Buffalo shooting: Broome County 18-year-old charged, more details emerge about him
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Buffalo, N.Y. — A Broome County 18-year-old who drove to a Buffalo supermarket and fatally shot 10 people Saturday afternoon has been charged with murder, the Erie County DA said.
Payton Gendron, of Conklin, was arraigned just before 8 p.m. and charged with first-degree murder, Erie County District Attorney John J. Flynn said Saturday night. If convicted he could face life in prison with no parole, the highest punishment allowed in New York State, the DA said.
“I understand my charges,” Gendron said in court, according to News 4 Buffalo. Gendron pleaded not guilty to the charges, according to the DA.
Gendron was a student at SUNY Broome Community College, near Binghamton, but he is no longer studying there, the Buffalo News reported Saturday night. A college spokeswoman did not elaborate on when Gendron attended the school nor when and why he left, the News reported.
Gendron has been investigated by law enforcement before.
In June 2021, police in Broome County were called by high school officials who told them Gendron had threatened violence in comments made to fellow students, the News reported.
“A school official reported that this very troubled young man had made statements indicating that he wanted to do a shooting, either at a graduation ceremony, or sometime after,” the same government official familiar with the case told the News.
State Police were sent to investigate and Gendron, under a section of state mental health laws, was referred for a mental health evaluation and counseling, the official told the News.
The Buffalo shooting is also being investigated as a hate crime and Gendron could also face additional terrorism charges, Flynn said.
Stephen Belongia, who heads a Buffalo-area branch of the FBI, said that agency is investigating this “both as a hate crime and racially motivated violent extremism.”
Gov. Kathy Hochel said in a news conference Saturday night in Buffalo, the state’s Hate Crime Task Force will also be investigating. She condemned social media platforms after reports that Gendron was very active with hate speech and that he livestreamed Saturday’s mass shooting.
Gendron was held without bail and is scheduled to appear back in court for a felony hearing within five days, Flynn said.
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Staff writer James McClendon covers breaking news, crime and public safety. Have a tip, a story idea, a question or a comment? Reach him at 914-204-2815 or jmcclendon@syracuse.com.
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