Assistant district attorney Gary Hackbush, center, helps deputies restrain a man who lunged towards the Payton Gendron during the sentencing of Tops gunman Payton Gendron at Erie County Court in Buffalo, N.Y., Wednesday, Feb 15, 2023. The white supremacist who killed 10 Black people at a Buffalo supermarket was sentenced to life in prison without parole. (Derek Gee/The Buffalo News via AP, Pool)

The sentencing hearing of the man who admitted to killing 10 people in a racist shooting at an upstate New York grocery store erupted in chaos when one of the victim’s family members advanced on the defendant in an apparent attempt to attack him.

Payton Gendron, now 19, was sentenced to life in prison Wednesday for the May 14, 2022, attack at Tops Friendly Market in Buffalo that killed 10 people and wounded three. Gendron, who lived more than 200 miles away in Conklin, near the Pennsylvania border, was apparently motivated by a belief in the so-called “great replacement” conspiracy theory, which alleges that nonwhite people are being brought to the United States to “replace” white people.

Wearing body armor, a tactical-style helmet, and camouflage clothing, Gendron used a high-powered automatic rifle to gun down three people — Roberta Drury, Pearl Young, and Heyward Patterson — outside the store and seven people — Ruth Whitfield, Celestine Chaney, Aaron W. Satler, Jr., Andrew Mackniel, Margus Morrison, Katherine Massey, and Geraldine Talley — inside. All 10 of Gendron’s victims were Black, as were two of the three people he injured with gunfire. He had posted a racist screed online prior to driving more than two hours to carry out the attack, which he livestreamed online as it happened before ultimately surrendering to police.

According to prosecutors, Gendron had apologized only to the sole white person he shot that day. He pleaded guilty in November to all 25 state charges against him.

At Wednesday’s sentencing hearing, prosecutors said they expected 11 people to offer victim impact statements. One of those people was Barbara Massey, sister of Katherine “Kat” Massey.

“If Kat saw you, she probably went into her pocket and give you money, even though you don’t need it,” she said, after describing her sister as a “protector” who would “do anything for anybody, any time.”



Law and Crime

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