Gunman kills 5 in Colorado LGBTQ nightclub before he is stopped by
patrons
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[November 21, 2022]
By Kevin Mohatt and Keith Coffman
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (Reuters) -A gunman opened
fire inside an LGBTQ nightspot in Colorado Springs late on Saturday,
killing at least five people and injuring 25 others before being stopped
by "heroic" clubgoers, police said.
Authorities on Sunday said they were investigating whether the attack
was motivated by hate.
Police identified the suspect as Anderson Lee Aldrich, 22, and said he
used a "long rifle." He was taken into police custody shortly after the
shooting began and was being treated for injuries, according to
officials.
The shooting was reminiscent of the 2016 Pulse club massacre, when a
gunman killed 49 people at the gay nightclub of that name in Orlando,
Florida, before he was fatally shot by police.
It unfolded as LGBTQ communities and allies around the world prepared to
mark the Transgender Day of Remembrance on Sunday, an annual observance
to honor victims of transphobic violence.
Club Q, a long-established venue in a modest strip mall, was described
by many as a safe haven for the LGBTQ community in Colorado's
second-largest city.
One of the victims was identified as Daniel Aston, 28, a transgender man
and bartender at the club who also performed in shows as a dancer,
according to a Colorado Public Radio interview with his mother, Sabrina
Aston.
"He was the happiest he had ever been," Sabrina Aston said. "He was
thriving and having fun and having friends. It's just unbelievable. He
had so much more life to give to us and to all to his friends and to
himself."
Police said the initial phone call about the shooting came in just
before midnight, and that the suspect was apprehended within minutes
thanks to the quick action of law enforcement and the bravery of at
least two patrons who intervened.
The shooter burst in with a rifle, a military-style flak jacket and what
appeared to be six magazines of ammunition, the New York Times reported,
citing the club owners, who said they did not know the man.
Multiple firearms were found at the venue, including the rifle, Colorado
Springs Police Chief Adrian Vasquez told a news conference on Sunday.
One patron, Joshua Thurman, choked up as he told reporters that he was
dancing in the club when he first heard gunshots. He sought refuge in a
dressing room and locked himself inside with others, praying for his
life and thinking about loved ones.
"We heard everything," Thurman said. "We heard more shots fired. We
heard the assailant being beat up by someone that I assumed that tackled
him. We heard the police come in. We heard them yelling at him. We heard
them saying, 'Take certain people because they're critical."
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Floral tributes are placed in memory of
the victims after a mass shooting at the Club Q gay nightclub in
Colorado Springs, Colorado, U.S., November 20, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin
Mohatt
Several of the injured were in critical condition and being treated
at local hospitals, authorities said.
Club Q called the incident a "hate attack" in a statement on
Facebook and thanked the "heroic customers" for subduing the gunman.
VIOLENCE CONDEMNED
Anxiety within many LGBTQ communities in the United States has risen
amid a divisive political climate and after a string of threats and
violent incidents targeting LGBTQ people and events in recent
months.
In a statement condemning the violence, President Joe Biden said
Americans must not tolerate hate.
"Places that are supposed to be safe spaces of acceptance and
celebration should never be turned into places of terror and
violence," Biden said.
Colorado Governor Jared Polis, who in 2018 became the first openly
gay man in the country to be elected as a governor, called the
shooting a "senseless act of evil."
"I feel that same pit in my stomach that so many of you today do, a
feeling sadly all too familiar," Polis said in a video appearance
during a vigil held at a local church.
A spokesperson for the city of Colorado Springs said authorities
were aware of a 2021 bomb threat involving an individual with the
same name and birth date as the suspect, but have not officially
confirmed they are one and the same.
Colorado has a grim history of mass violence, including the 1999
shooting at Columbine High School, a 2012 rampage inside a movie
theater in a Denver suburb and a supermarket attack that killed 10
people last year.
Mourners laid flowers outside the club on Sunday as Colorado Springs
resident Mark Travis, a former police chaplain, played "Taps" on his
bugle.
"We could go in and forget about work and everything else and feel
like it was a home," Travis said of the club.
The shooting, he said, had ripped away that sense of comfort. "It's
akin to, I guess being burglarized or something but much worse.
You're not even safe in your own home."
(Reporting by Kevin Mohatt in Colorado Springs, Keith Coffman in
Denver, Maria Caspani in New York and Shubham Kalia in Bengaluru;
Writing by Maria Caspani and Daniel Trotta; Editing by Raissa
Kasolowsky, Frances Kerry, Lisa Shumaker, Paul Simao and Daniel
Wallis)
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