NY - 10 dead, 3 critical after mass shooting at a Buffalo supermarket, 14 May 2022 *Guilty*

Payton Gendron is likely an injustice collector or grudge hoarder. Injustice collectors feel persecuted as they have paranoid mindset. They are angry at the world and their hatred and anger is taken out one individual(s) or group(s).


Examples of injustice collectors are: Jodi Arias, Betty Broderick, Casey Anthony, Lori Drew, Yoselyn Ortega, Michelle Carter, Gertrude Baniszewski, Theresa Knorr, Pamela Smart, Angela Marinucci, Eliza Baker, Andrew Cunanan, David Berkowitz, Elliot Rodger, Connor Betts, Ahwad Alissa, Eric Harris, Nikolas Cruz, Charles Whitman, Gabriel Wortman, Adam Lanza, Seung-Hui Cho, Andrew Kehoe, Omar Mateen, Stephen Paddock, Anders Breivik, Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel, Timothy McVeigh, Andreas Lubitz, Jim Jones, Osama bin Laden, Abubakar Shekau, and Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
Can anyone explain the the difference between an injustice collector and a narcissist? Just curious. TIA

Injustice collectors are known as grudge holders, grievance collectors, or grudge hoarders. They can be narcissistic and it often occurs. Many injustice collectors are extreme narcissists. Not all injustice collectors are narcissistic. One common characteristic is that they lack empathy.

Injustice collectors are paranoid and feel paranoid. They feel insulted and persecuted. They are consumed by hatred. they are often very easy to anger. Injustice collectors are often jealous and envious of others. They are often have a reputation for being difficult to deal with. They are prone to constant complaining.
 
@KarysBelger
Aaron Salter Jr., the security guard who died a week ago in the racially motivated mass shooting in Buffalo, was three credits shy of finishing a degree in communications at Canisius College. Today, his family will receive a posthumous degree on his behalf.
@WGRZ
 

Attachments

  • 8992430C-F520-4F33-874C-B85F22E8BD41.jpeg
    8992430C-F520-4F33-874C-B85F22E8BD41.jpeg
    130.7 KB · Views: 1

"The family of a Buffalo shooting victim may sue major gun manufacturer Remington, whose headquarters are expected to move to LaGrange, Georgia within four years.

The family has hired two lawyers who are investigating a potential lawsuit. One of them believed the AR-15-style weapon allegedly used in the massacre is designed for military and war, and he believes Remington should have taken more steps to make sure it didn't end up in the wrong hands.

[snip]

If Mackneil's family decides to pursue to the legal challenge, it wouldn't be Remington's first.

The gun manufacturer settled a $73 million lawsuit earlier this year with the families of the Sandy Hook School shooting victims.
..."
 
ADMIN NOTE:

Gun control, like other social justice issues, will never be resolved through discussion at Websleuths. As per The Rules, it is a violation of TOS to do so and members may end up being issued permanent Warning Points for discussing such topics.

Stick to discussing the facts of this case which does NOT include generalized discussion of gun control.
 
In the late 1980s, Katherine “Kat” Massey was tired of the perpetually overgrown lot on state property on her street, so she sent a letter on “Cherry Street Block Club” letterhead to the governor, which led to it being cleaned up.

“She was the mayor in every neighborhood that she lived in,” said U.S. Rep. Brian Higgins, one of several elected officials who joined family, friends and former co-workers inside Pilgrim Missionary Baptist Church for a celebration of her life.

Massey was among the 10 Black people killed May 14

Massey worked for 40 years at the health insurance company Blue Cross Blue Shield, retiring in 2011.

 
The Bills are helping the Buffalo community heal following a grocery store shooting that killed ten people earlier this month, and the team is now handling funeral expenses for the family of one victim.

Bills special teams player Taiwan Jones was told by members of a Buffalo non-profit that there was a family that couldn’t afford the funeral expenses for someone who was killed in the shooting. When Jones found out that the family couldn’t afford the funeral expenses, he and some teammates got a quote from a funeral home and covered the $15,000 bill for the service.

Jones’s gesture is the latest in a string of good deeds from the Bills in the community, who last week had 80 players visit the neighborhood surrounding the Tops grocery store. With the grocery store closed, the players helped establish a food distribution location nearby to help families in the area receive the food they need.

 
Dewitt Lee, III, owner of St. Brian Clothiers, established the space at the Utica Business Center, on E. Utica Street near Main, to provide free suits and ties to those attending the funerals of those killed in the attack. The empty storefront at 11 E. Utica St. will now be turned into the “Men’s Headquarters.”

Because the attack affected the community not only physically, but mentally and emotionally as well, Men’s Headquarters will provide guest speakers, holistic healers, ministers and more, in an effort to heal and support the men of Buffalo in a time of need.

 
Dewitt Lee, III, owner of St. Brian Clothiers, established the space at the Utica Business Center, on E. Utica Street near Main, to provide free suits and ties to those attending the funerals of those killed in the attack. The empty storefront at 11 E. Utica St. will now be turned into the “Men’s Headquarters.”

Because the attack affected the community not only physically, but mentally and emotionally as well, Men’s Headquarters will provide guest speakers, holistic healers, ministers and more, in an effort to heal and support the men of Buffalo in a time of need.

How heartwarming!

What a wonderful community and solidarity!
 
You can't get a much stronger warning sign than being taken to a mental health facility after making a threat of mass murder. So why on earth was he let out into the community again straight away, and nobody thought he was a problem?
 
The Buffalo Police Department posthumously honored Salter with the Medal of Honor and promoted him to Lieutenant.

Salter, who often rode a motorcycle with Buffalo Police as part of a funeral escort Wednesday got one of his own.

“He’s going to get one today that should be out of this world,” Beaty said.

Salter’s friends, many retired Buffalo Police officers say they have set up a fund to give students at Hutch Tech a scholarship every year in his honor.

 

Attachments

  • AA1C52C9-11D8-4B82-9D81-9663BDBADA03.jpeg
    AA1C52C9-11D8-4B82-9D81-9663BDBADA03.jpeg
    133 KB · Views: 0
Authorities believe the former agent – believed to be from Texas – was one of at least six individuals who regularly communicated with accused gunman Payton Gendron in an online chat room where racist hatred was discussed, the two officials said.

 
Authorities believe the former agent – believed to be from Texas – was one of at least six individuals who regularly communicated with accused gunman Payton Gendron in an online chat room where racist hatred was discussed, the two officials said.

Wow…
 
Authorities believe the former agent – believed to be from Texas – was one of at least six individuals who regularly communicated with accused gunman Payton Gendron in an online chat room where racist hatred was discussed, the two officials said.

This is awful.

Federal agents take an oath to: "Defend the Constitution from all enemies, foreign and domestic".

I dont know if that oath, once taken, continues after retirement, but I would not be surprised if it does. There seems to be a concept of 'once an agent, always an agent" in regards to some responsibilities and privaleges of military officers and agents.

If so, this agent needs to face treason charges.

It is one thing for retired military, agents to hold constitutionally protected, but not "politically correct" views regarding a variety of subjects and from a variety of political orientations.

It is an entirely different thing to facilitate domestic terrorism. Giving any kind of encouragement to the perpetrator, then not alerting authorities of even a possible attack of increasing probability should support treason charges for a retired agent.
 
Last edited:
@wgrzMichael
According to online records from the court system, here are the 25 charges included in the indictment against the suspected shooting in the #BuffaloMassacre. In addition to 10 counts of 1st Degree Murder, the grand jury also indicted on a count of Domestic Act of Terror.
@WGRZ
 

Attachments

  • 53221A41-4A26-49DB-A3F7-758A6BF6A0DD.jpeg
    53221A41-4A26-49DB-A3F7-758A6BF6A0DD.jpeg
    108.2 KB · Views: 1
You can't get a much stronger warning sign than being taken to a mental health facility after making a threat of mass murder. So why on earth was he let out into the community again straight away, and nobody thought he was a problem?

I'd have to read more about it, but from the little I saw, it seems this happened last year. The law states that unless someone is an "imminent" threat to themselves or others, they have to be discharged. Also, unless he is diagnosed with a legitimate mental health condition (that you can prove he has in court), he cannot be held. Making threats doesn't qualify since it isn't a mental health condition. A lot of people make threats, but generally, those people are criminals, not mentally ill. Jail is the place for them unless it's the context of a broader mental health condition, such as schizophrenia. It seems this kid belonged in jail rather than a hospital.
 
Maybe threats like his should be taken more seriously as in something like making it a crime, punishable by 6 months' imprisonment?
 
Maybe threats like his should be taken more seriously as in something like making it a crime, punishable by 6 months' imprisonment?

Well, how about juvenile records & school records & health records were more available to LE?

Or part of pre-purchase background checks?

jmho ymmv lrr
 
@AshleyroweWKBW

Buffalo Police Commissioner Joe Gramaglia and Zeneta Everhart, mother of Zaire Goodman who was injured in Buffalo mass shooting, will testify at House Oversight Committee Hearing on Wednesday. Focus of hearing is on gun violence following Buffalo & Uvalde mass shootings.
 

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
160
Guests online
2,113
Total visitors
2,273

Forum statistics

Threads
595,203
Messages
18,021,061
Members
229,599
Latest member
BSteel
Back
Top