My administration will ensure the victims and all those impacted by this weekend’s act of terror receive the support they need.
We will always be there to support the Buffalo community.
For more information on available resources: https://t.co/u49zbOjZy6
—Governor Kathy Hochul (@GovKathyHochul) May 16, 2022
The shooting, perpetrated by a young white man from 18 years identified as Payton S. Gendron, is being investigated as a racist and terrorist attack, after it was found a manifesto in which he apparently claimed that he wanted to kill “all blacks” and, therefore, had decided to perpetrate the massacre in a majority inhabited area mented by citizens of the African-American community.
Of the 13 victims, eleven were black.
“An attack against one of us is an attack against all of us. We must confront white supremacy,” Hochul added.
Gendron, who turned himself in after the shooting, which he broadcast live through a camera attached to the military helmet he wore, is scheduled to appear before a judge next Tuesday.
According to Buffalo Police Commissioner Joseph Gramaglia, Gendron made a “widespread threat” in June of last year when he was in high school for which his teachers reported to the police.
Gramaglia, who did not go into details, added that it was not “a specific threat directed towards a specific place or person.”
Read more:
Author of shooting in Buffalo announced since June that he wanted to cause a massacre and the police investigated him Suspect in Buffalo market shooting pleaded not guilty at arraignment
The FBI investigates the massacre in which they died people in Buffalo as a racist hate crime