Kane Republican

Judge finds evidence to try suspect in attack on gay club

- By Colleen Slevin

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — There is sufficient evidence to send to trial the person accused of killing five people and wounding over a dozen others at a gay nightclub in Colorado Springs last year, a judge ruled Thursday.

The ruling that sends Anderson Lee Aldrich to trial on dozens of murder and hate crime chargescam­e after a hearing Wednesday in which prosecutor­s presented evidence that they visited Club Q at least six previous times, drew a map showing the layout of the club, and appeared to be planning to livestream the attack using a mobile phone duct taped to a baseball hat found in their SUV.

Appearing in the courtroom in an orange jumpsuit, hands cuffed, Aldrich had no visible reaction to the ruling after crying at time during the testimony. The 22-yearold, who identifies as nonbinary and uses the pronouns they and them, is charged with more than 300 charges including murder and bias-motivated crimes.

District Attorney Michael Allen told the judge that the evidence showed that Aldrich had an “aversion to the LGBTQ community." The prosecutio­n argued that the attack last November was inspired by a “neo-nazi white supremacis­t” shooting training video.

Aldrich's lawyers countered with a picture of a suspect under the influence of drugs. The defense also brought up Aldrich's mental health for the first time, showing photograph­s of pill bottles for drugs that Aldrich had been prescribed to treat mental illness, such as schizophre­nia, bipolar disorder and PTSD. But defense attorney Joseph Archambaul­t didn't say whether Aldrich had been formally diagnosed with any of those mental illnesses.

Archambaul­t told the judge that what happened was “senseless and it was tragic" but noted that Aldrich expressed remorse.

“It does not excuse it but it is categorica­lly different from people who target a group," Archambaul­t said.

Judge Michael Mchenry also ordered Aldrich to continue to be held without bond. He had to decide only whether prosecutor­s have shown during this week's hearing that there is probable cause that Aldrich committed the crimes they are charged with in order for the case to move ahead to a trial. At a trial, prosecutor­s are held to a higher standard and must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt to convince jurors to convict defendants.

Unlike other crimes, hate crime charges require prosecutor­s to present evidence of a motive — that Aldrich was driven by bias, either wholly or in part.

Although Aldrich identifies as nonbinary, someone who is a member of a protected group such as the LGBTQ community can still be charged with a hate crime for targeting peers. Hate crime laws are focused on the victims, not the perpetrato­r.

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