2010 City Grill shooting | |
---|---|
City Grill Massacre | |
Location | City Grill, Downtown Buffalo, New York |
Date | August 14, 2010 2:30 AM (UTC−05:00) |
Attack type | Mass shooting |
Weapon | 9×19mm Parabellum handgun [1] |
Deaths | 5 [a] |
Injured | 3 [b] |
Perpetrator | Riccardo McCray |
Motive | Possibly gang related |
Verdict | Life without the possibility of parole |
Charges | Three counts of first degree murder Two counts of attempted murder Criminal possession of a weapon [2] |
The 2010 City Grill shooting, also known colloquially the City Grill Massacre was a mass shooting that occurred on August 14, 2010, at the City Grill restaurant in downtown Buffalo, New York located on main street. It was the deadliest shooting in Buffalo before the Tops supermarket shooting 12 years later. [3]
On the night of August 14, 2010, at approximately 2:30 AM, the shooter, 23-year-old Riccardo McCray, entered the building where a party was being hosted by one of the victims for their first wedding anniversary where he then shot off rounds and killed the victims execution-style. [4] The shooting only lasted under a quarter of a minute with 10 shots being fired over the course of around 17 seconds. [5] One of the victims was the bridegroom who was attending the party, McCray later fled the scene after around 100 guests of the party. There was no initial presumption of any intentions, including ideological, and was called a random killing at first. [6] Though later sources show that there was a confrontation between McCray and rival gang members, [7] due to this confrontation between the perpetrator and one of the victims, the management of the building told people to leave and attempted to shut down the building for the remainder of the night before the shooting occurred. [8] After management failed to remove everyone from the building, McCray started firing shots and killed 4 people and injure another 4 during that attack. One of the injured was in critical condition, three were identified directly on the scene as 26-year-old Willie McCaa III, 27-year-old Shawnita McNeil, and 32-year-old Tiffany Wilhite. [9] One of the victims later died in the hospital she was transferred to after the shooting. [10]
Due to the suspect fleeing, the Buffalo Police Department arrested 25-year-old Keith Johnson and charged him with 4 counts of second degree murder though the Buffalo police did not have evidence or could prove that Johnson had any association with the fight or any confrontation that happened prior to the shooting that occurred. [11] Though, a day after the arrest, Erie County District Attorney Frank Sedita III alerted the judge on the case about new evidence, CCTV footage, that showed the physical appearance of the actual perpetrator including race, height, gender, and general physique in which led to the charges of Keith Johnson being dropped entirely. [12] [13] After Johnson was released with all charges dropped, a manhunt ensued looking for the true perpetrator which lasted for 10 days. [14] Buffalo police also hypothesized that there was a second perpetrator to the attack. [10] A fundraiser was created by the funeral homes of the victims which included the local Buffalo community and religious leaders that promised to divide the funds among the families victims if the perpetrator turned themself in, the reverend Darius Pridgen of the Buffalo True Bethel Baptist Church started the fundraiser with $4,000 during services in honor of the two victims, Shawnita McNeil and her 32-year-old cousin, Tiffany Wilhite, though, other pastors, business owners, and members of the community donated to the cause and led the fund to raise up to $20,000, which was promised to the victims families. [15] Around 11 days after the shooting, the perpetrator turned himself in to the Buffalo police. [16] After McCray turned himself in to the Buffalo police, he was placed under the custody of the Buffalo police until he was set to be put to trial which he would appear at court in October 2010 with the judge assigned to the case giving him a hearing in November 2010. [17] In March, 2011, jury selection started in Buffalo with the case of McCray for both the trial of his first degree murder charges. [18] A month later after jury selection in April 2011, the jury found Riccardo McCray guilty on three counts of first-degree murder, two counts of attempted murder and weapons possession. [19] He would be sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, though as he was sentenced, McCray continued to plead his innocence to the court and to the families that attended the trial. [20] The attorneys of McCray stated that there were more than one shooters according to the CCTV footage, and McCray confirmed this by stating there will multiple shots from different people according to an interview done by WIVB-TV and McCray. [21] Contrary to what the attorneys of McCray and McCray himself stated, eyewitnesses of the attack state that there was only one shooter and described him as a dark-complexioned African American at about 5 foot 7, matching the description of McCray. [22] Around a month later, a relative to McCray, Ahmen R. Lester, was murdered by the East Ferry Gang in Buffalo at the 1000 block of East Ferry street in retaliation for the shooting which led authorities to believe that there was gang motivation as the identities of McCray and the man he fist fought came out through CCTV footage were rival gang members with McCray being a member of the Schuele Boys and the man he fought being a member of the East Ferry Gang. [23] This revealed McCray's gang association, with his street name being "Murder Matt" [24] or just simply "murder". [25]
In 2014, a dispute over the reward money collected by Darius Pridgen and local community activist Darnell Jackson who assisted in the arrest of McCray led to Jackson suing Pridgen for, allegedly, leaving Jackson out of the collected money. [26]
In 2017, one of the injured victims of the shooting, 37-year-old Demario Vass, succumbed to his injuries 7 years later after being shot in the head by McCray which left him paralyzed from the neck down and only able to communicate through blinking and grunting noises, he had assisted care from his family members including his mother where he spent most of his time in the hospital staring at the 72-inch television that was provided for him in which, most of the time, he would watch NFL games of the Buffalo Bills and NBA games. [27] He was officially deemed deceased on October 17, 2017. [28]
The Railroad Museum of the Niagara Frontier is located in the 1922-built Erie Railroad freight depot in North Tonawanda, New York. Operated by the Niagara Frontier Chapter of the National Railroad Historical Society, its mission is to preserve the railroad history of the Buffalo, New York area, once the railroad hub of America. The Museum is owned by the Niagara Frontier Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society.
A mass shooting is a violent crime in which one or more attackers use a firearm to kill or injure multiple individuals in rapid succession. There is no widely accepted specific definition, and different organizations tracking such incidents use different criteria. Mass shootings are generally characterized by the targeting of victims in a non-combat setting, and thus the term generally excludes gang violence, shootouts and warfare. Mass shootings may be done for personal or psychological reasons, such as by individuals who are deeply disgruntled, seeking notoriety, or are intensely angry at a perceived grievance; though they have also been used as a terrorist tactic, such as when members of an ethnic or religious minority are targeted. The perpetrator of an ongoing mass shooting may be referred to as an active shooter.
Mass shootings are incidents involving multiple victims of firearm related violence. Definitions vary, with no single, broadly accepted definition. One definition is an act of public firearm violence—excluding gang killings, domestic violence, or terrorist acts sponsored by an organization—in which a shooter kills at least four victims.
Jerry Services Inc. is an American company based in Palo Alto, California. Jerry's mobile app offers vehicle and home insurance comparisons, among other services.
On May 14, 2022, a mass shooting occurred in Buffalo, New York, United States, at a Tops Friendly Markets supermarket in the East Side neighborhood. Ten people, all of whom were African Americans, were murdered and three, one of whom was African American, were injured. The shooter, identified as 18-year-old Payton S. Gendron, livestreamed part of the attack on Twitch, but the livestream was shut down by the service in under two minutes. Gendron was taken into custody and charged with first-degree murder. He formally entered a plea of "not guilty" on May 19, 2022. On November 28, 2022, Gendron pleaded guilty to all state charges in the shooting, including murder, domestic terrorism, and hate crimes. On February 15, 2023, Gendron was sentenced to 11 concurrent life sentences without the possibility of parole; as of that date, federal charges are still ongoing, and the federal prosecution also expressed their intention to seek the death penalty.
Temple Beth Tzedek is a Conservative Jewish congregation and synagogue, located in Getzville, in Western New York, in the state of New York, in the United States.
Smokin Joes Trading Post is an American cigarette manufacturer and retailer headquartered in Niagara County, New York. It was founded by Joe Anderson in 1985.
Lyndon B. Johnson Apartments also known as LBJ Apartments is a 10-story apartment building that was built in 1973 in Buffalo, New York and is currently a senior apartment center. The building is currently owned by the Buffalo Municipal Housing Authority.
Genesee Building/Hyatt Regency Hotel is a 15-story tall hotel building in Buffalo, New York that was built as the Hyatt Regency Hotel in 1922 by architects E.B. Green and William S. Wicks.
Bailey Boys is a street gang based in Buffalo, New York in the Kensington, Buffalo and surrounding neighborhoods and was established around 2011. The gang is known for crimes of murder, robbery, and many different types of racketeering including drug trafficking.
Fruit Belt Gang also known as the Fruit Belt Posse, is a street gang based in Buffalo, New York in the Fruit Belt area and is the direct opposition to the Central Park Gang.
CBL/BFL, also known by the full name Cash Been Long / Brothers For Life, is an American gang based in Buffalo, New York and was established in the Towne Gardens Housing Complex located in Willert Park in 2009.
10th Street Gang also known as 1015 and MOB is a street gang located in Buffalo, New York and established themselves between Niagara Street and Richmond Avenue and Auburn Avenue and North and Carolina streets in Grant Ferry of the Upper West Side.
LRGP, LRGP Crew, also known by its full name being Lombard, Rother, Gibson, and Playter, is/was a gang based in Buffalo, New York in the Broadway-Fillmore area of the city and is the direct opposition to the Bailey Boys.
7th Street Gang was a gang based in Buffalo, New York, specifically the West Side of the city. The gang participated in the illegal drug trade of cocaine, heroin, and other narcotics and has participated in violence in the city.
31 Gang is a street gang based in East Buffalo, New York, that has small amounts of territory in Willert Park and Broadway-Fillmore.
Schuele Boys is a street gang based in Buffalo, New York, specifically East Side, Buffalo, in the areas of Grider and outskirt of Genessee-Moselle.