Victims and heroes in Colorado Springs LGBTQ nightclub shooting
identified
Send a link to a friend
[November 22, 2022]
By Kevin Mohatt and Keith Coffman
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (Reuters) -Colorado Springs officials on Monday
identified the five shooting victims who died and the two heroes who
prevented further bloodshed at the LGBTQ nightclub where a gunman opened
fire on Saturday night.
Another 17 people were wounded by gunfire in the rampage. Police said
they had yet to determine a motive, but the city's mayor and LGBTQ
rights groups said the attack bore the hallmarks of a hate crime.
The suspected shooter, a 22-year-old man, remained under arrest at a
hospital, presumably for injuries sustained when a decorated former Iraq
and Afghanistan war veteran pummeled him in a successful effort to stop
the assault at Club Q in Colorado's second-largest city.
Club Q, one of the only places for LGBTQ people to gather in Colorado
Springs, attracted a diverse crowd of queer people and straight allies.
On Sunday, which was Transgender Day of Remembrance, the club was
planning to mark the occasion with a "drag brunch" and a nighttime show
"with a variety of gender identities and performance styles."
Police held him on initial charges including five counts of first-degree
murder and bias crimes, but prosecutors said they expected to file
formal criminal charges that may differ once he is out of the hospital.
The suspect, Anderson Lee Aldrich, was known to law enforcement, having
been arrested in June 2021 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.
Colorado Springs Police Chief Adrian Vasquez instead tried to focus
Monday's news conference on the victims. He identified the dead as Kelly
Loving, Daniel Aston, Derrick Rump, Ashley Paugh and Raymond Green
Vance.
Colorado Springs Mayor John Suthers also paid tribute to the heroes who
rushed the shooter: Richard Fierro and Thomas James.
Fierro is a U.S. Army veteran who did three tours of duty in Iraq and
one in Afghanistan.
"I'm straight. My kids are straight, but we go there ... Why? Because
it's about community," Fierro told reporters.
When the shooting broke out, Fierro said he rushed the gunman, pulled
him to the ground, then grabbed the gunman's pistol and hit him with it.
James helped by removing the shooter's rifle, which Fierro described as
an AR, and kicking him. Meanwhile a drag performer stomped him with high
heels, Fierro said.
"I wish I could have done more," Fierro said. "But those (five) people
aren't home tonight, and I am. And I'm really upset by that. It's not
something I'm proud of."
[to top of second column]
|
Rich Fierro speaks on the events that
occurred at the mass shooting at an LGBTQ nightclub Club Q in
Colorado Springs. Fierro and one other person were able to take down
the active shooter and detain him. REUTERS/Alyson McClaran
Fierro, who had gone to celebrate a birthday with his wife, their
daughter and some friends, was unable to save his daughter's
boyfriend, Raymond Green Vance.
Vance, 22, had never been to the club before but was supportive of
the LGBTQ community, his family said in a statement.
"He had just gotten a new job at a Colorado Springs FedEx
distribution center, and was thrilled to have received his first
paycheck," the family statement said. "He couldn't wait to save
enough money to get his own apartment."
Others families of the deceased offered tributes as well.
Kelly Loving's sister, Tiffany Loving, said simply, "My sister was a
good person. She was loving and caring and sweet. Everyone loved
her. Kelly was a wonderful person."
Ashley Paugh's husband, Kurt Paugh, described his wife as his high
school sweetheart, an "amazing mother" of champion swimmer Ryleigh
and someone who worked at a nonprofit that helps find homes for
foster children.
"This included working with the LGBTQ community to find welcoming
foster placements for children," Paugh said.
Daniel Aston, 28, was 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 had
so much more life to give to us and to all to his friends and to
himself."
Derrick Rump was a Club Q bartender who was "what made Club Q,"
Kayla Rene Cortes, a 26-year-old lesbian who has visited the bar for
years, told the Washington Post.
"He was living his dream and he would have wanted everyone to do the
same," his mother, Julia Thames, told ABC News in a statement.
El Paso County District Attorney Michael Allen warned the
investigation may be lengthy and declined to say what charges may be
brought, but promised justice.
"The devastation this violent act has had in our community cannot be
measured," Allen said. "But we do know that we will respond to it in
a strong way."
(Reporting by Kevin Mohatt in Colorado Springs, Rich McKay in
Atlanta, Katharine Jackson in Washington, Andrew Hay in Taos, New
Mexico, and Tyler Clifford and Joseph Ax in New York; Writing by
Julia Harte and Daniel Trotta; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and
Stephen Coates)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |