The Guardian (USA)

US seeks death penalty for Buffalo shooter who killed 10 at supermarke­t

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Federal prosecutor­s will seek the death penalty for the white supremacis­t who killed 10 Black people at a Buffalo supermarke­t in May 2022.

The US Department of Justice has opted to ask for capital punishment for Payton Gendron, 20, for federal hate crimes, according to a new court filing. He was 19 when he carried out a racist, murderous attack on shoppers in a majority Black area, devastatin­g the upstate New York community.

He was originally sentenced to life in prison last February, after a sentencing hearing at which he was obliged to listen to relatives of his victims express their pain and rage.

The sentencing hearing for Payton Gendron was disrupted when he was charged at by a man in the audience who was quickly restrained.

Gendron, whose hatred was fueled by racist conspiracy theories he encountere­d online, pleaded guilty in November 2022 to state charges of crimes including murder and domestic terrorism motivated by hate, a charge that carried an automatic life sentence.

New York does not have capital punishment, but the justice department had the option of seeking the death penalty in a separate federal hate crimes case. Gendron had promised to plead guilty in that case if prosecutor­s agreed not to seek the death penalty.

In a notice announcing the decision to seek the death penalty, Trini Ross, the US attorney for western New York, wrote that Gendron had selected the supermarke­t “in order to maximize the number of Black victims”.

The notice cited a range of factors for the decision, including the substantia­l planning leading to the shooting and the decision to target at least one victim who was “particular­ly vulnerable due to old age and infirmity”.

Genron did not appear at a status conference held in his case on Friday afternoon following news of the filing.

Relatives of the victims had expressed mixed views on whether they thought federal prosecutor­s should pursue the death penalty. After meeting with prosecutor­s hours before a Friday hearing in the case, one of the relatives, Mark Talley, shared his thoughts.

“I’m not necessaril­y disappoint­ed in the decision … It would have satisfied me more knowing he would have spent the rest of his life in prison being surrounded by the population of people he tried to kill,” said Talley, whose 63-yearold mother Geraldine Talley was killed.

The justice department has made federal death penalty cases a rarity since the election of Joe Biden, a Democrat who opposes capital punishment.

This is the first time Merrick Garland, the US attorney general, has authorized a new pursuit of the death penalty. Under his leadership, the justice department has permitted the continuati­on of two capital prosecutio­ns and withdrawn from pursuing death in more than two dozen cases.

Garland instituted a moratorium on federal executions in 2021 pending a review of procedures. Although the moratorium does not prevent prosecutor­s from seeking death sentences, the justice department has done so sparingly.

At the time of the supermarke­t shooting Buffalo, an old rust belt city that sits on Lake Erie on the US-Canadian border, was the sixth-most segregated city and the third poorest in the country.

Black people account for 34% of its population of 255,000. Nearly threequart­ers of them live on the city’s east side, according to a 2021 report by the University of Buffalo Center for Urban Studies.

 ?? ?? A man visits a memorial by the supermarke­t where a shooter killed 10 people in Buffalo, New York, on 20 May 2022. Photograph: Lindsay Dedario/Reuters
A man visits a memorial by the supermarke­t where a shooter killed 10 people in Buffalo, New York, on 20 May 2022. Photograph: Lindsay Dedario/Reuters

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