Thirteen people between the ages of 20 and 86 were shot dead. According to Buffalo police, 11 were black and 2 were white.
• Buffalo Roberta A. Drury, 32 years old
• Buffalo Margus D. Morrison, 52
• Andre Mackneil, Auburn, NY, 53,
• Aaron Salter, Lockport, NY, 55
• Buffalo Geraldine Tally, 62
• Buffalo Celestine Chaney, 65
• Buffalo Hayward Patterson, 67
• Buffalo Catherine Massey, 72
• Buffalo Pearl Young, 77
• Buffalo’s Ruth Whitfield, 86
• Buffalo’s Zaire Goodman, 20, was treated and released from the hospital.
• Jennifer Warrington, 50, from Tonawanda, NY, was treated and released from the hospital.
• Christopher Braden, 55, in Lackawanna, New York, suffered a non-life-threatening injury.
New York Governor Kathy Hokul has announced $ 2.8 million in funding for the victims and their families, according to a statement from her office.
“The last 24 hours have been traumatic for New Yorkers,” Hokul said in a statement on Sunday. “The world is watching how we get together as New Yorkers to overcome this unimaginable tragedy. My hometown of Buffalo is a good neighbor’s city and New York is good for them. You will be a neighbor. “
According to the statement, the New York State Victim Services Department is in Buffalo throughout the week to help manage funds and help victims and their families receive financial support from the state.
Investigators are also considering a manifest allegedly posted online on Saturday in connection with the shooting investigation, two federal law enforcement officials told CNN. Manifest authors describe themselves as fascists, white supremacists, and anti-Semites.
Details of the victims and their lives beginning to be revealed.
This is what we know about them.
Aaron Salter
The “hero” guard who engaged the suspect but was shot deadly was Aaron Salter, a former Buffalo police lieutenant, the mayor said.
Salter was respected throughout the police station, Brown told CNN’s “New Day Weekend” and worked in a supermarket for several years after his retirement.
Salter is “a hero who tried to protect the people in the store, saved his life, and lost his life in the process,” Brown said.
When a supermarket guard entered the store, he “fired multiple bullets at the suspect,” said Buffalo police commissioner Joseph Gramagria, who was tactical equipment to protect him from the guard’s shootings. I was wearing.
Loose Whitfield
Brown told CNN that 86-year-old Ruth Whitfield, the mother of former Buffalo Fire Director Garnell Whitfield, was also killed.
The mayor saw her son walking on Jefferson Avenue, the road outside the supermarket, and thought Garnell Whitfield was there to help, Brown was a true Bethel Baptist Church on Sunday. I remembered the worshipers of. The mayor turned to the former fire chief for help.
“He said,’Yes, the mayor, but I’m here because I’m looking for my mother,” Brown said.
Ruth Whitfield told the mayor that he was visiting the father of a former commissioner at a nursing home on a daily basis, and she stopped by a supermarket to buy groceries.
“We’re calling her, but she’s not answering her cell phone, and her car is still in the parking lot, and I think she’s one of the victims of this shooting,” Brown said. Said Garnell Whitfield.
His fear was later confirmed, Brown said.
At the same event, Hochul said, “I have to do something about this.”
“I thought I was strong,” she said. “But I heard about our committee member who lost her mother as the mayor devoted her life to saving lives in racism and white supremacist acts. Angry, my friend.”
Pearl Young
Pearl Young, 77, was a substitute teacher and “a true pillar of the community,” her family said in a statement.
According to the statement, “Pearl is a long-term substitute teacher in the Buffalo Public School District and recently worked at the Emerson Hospitality School.”
“If there is one comfort we can take from this tragedy, that mom is in heaven with her dad (her Ollie), dancing and screaming with her heavenly father. You know, “the statement said.
Geraldine Tally
Geraldine Tally, 62, was regularly grocery shopping with her fiance when she was shot and killed on Saturday, her niece Lakesha Chapman told CNN. ..
She said Tally was Chapman’s “Ante Jeri”, her father’s sister, and a wonderful woman.
Chapman lived in Atlanta and had just arrived in Buffalo with his family on Sunday when she talked to CNN on the phone.
Chapman called Tally her “Auntie Geri” and said she was a wonderful woman. She said Tally was her father’s sister.
“She’s sweet, sweet, you know, party life,” Chapman said. “She was always the one who organized the reunion of our family, she was an avid bakery … the mother of two beautiful children.”
“She was just a lover. This hurts because I didn’t meet a stranger,” Chapman, who lives in Atlanta and just arrived in Buffalo with his family on Sunday, told CNN. on the phone.
Chapman said that when the shooting began, Tally was in front of the store and her fiance had orange juice so she was able to escape unharmed.
Five hours had passed before her family learned that she had been killed, Chapman said.
“We are indignant,” she said. “This is clearly not the first racially triggered attack in the United States, but it is the first to hit our home.”
It was “the most numbness and numbness I’ve ever had,” she said.
“She was shopping and this guy came out of the neighborhood to attack because her skin color, zip code, mostly black,” Chapman said. “She was innocent, and that-there is no word to explain it.”
CNN’s Artemis Moshtaghian, David Williams, and Carroll Alvarado contributed to this report.