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One day after he is sentenced on Feb. 15 for the racist mass shooting at Tops, attorneys for Payton Gendron will be in federal court asking a judge to keep him local for the sake of the ongoing federal proceedings.
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A huge police operation in Ontario over child exploitation has resulted in more than 100 people facing charges.As Dan Karpenchuk reports, the province-wide operation was a collaboration between more than two dozen police departments.
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Arson is the suspected cause of an overnight fire at the Compass Care health facility at 1230 Eggert Rd., near Main Street, in Amherst.
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Among those testifying was former Buffalo Fire Commissioner Garnell Whitfield, whose mother Ruth Whitfield was one of the 10 mostly Black people killed May 14 at an East Side Buffalo Tops supermarket.
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Federal law includes a death penalty in certain crimes and there have been executions, while 44 people wait for execution on federal death row.
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The City of Buffalo, still mourning and grieving weeks after a supermarket mass shooting, is marking National Gun Violence Awareness Day by pressing state and federal governments to pass meaningful reforms, and by encouraging the public to pressure their representatives, and even do their part to change some of the culture that has encouraged gun violence to continue.
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The 18-year-old man accused of killing 10 Black people at a Buffalo grocery store on Thursday entered a not guilty plea on charges of domestic terrorism and first-degree murder. WBFO's Michael Mroziak talked with Ailsa Chang, host of NPR's "All Things Considered," about the proceedings.
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The suspect in the May 14 mass shooting in Buffalo was in court Thursday afternoon, facing arraignment on 25 counts, including one count of first degree domestic terrorism. Payton Gendron, appearing with his team of court-appointed attorneys, entered a plea of not guilty and remains held without bail. In addition to the domestic terror charge, he faces 10 counts of first degree murder, 10 counts of second degree murder as a hate crime, three counts of attempted second degree murder as a hate crime and one count of second degree criminal possession of a weapon.
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A handful of Democrats voted against the measure, but it passed with strong support from that side of the aisle. Republicans were opposed to the bill.
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Attorney John Elmore, representing the families of Kat Massey and Andre Mackneil, discusses a potential lawsuit against Remington following the shooting at Tops Market.
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The white 18-year-old man accused of fatally shooting 10 Black people at a Buffalo supermarket was charged Wednesday by a grand jury with domestic terrorism motivated by hate and 10 counts of first-degree murder.
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A former acting supervisor for the Town of Tonawanda Police Department is going to prison for sexually harassing behavior on the job and assaulting three female employees while off-duty.