid flowers, and the pair paused to pray for several minutes.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP ?? Vice President Kamala Harris and husband Doug Emhoff visit a memorial near the site of the supermarke­t shooting in Buffalo, N.Y.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP Vice President Kamala Harris and husband Doug Emhoff visit a memorial near the site of the supermarke­t shooting in Buffalo, N.Y.

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