Friends and family were mourning the loss of 10 people who were killed Saturday in Buffalo, New York, after a gunman opened fire at a busy supermarket in what the FBI was investigating as a hate crime and racially motivated shooting.

Thirteen people were shot Saturday afternoon at a Tops Friendly Markets store in a  historic neighborhood on the city’s near East Side. Eleven of the people shot were Black and two were white, police have said. 

Authorities released the names of the victims Sunday evening, among them a security guard hailed as a “hero” for trying to stop the gunman and a deacon who often drove shoppers home. Their ages range from 32 to 86 years old. 

Here’s what we know about the victims:

Aaron Salter Jr.

Salter Jr., 55, was a retired police lieutenant with the Buffalo Police Department who was working as a security guard at the Tops store when the shooting occurred, Buffalo Police Commissioner Joseph Gramaglia said. 

Salter, of Lockport, New York, fired multiple shots, which struck the gunman, who was wearing body armor. The gunman returned fire, killing Salter, police said. 

Gramaglia described Salter as a “beloved” security guard and “a hero in our eyes” for his actions during the shooting.

“He was a hero who tried to protect people in the store,” Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown told CNN on Sunday.

Ruth Whitfield

Whitfield, 86, was shopping at the Tops store when she was shot and killed, her son, Garnell W. Whitfield, told The Buffalo News. She was stopping for groceries after visiting her husband at a nursing home.

“My mom was the consummate mom. 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,” Garnell Whitfield, who is a retired Buffalo Fire Commissioner, told the Buffalo News.