Colorado suspect set to be charged for LGBTQ club shooting that killed
five
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[December 06, 2022]
By Keith Coffman
DENVER (Reuters) - The suspect in the fatal shooting of five people in a
Colorado LGBTQ nightclub last month is set to be formally charged on
Tuesday, potentially facing dozens of counts including murder, attempted
murder, assault and hate crimes.
Anderson Lee Aldrich, 22, has been held without bond at the El Paso
County jail stemming from the Nov. 19 rampage at Club Q in Colorado
Springs. Twenty-two people were wounded with gunshots or injured in
other ways.
The defendant was initially booked on suspicion of various offenses
including first-degree murder, bias-motivated crimes and ethnic
intimidation, according to jail records.
Police and witnesses said Aldrich, who was clad in body armor, stormed
the club armed with a rifle and handgun and opened fire
indiscriminately.
Those killed were identified as Kelly Loving, 40, Daniel Aston, 28,
Derrick Rump, 38, Ashley Paugh, 34, and Raymond Green Vance, 22.
Two men with military backgrounds subdued Aldrich until police arrived.
A former U.S. Army major and decorated Iraq and Afghanistan war veteran,
Richard Fierro, told reporters that he disarmed Aldrich and
pistol-whipped him into submission.
"I wish I could have saved everybody in there," Fierro said. "I wish I
could have done more."
In the suspect's booking photo, Aldrich appeared battered with face and
neck bruises apparently sustained when beaten by the bar’s patrons.
The other man credited with subduing Aldrich, U.S. Navy Petty Officer
2nd Class Thomas James, said in a written statement that he just wanted
“to save the family I found.”
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Flowers, candles, and mementos are left
at a memorial after a mass shooting at LGBTQ nightclub Club Q in
Colorado Springs, Colorado, U.S. November 26, 2022. REUTERS/Isaiah
J. Downing
“My thoughts are with those we lost ... and those who are still
recovering from their injuries,” said James, who was hospitalized
with unspecified injuries and has since been released.
Although authorities have not publicly identified a motive, the
Colorado shooting was reminiscent of the 2016 Pulse nightclub
massacre in Orlando, Florid, where a gunman killed 49 people before
police shot him dead.
If convicted of first-degree murder, Aldrich faces a mandatory life
sentence without the possibility of parole.
Colorado no longer has a death-penalty statute but Aldrich could
face a death sentence in federal court if prosecutors there decide
to charge him with crimes under the federal code that still has
capital punishment on its books for certain crimes.
Lawyers assigned to represent Aldrich from the Colorado public
defender's office have said in court filings that their client
identifies his gender as non-binary and prefers "they" and "them"
pronouns.
District Attorney Michael Allen said after Aldrich's initial court
appearance on Nov. 23 that the suspect's gender identity would have
no bearing on how the case would be prosecuted.
Aldrich was previously arrested in June 2021 in Colorado Springs
after his mother reported he threatened to detonate a bomb and harm
her with multiple weapons, according to a news release from the El
Paso County Sheriff's Office.
(Reporting by Keith Coffman in Denver; Editing by Steve Gorman,
Robert Birsel)
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