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WEBVTT AS MY OFFICE DURING TO PROCESS. I WILL GIVE YOU THE NAMES OF THE VICTIMS NOW. THESE WILL BE AVAILABLE TO YOU AFTERWARDS. 75-YEAR-OLD JOYCE FEINBERG, 65-YEAR-OLD RICHARD GOTTFRIED, 97-YEAR-OLD ROSE BALLINGER, 66-YEAR-OLD JERRY RUBINO. 69-YEAR-OLD CECIL ROSENTHAL, 54-YEAR-OLD DAVID ROSENTHAL DAVID AND CECIL WERE BROTHERS. 84-YEAR-OLD BERNICE SIMON, 86-YEAR-OLD SILVA SIMON, BERNICE N SILVA WERE HUSBAND AND WIFE. 71-YEAR-OLD DANIEL STEIN, 88-YEAR-OLD MELVIN WAX, AND 61-YEAR-OLD URBAN JUNG. WE ARE DOING EVERYTHING IN OUR POWER TO COMPLETE THE PROCESS IN A WAY THAT HONORS BOTH CIVIL AND RELIGIOUS LAW. THE CAUSE AND MANNER WILL BE RELEASED TO THE IMMEDIATE AS DETERMINED. IT IS NOT ESTABLISHED A TIMEFRAME FOR THIS. ONLY IN THE INITIAL PROCESS. FINALLY, IN TALKING WITH THE FAMILIES OF LAST NIGHT, THEY ARE IN SHOCK AND GRIEVING AS YOU CAN IMAGINE. MY COLLEAGUES AND I ASK YOU TO PLEASE BE RESPECTFUL OF THE NEEDS OF THE TIME AND TRAGEDY. IN THE COMING WEEKS THEY WILL NEED TO K

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The suspect in the mass shooting at a Pittsburgh synagogue expressed hatred of Jews during the rampage and told officers afterward that Jewish people were committing genocide and he wanted them all to die, according to charging documents made public Sunday.Robert Gregory Bowers, 46, killed eight men and three women inside the Tree of Life Synagogue on Saturday during worship services before a tactical police team tracked him down and shot him, police said in an affidavit, which contained some unreported details on the shooting and the police response.The shooting began just before 10 a.m. at the synagogue in the city’s Squirrel Hill neighborhood. Squirrel Hill, just east of downtown Pittsburgh, is the hub of the city's Jewish community.Mayor Bill Peduto called it the “darkest day of Pittsburgh’s history.”A GoFundMe page set up to directly support the Tree of Life congregation had raised over $470,000 as of Sunday evening.The victims range in age from 54 to 97. On Sunday, officials released the names, ages and hometowns of the 11 people who lost their lives in the shooting: Joyce Feinberg, 75, Oakland, Pennsylvania Richard Gottfried, 65, Ross Township, PennsylvaniaRose Mallinger, 97, Squirrel Hill, PennsylvaniaJerry Rabinowitz, 66, Edgewood, PennsylvaniaCecil Rosenthal, 59, Squirrel Hill, Pennsylvania (brother of David)David Rosenthal, 54, Squirrel Hill, Pennsylvania (brother of Cecil)Bernice Simon, 84, Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania (wife of Sylvan)Sylvan Simon, 86, Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania (husband of Bernice)Daniel Stein, 71, Squirrel Hill, PennsylvaniaMelvin Wax, 88, Squirrel Hill, PennsylvaniaIrving Younger, 69, Mount Washington, PennsylvaniaWHO WERE THE VICTIMS?University of Pittsburgh Medical Center said Dr. Jerry Rabinowitz was "one of the kindest physicians and human beings in our community."Law Claus, a former Allegheny County deputy district attorney, described him as "more than just a physician for me and my family; for over three decades he was truly a trusted confidant and healer who could always be counted upon to provide sage advice whenever he was consulted on medical matters, usually providing that advice with a touch of genuine humor. He had a truly uplifting demeanor, and as a practicing physician he was among the very best."Daniel Stein was a visible member of the city's Jewish community as a leader in the New Light Congregation. The co-president of the area's Hadassah chapter, Nancy Shuman, says Judaism was very important to Stein, whose wife, Sharyn, is the chapter's membership vice president.Shuman says, "Both of them were very passionate about the community and Israel."Stein's nephew Steven Halle told the Tribune-Review that his uncle "was always willing to help anybody." Halle says Stein "was somebody that everybody liked."Joyce Fienberg and her late husband, Stephen, were intellectual powerhouses, but those who knew them say they were the kind of people who used that intellect to help others.Fienberg spent most of her career at the University of Pittsburgh's Learning Research and Development Center. She retired in 2008 from her job as a researcher looking at learning in the classroom and in museums. She worked on several projects, including studying the practices of highly effective teachers.Dr. Gaea Leinhardt, who was Fienberg's research partner for decades, says, "Joyce was a magnificent, generous, caring, and profoundly thoughtful human being."Melvin Wax was remembered as "a sweet, sweet guy" by fellow members of New Light Congregation, which rented space in Tree of Life Synagogue. The retired accountant was said to be unfailingly generous and a pillar of the congregation, filling just about every role except cantor."He was such a kind, kind person," said Myron Snider, chairman of the congregation's cemetery committee. "When my daughters were younger, they would go to him, and he would help them with their federal income tax every year. Never charged them."He and I used to, at the end of services, try to tell a joke or two to each other. Most of the time they were clean jokes. Most of the time. I won't say all the time. But most of the time."THE PATIENTSOn Sunday night, UPMC said it still was treating four patients: a 40-year-old male police officer in critical condition, a 61-year-old woman in stable condition, a 70-year-old man in critical condition and a 55-year-old man in stable condition."Squirrel Hill is the most diverse neighborhood in all of Western Pennsylvania. People choose to live there because of the diversity of the community," Mayor Bill Peduto said. "The Jewish community is the backbone. It is part of the fabric of Pittsburgh. And we will be there — in all communities — to support our friends in the Jewish community."We have been knocked down before, and have always been able to stand back up because we worked together."THE SUSPECTRobert Bowers, 46, of Baldwin, is charged with federal murder and hate crime counts, along with state charges. Authorities said he killed the eight men and three women during worship services Saturday before a SWAT team shot and took him into custody.FBI Special Agent in Charge Robert Jones commended police officers for their bravery in entering the synagogue and subduing Bowers, saying that there was "a strong possibility of additional violence" had the gunman been able to leave the building.Bowers is scheduled for his first court appearance Monday, U.S. Attorney Scott Brady said.Brady said the distinction between a hate crime and domestic terrorism is that a "hate crime is where an individual is animated by a hatred or certain animus toward a person of a certain ethnicity or religious faith, and if it becomes domestic terrorism where there is an ideology that that person is then also trying to propagate through violence. So we continue to see where that line is. But for now, at this place in our investigation, we're treating it as a hate crime and charge it as such."The Associated Press and CNN contributed to this report.