The dramatic moment came as the sister of victim Katherine Massey addressed the shooter, Payton Gendron, who is expected to get life in prison for the May 14 massacre at Tops Friendly Markets.
BUFFALO, N.Y. — Guards had to remove a 19-year-old white gunman who killed 10 Black people in a racist mass shooting at a Buffalo, New York, grocery from court Wednesday after a man charged toward him during emotional statements from victims’ families.
The dramatic moment came as the sister of victim Katherine Massey addressed the shooter, Payton Gendron, ahead of his sentencing for the May 14 massacre at Tops Friendly Markets.
“You got my family crying. I miss my sister every day,” Barbara Massey told the gunman.
“You killed my sister. I will hurt you so bad. I’m not gonna be nice. Kat was my sister. I want to personally choke you out,” she added.
As Barbara Massey continued to address the shooter, a man in a gray jogging suit ran toward Gendron, who was rushed out of the courtroom.
It was not immediately clear who the man was.
After the tense moment, Erie County Judge Susan Egan said: “I am sure you are all disturbed by the physicality we’ve seen in the courtroom today. I understand that emotion. And I understand that anger. But we cannot have that in the courtroom.”
Victim statements then resumed.
More coverage of the Buffalo grocery mass shooting
- Buffalo gunman pleads guilty to murder and hate crime charges
- Suspect in racist Buffalo mass shooting indicted on murder, terrorism and hate crime charges
- Buffalo’s Tops, where racist gunman attacked, is a lifeline in a Black community’s food desert
- Tops employees recount horror of Buffalo shooting as some remain determined to reopen for community
- 10 killed, 3 wounded in racist shooting at Buffalo supermarket, officials say
Authorities said that Gendron was dressed in tactical gear when he unleashed a flurry of bullets in the parking lot of Tops. He streamed the attack on the social media platform Twitch before it was taken down.
He fatally shot three people and wounded one in the parking lot before entering the store, where he was confronted by Tops security guard Aaron Salter. Officials said Salter’s rounds didn’t appear to penetrate Gendron’s ballistic gear, and the gunman shot and killed the security guard before shooting others.
A document Gendron posted online claimed he had been radicalized and appeared to adhere to the false replacement theory, which has been used by white killers to justify violence against Muslims, Latinos and Jewish people around the world.
Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown said that Gendron lived hours away and drove to Buffalo to carry out the crime. The document stated that he chose Buffalo because it was the city with the most Black residents closest to his home. Thirteen people, including 11 Black people and two white people, were shot during the massacre.
Gendron also faces 27 federal counts including murder, discharging a firearm and hate crimes. If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of life in prison or the death penalty. The attorney general will decide whether to seek the death penalty, the Justice Department said in a news release. He pleaded not guilty in July.
Tops Friendly Markets reopened in July after undergoing extensive renovations.