President Donald Trump made a controversial visit to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania just days after a gunman entered a synagogue there and murdered 11 worshippers.
The president was met with hundreds of protestors, with the trip coming as the community mourned their lost loved ones, and just as burials began.
The attack on Saturday has sparked a national conversation around the president's rhetoric, and Jewish leaders have suggested that the president has not been strong enough in denouncing anti-semitism in the United States as president. At least one mourning family has declined an invitation to meet with the president, and the mayor of the city has asked that Mr Trump not come to the city.
The president and his allies, meanwhile, have pushed back on the notion that he in any way fosters an environment that is sympathetic or allowing of hate based upon religion and race.
Read events from the visit as they happened below
In Squirrel Hill, Barry Werber, 76, who said he survived the massacre by hiding in a dark storage closet as the gunman rampaged through the building, said he hoped Trump wouldn't visit, noting that the president has embraced the politically fraught label of "nationalist." Werber said the Nazis were nationalists.
"It's part of his program to instigate his base," Werber said, and "bigots are coming out of the woodwork."
A funeral was set to begin at noon Tuesday for Cecil and David Rosenthal, who were both in their 50s.
They were among 11 people who died in the massacre inside the Tree of Life Synagogue.
The mourners include Dr. Abe Friedman, who said the Rosenthal family is well known in Pittsburgh for their philanthropy and kindness. Friedman would sit in the back row of Tree of Life each week along with the brothers, and would have been killed along with them had he not run late Saturday.
Services for Dr. Jerry Rabinowitz were also being held Tuesday.
Mr Wolf and Mr Peduto are both Democrats. But, Mr Trump's visit to Pittsburgh has been widely criticised by jewish leaders and politicians who have expressed concern that the president's rhetoric inflames racial and religious divisions in the US.
Pennsylvania is deferring at this time to federal authorities on the prosecution of the suspected Pittsburgh synagogue gunman.
District Attorney Stephen Zappala Jr. had asked the U.S. Marshals Service Tuesday to relinquish custody of Robert Bowers so he could be arraigned on state charges filed last Saturday. But the request was denied.
Zappala says it is "prudent" to let Bowers be prosecuted "at the federal level at this time."
Federal prosecutors are seeking approval from Attorney General Jeff Sessions to pursue the death penalty. Bowers did not enter a plea in court Monday.
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