Victims of Buffalo shooting include retired cop, anti-gun advocate and a missionary

A retired police officer, the 86-year-old mother of a former fire commissioner, an anti-gun activist and a longtime missionary were among the 10 people shot and killed in Saturday’s racially motivated attack at a Buffalo supermarket.

A total of 13 people were shot, 11 of them Black.

Authorities arrested Payton Gendron, 18, of Conklin, N.Y., in connection with the shooting. A manifesto allegedly written by Gendron describes the Zip code where the supermarket is located as having “the highest Black percentage that is close enough to where I live.”

10 people killed in Buffalo supermarket shooting that targeted Blacks: ‘Pure evil — straight-up racially motived’

Police have identified the victims of the shooting at a Tops Friendly Markets store and notified their families. Their names were released Sunday evening.

Aaron Salter Jr.

Retired cop Salter, 55, was working as a security guard at the Tops supermarket on Saturday and exchanged gunfire with the shooter before being fatally wounded.

Salter, who worked for the Buffalo Police Department for three decades, spent the past four years doing security for Tops. On his LinkedIn page, Salter said it was his “dream” to get “cars to run off of water” through an energy source he discovered.

He previously survived a 1996 encounter with a suspected burglar who had a shotgun, telling The Buffalo News at the time, “I don’t enjoy looking down the barrel of a shotgun, and if it hadn’t been for my partner shooting first, it would have been a golden opportunity to shoot us. My partner probably saved us.”

Aaron Salter Jr.
Aaron Salter Jr.


Aaron Salter Jr.

Ruth Whitfield

The 86-year-old Whitfield was buying food at Tops when the gunfire began, her son Garnell Whitfield, a former Buffalo fire commissioner, told local news station WGRZ.

Before the shooting, she had spent time visiting her 88-year-old husband at a nursing home, according to the station.

“My mom was the consummate mom,” Garnell told The Buffalo News. “My mother was a mother to the motherless. She was a blessing to all of us. She loved God and taught us to do the same thing.”

Pearly Young (left) and Ruth Whitfield in an undated photo.
Pearly Young (left) and Ruth Whitfield in an undated photo.


Pearly Young (left) and Ruth Whitfield in an undated photo.

Pearly Young

The 77-year-old Young was also shopping when she was fatally shot, according to Buffalo native Madison Carter, a reporter for Atlanta news station WXIA-TV.

She described Young in a tweet as a “missionary,” in addition to being a mother and grandmother.

“For 25 years she ran a pantry where every Saturday she fed people in Central Park,” Carter wrote. “Every. Saturday. She loved singing, dancing, & being with family.”

Katherine Massey was one of the victims killed in the supermarket shooting in Buffalo on Saturday.
Katherine Massey was one of the victims killed in the supermarket shooting in Buffalo on Saturday.


Katherine Massey was one of the victims killed in the supermarket shooting in Buffalo on Saturday. (Robert Kirkham/)

Katherine Massey

Massey wrote about the “escalating gun violence in Buffalo” last year in a letter to The Buffalo News, calling for more federal firearm regulations.

A member of the “We Are Women Warriors” community empowerment group, the 72-year-old Massey was vocal about civil rights and education in Buffalo, said Betty Jean Grant, a former legislator in Erie County.

“We lost a voice yesterday,” Grant told The Buffalo News. “We lost a powerful, powerful voice.”

Roberta Drury

Drury, 32, was a Buffalo resident and a regular customer at Tops, her brother said.

“We would like to personally thank the security guard’s family,” brother Christopher Moyer told local news station WIVB, referring to Salter.

Drury, who was adopted, had three siblings, including two brothers. She was reportedly assisting one of the brothers after he underwent a bone marrow transplant.

Celestine Chaney

A single mother with six grandchildren, Chaney, 65, was visiting her sister in Buffalo when she was fatally shot, her son told The New York Times.

Chaney — a retired suit and baseball hat manufacturer — went to Tops with her sibling to buy strawberries to make shortcakes, and her sister hid in a freezer when the shooting began.

“But my mom cannot really walk like she used to,” Wayne Jones told the newspaper. “She basically can’t run.”

Heyward Patterson

Patterson was a “family oriented” and “harmless” Buffalo native who drove others to the supermarket at a discounted price every day, grand-niece Teniqua Clark told The Times.

”That’s how he made his livelihood,” Clark said.

Patterson was fatally shot in the parking lot while helping someone put groceries into their car, Clark said. He was around 60 years old.

Andre Mackneil

The 53-year-old, of Auburn, New York, was in Buffalo on a visit to relatives. Called “just a loving and caring guy” by his cousin Clarissa Alston-McCutcheon, Mackneil was in the supermarket to pick up a surprise birthday cake for his grandson.

Alston-McCutcheon said, “Loved family. Was always there for his family.”

The last two victims were Margus D. Morrison, a Buffalo resident who was 52 years old, and Geraldine Talley, 62, who lived in Buffalo.

With News Wire Services