The Citizen (KZN)

Barman tells how he cheated death

SHOOTING SPREE: ‘I JUST WANTED TO SAY GOODBYE TO MOM’

- Colorado Springs

‘Two heroes wrestled gunman to the ground and saved me.’

As barman Michael Anderson cowered on the patio of a nightclub on Saturday night, hiding from the gunman who was killing his friends and colleagues, he was convinced he was going to die, too.

“I just felt alone, really alone and scared,” he said. “I didn’t even have my phone with me. I was afraid I wouldn’t even get to say goodbye to my mother.”

Moments earlier he had been pouring drinks at Club Q, a long-establishe­d lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r (LGBTQ )venue in Colorado Springs in the foothills of the US Rocky Mountains.

Earlier, there had been a drag show to mark the Transgende­r Day of Remembranc­e and the music was pumping when he began hearing popping sounds.

“I looked up and saw a shadow of a tall person holding a rifle. I saw the gun plainly... and then the shots continued... round after round after round. It was absolutely terrifying.

“I ducked down behind the bar. Glass was just flying everywhere around me, like there were just bullets breaking bottles and whatever else was back there.”

Penned in and scared he was going to be targeted, Anderson crawled out to a patio where he and a co-worker wedged themselves between a wall and a booth.

Inside, the gunman, later identified by police as 22-year-old Anderson Lee Aldrich, was shooting indiscrimi­nately at clubbers in a rampage that would leave at least five dead at 18 wounded, some of them critically.

And he wasn’t done yet. “I saw a gun come out from the patio door, the barrel of a gun sticking out,” Anderson said. “And that was the moment I was most terrified. Because I knew we were next. He was gonna find us.”

What happened next has left Anderson eternally grateful to the people he describes as heroes.

Police say at least two individual­s rushed at the shooter and overpowere­d him. When Anderson next looked up, he saw the gunman pinned to the floor.

“There were some very brave people beating him and kicking him,” he said. “I don’t know who did that. They saved my life last night.”

The United States is no stranger to acts of horrific violence but for Anderson and other members of the LGBTQ community in Colorado Springs, a city of around half a million people, the threat seemed remote.

“The community here is tightknit,” he said. “Everyone knows each other. We’re a family.

“We always thought this could never happen here; never Colorado Springs, never Club Q.”

Less than two weeks after an election in which several candidates amped up their antigay, anti-trans rhetoric in the rush for votes, politician­s need to rethink their strategy, he said. “Their culture war has real consequenc­es I’ve seen first-hand.” –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? OUT OF THE BLUE. Je-Zeravon Swisher cries next to his partner Jonathon Willis, while paying respects to victims of the mass shooting at Club Q, a LGBTQ nightclub in Colorado Springs on Sunday.
Picture: AFP OUT OF THE BLUE. Je-Zeravon Swisher cries next to his partner Jonathon Willis, while paying respects to victims of the mass shooting at Club Q, a LGBTQ nightclub in Colorado Springs on Sunday.

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