Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Club shooting footage won’t be made public

Video will be shown at trial in killing of five

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Surveillan­ce footage capturing the attack at a Colorado gay nightclub that left five people dead and 17 others wounded will not be made public until it is presented at trial, a judge ruled Friday.

Prosecutor­s and defense attorneys had argued that releasing the gruesome video could make it difficult to seat an impartial jury and would further traumatize the survivors while disrespect­ing those who were killed in the Nov. 19, 2022, shooting.

“Those individual­s deserve the respect of not having the last moments or the most traumatic moments of their lives broadcast and downloadab­le from a State of Colorado web site,” Anderson Lee Aldrich’s public defenders wrote in a March 2 motion.

They also argued that, unlike printed court documents, it would be too difficult to redact the video, which shows “moments of death

and severe injury to several people.”

Judge Michael Mchenry agreed not to make the footage public because attorneys on both sides were opposed.

He said he had not received any media requests to do so.

Public court records released last month include still images of the attack and its aftermath. District Attorney Michael Allen said in a court

filing that the surveillan­ce video would be introduced at trial.

On the night of the shooting, Aldrich went to Club Q in Colorado Springs, left and then returned, according to authoritie­s.

Surveillan­ce video showed Aldrich entering the club wearing a red T-shirt and tan ballistic vest while holding an Ar-style rifle, with six magazines for the weapon and a pistol visible, police Detective Jason Gasper testified during a February preliminar­y hearing.

Investigat­ors said that soon after entering, Aldrich opened fire indiscrimi­nately.

The shooting was stopped when Navy informatio­n systems technician Thomas James grabbed the barrel of Aldrich’s rifle, burning his hand it was so hot, Detective Ashton Gardner testified.

As panicked patrons fled from the dance floor, James and Aldrich tumbled off a landing and struggled over a handgun. Aldrich fired at least once, shooting James in the ribs, Gardner said.

After being shot, it is clear from the video that James was tiring, “but he continues to do what he can to subdue the suspect until police arrive,” Gardner testified, noting that James later gave up his spot in an ambulance to someone else who was injured.

Army veteran Richard Fierro rushed over to help, grabbing the rifle and throwing it, Gardner said. Fierro then used the handgun to beat Aldrich, telling officers later that he “kept hitting” the suspect until they arrived.

 ?? David Zalubowski The Associated Press file ?? A memorial for the victims of November’s mass shooting at a Colorado Springs, Colo. gay nightclub. Footage of the attack will not be made public until it is presented at trial.
David Zalubowski The Associated Press file A memorial for the victims of November’s mass shooting at a Colorado Springs, Colo. gay nightclub. Footage of the attack will not be made public until it is presented at trial.

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