Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Warnings on gay club shooter stir questions about old case

- By Brian Melley, Colleen Slevin and Bernard Condon

A California woman who warned a judge last year about the danger posed by the suspect in the Colorado Springs gay nightclub shooting said Friday that the deaths could have been prevented if earlier charges against the suspect weren’t dismissed.

Jeanie Streltzoff — a relative of alleged shooter Anderson Lee Aldrich — urged Colorado Judge Robin Chittum in a letter last November to incarcerat­e the suspect following a 2021 standoff with SWAT teams that uncovered a stockpile of more than 100 pounds (45 kilograms) of explosive material, firearms and ammunition.

Aldrich should have been in prison at the time of the shooting and prevented from obtaining weapons, she told The Associated Press on Friday.

“Five people died,” Streltzoff said, hushing the final word. “Someone should have done something.”

Streltzoff blamed Aldrich’s grandmothe­r and mother for dodging subpoenas that would have forced them to testify in the bomb threat case. But documents unsealed Thursday also raised questions about whether authoritie­s were aggressive enough in their pursuit of a conviction or could have sought different charges when it became clear Aldrich’s mother, Laura Voepel, and grandparen­ts Jonathan and Pamela Pullen wouldn’t testify.

The case was derailed because prosecutor­s couldn’t properly serve subpoenas to the Pullens, who had moved to Florida, and Voepel, who was still in Colorado Springs, and ran out of

time under fair trial rules, according to District Attorney Michael Allen and court documents.

George Washington University Law Professor Jonathan Turley said he found the district attorney’s explanatio­ns of why he dropped the case “incomplete” and was surprised Allen didn’t amend the charges to involve the threat to the police and community.

“This was a potential crime that didn’t just solely impact the grandparen­ts,” Turley said. “This was a three hour standoff. This was disruptive. The police were threatened.”

It’s rare for a criminal case to fall apart over a failure to deliver subpoenas to a couple victims or witnesses, Turley said. He also noted that police and prosecutor­s have enhanced abilities to access property and serve people in criminal cases.

Aldrich, 22, who is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns according to defense attorneys, was initially charged with kidnapping and other felonies in the 2021 case.

Court documents describe how Aldrich told frightened grandparen­ts about firearms and bombmaking material in their basement, talked of plans to become the “next mass killer,” and vowed not to let them interfere with plans to “go out in a blaze.” Aldrich livestream­ed on Facebook a subsequent confrontat­ion with SWAT teams at the house of mother Laura Voepel.

Former deputy district attorney Mark Waller, who ran against Allen in the last election, said prosecutor­s should have amended charges to obstructio­n of justice, given that Aldrich was deemed so dangerous a SWAT team and bomb squad had to be deployed and surroundin­g homes evacuated.

“They have that video of (Aldrich) saying he’s going to blow everything up. They could have easily charged ... obstructio­n of justice,” said Waller. “It could have prevented this whole thing from happening.”

A spokespers­on for the district attorney’s office, Howard Black, said “numerous” attempts were made to serve subpoenas in the case but did not provide further details.

About a week before the case was dismissed, a lawyer for Pamela Pullen asked the court to quash, or reject, a subpoena that had been left in her mailbox. It’s not clear when that subpoena had been left for her. Black said it was “just one attempt of many” to subpoena Pullen.

He dismissed the idea prosecutor­s could have pursued charges for the harm caused to neighbors during the bomb scare, noting that evacuation­s happen a lot. Prosecutor­s filed charges based on the evidence they had and what they ethically believed they could prove in court, Black said.

Pullen’s attorney in the bomb threat case, Aaron Gaddis, did not immediatel­y respond to a phone message seeking comment. Phone calls to Pamela and Jonathan Pullen have not been returned.

 ?? COLORADO SPRINGS POLICE DEPARTMENT, FILE ?? Anderson Lee Aldrich is accused of entering a gay nightclub clad in body armor and opening fire with an AR-15-style rifle, killing five people and wounding 17.
COLORADO SPRINGS POLICE DEPARTMENT, FILE Anderson Lee Aldrich is accused of entering a gay nightclub clad in body armor and opening fire with an AR-15-style rifle, killing five people and wounding 17.

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