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Recent shooting in buffalo
Recent shooting in buffalo




recent shooting in buffalo

Jeter says as soon as Hudson went around the corner in her car, that he "smashed into the front of her car and got out of the car with a shotgun, shot her and pulled off." Jeter says her mother asked Hudson why she was putting on the vest, and Hudson responded, "because mom he's going to kill me you don't understand." Hudson's mother says Keaira went so far as to wear a bulletproof vest before leaving the house. Hudson's family members tell 7 News that she left the house Wednesday morning to drop her three children off at school. Hudson, unfortunately, never made it to court or work Wednesday morning. "She's been staying at my mom's house for the last couple of days and she was going to go to court today because he was trying to get custody," Jeter said. Jeter says her sister was staying with their mother because she feared for her life.

#RECENT SHOOTING IN BUFFALO PASSWORD#

I've been with her going to police stations, she's been texting me, sending me videos, giving me her phone password just in case," Jeter said. Hudson's sister, Montaysha Jeter, says her sister posted a disturbing video of her being beaten by her husband on social media. The mother, 40-year-old Keaira Hudson, was in an abusive marriage with her husband according to her family members. (WKBW) - A mother of three children is dead after being shot in her SUV near Shawnee and Richlawn Avenues Wednesday morning. Replacement theory talking points have repeatedly been shared on Fox News in recent years, particularly from primetime host Tucker Carlson.Ĭarlson, one of the most popular voices on the right, has argued Democratic lawmakers are purposefully "importing a brand new electorate" with "more obedient voters from the Third World" intended to "dilute the political power" of Americans.įox News has said Carlson was not endorsing "white replacement" theory and was instead commenting on voting rights, but his segments have been embraced by white supremacists.BUFFALO, N.Y. The "Great Replacement" theory was once limited to white supremacists but has become increasingly mainstream, according to the ADL. Two years prior, in 2017, white supremacists participating in the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, were captured chanting "You will not replace us" and "Jews will not replace us." At the same rally, an avowed white supremacist drove his car into a group of anti-racism protesters, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer. The manifesto also cited the "Great Replacement" theory and railed against a "Hispanic invasion" of the US. Officials said the 21-year-old suspect had written a manifesto that praised the Christchurch attacker. Later that year, another gunman shot and killed 23 people in a Walmart in El Paso, Texas. He said it could result in the "complete racial and cultural replacement of the European people." That gunman's manifesto was called "The Great Replacement" and focused on his concern that white European society would be overrun by immigrants from Muslim and African countries. The Christchurch mosque attacks were also inspired by the white supremacist replacement theory, according to the Anti-Defamation League. The manifesto indicated the gunman was inspired by other mass shooters, including a man who killed nine Black church members during a Bible study session in South Carolina in 2015, and another who killed 51 people at mosques in New Zealand in 2019. The manifesto belonging to the suspect contained racist and antisemitic claims, outlined plans to kill Black people, and repeatedly referenced replacement theory and concerns about the elimination of the white race, a federal official confirmed to The New York Times.Īccording to the manifesto, the location for the shooting was chosen because it had the highest percentage of Black residents near the gunman's home, which was located hours away from the crime scene, authorities said. Account icon An icon in the shape of a person's head and shoulders.






Recent shooting in buffalo