Los Angeles Times

Details on Club Q suspect’s earlier arrest

Alleged Colorado Springs shooter said in 2021 they wanted to be ‘next mass killer,’ court records show.

- By Alexandra E. Petri The Associated Press contribute­d to this report.

About a year and a half before being named the suspect in a mass shooting at an LGBTQ nightclub in Colorado Springs, Anderson Lee Aldrich was arrested after making bomb threats, threatenin­g to kill family members and talking about becoming “the next mass killer,” according to court records unsealed Thursday.

Aldrich, 22, was arrested in June 2021 on several counts of felony menacing and first-degree kidnapping after making threats that disrupted a residentia­l street in Colorado Springs, Colo., and led to a standoff with authoritie­s, the unsealed records show.

But the case was dismissed more than a year later, in August 2022, because the victims — the suspect’s grandparen­ts and mother — dodged subpoenas and did not cooperate with authoritie­s, leading the defense to argue Aldrich’s constituti­onal right to a speedy trial was at risk, Michael J. Allen, the district attorney for the 4th Judicial District, which includes Colorado Springs, said at a news conference Thursday.

At one pretrial hearing in the months following the threats, the suspect’s family described Aldrich as “loving” and said they did not deserve to be in jail, the prosecutor said.

Records were sealed at the request of the suspect, according to prosecutor­s.

Authoritie­s have previously declined to discuss the 2021 case, citing Colorado state law that seals records when cases are dropped and prohibits officials from acknowledg­ing any records exist.

Judge Robin Lynn Chittum of the 4th Judicial District ordered the seal lifted Thursday, saying public interest in the case outweighed the suspect’s right to privacy. According to the Associated Press, the judge said scrutiny of judicial cases is “foundation­al to our system of government.”

“The only way for that scrutiny to occur is for this to be unsealed,” she said.

The Associated Press had reported on portions of the documents this week before they were unsealed.

Allen said that his office, as well as news agencies and the El Paso County Sheriff ’s Office in Colorado, had filed motions to unseal the case after the Nov. 19 shooting.

Weapons and bombmaking materials confiscate­d during the 2021 case were seized and held as evidence, Allen said. The suspect attempted to reclaim the weapons but their request was denied, he said.

The case has raised questions on why Colorado’s “red flag” laws were not used, given the threats Aldrich made in 2021. In a statement Thursday, El Paso County Sheriff Bill Elder said there was no need to ask for a red-flag order because Aldrich’s weapons had already been seized as part of the arrest and the suspect couldn’t buy new ones. A protective order was in place through July 2022, authoritie­s said.

The sheriff also rejected the idea that he could have asked for a red-flag order after the case was dismissed in August. The bombing case was too old to argue there was danger in the near future, Elder said, and the evidence was sealed a month after the dismissal and couldn’t be used.

Attorneys for Aldrich have said the suspect identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns.

According to a June 2021 arrest affidavit from the El Paso County Sheriff ’s Office, the incident began June 18 at Aldrich’s grandparen­ts’ home in Colorado Springs, after Aldrich became furious when the grandparen­ts said they were selling the house and moving to Florida. Aldrich told the grandparen­ts, Pamela and Jonathan Pullen, not to move, because it “would interfere with [the suspect’s] plans to conduct a mass shooting and bombing,” the report says.

Aldrich had also described amassing “ammunition, firearms and bulletproo­f body armor” and storing it in the grandparen­ts’ basement to become the “next mass killer.” The report states that the grandparen­ts had been living in fear of Aldrich, whom the grandmothe­r believed was building a bomb and had discussed “wanting to go out in a blaze.”

Aldrich allegedly threatened to kill the grandparen­ts unless they promised not to move, and pointed a loaded gun at them, saying, “You guys die today and I’m taking you with me. I’m loaded and ready,” according to the report.

The grandmothe­r also said Aldrich showed her a box with chemicals in it, claiming it was a bomb “powerful enough to blow up a police department and a federal building.”

The grandparen­ts, who said they were held hostage and begged for their lives, eventually escaped and called 911 after Aldrich, who was drinking vodka, retreated to the basement, according to the document.

Video obtained by the Associated Press shows Aldrich arriving at their mother’s house, where Aldrich, tugging a big black bag, told her that police were close by and “this is where I stand. Today I die.”

The mother, Laura Voepel, was uncooperat­ive with authoritie­s, the report says, and eventually left the house, saying that Aldrich “let me go.”

Voepel declined to comment Thursday evening. The suspect’s grandparen­ts could not be reached for comment.

SWAT teams and a bomb squad responded to the incident, and AP reported that about 10 nearby homes were evacuated. A standoff ensued, in which Aldrich, wearing a helmet and bulletproo­f vest, holed up in the home, threatened to blow it up and yelled profanitie­s at authoritie­s from inside, the report states. The suspect livestream­ed the incident on Facebook. Doorbell security video obtained by AP shows the standoff ended with Aldrich walking out of the home, hands up in surrender.

The report states authoritie­s searched the grandmothe­r’s home that evening and “found items consistent with bomb making materials.”

Weapons were also seized during the search of the family residences.

Though Aldrich was arrested and booked into jail, the case was dismissed after a legal process of more than a year.

The document’s release comes days after Aldrich was charged with 305 criminal counts, including murder and bias-motivated crimes, for the Colorado Springs mass shooting last month that left five dead and at least 17 others wounded at Club Q, a nightclub at the heart of the LGBTQ community in this conservati­ve town.

Police detailed the events of the shooting in an arrest affidavit released Wednesday. Authoritie­s received a call at 11:56 p.m. on Nov. 19 about an active shooter at Club Q with numerous victims inside and at least a dozen shots fired, the report says.

Surveillan­ce video from the club shows the shooter arrived around 11:55 p.m. and parked their gold 2005 Toyota Highlander near the front entrance, police said. Images in the affidavit show the shooter exiting the vehicle and entering the club with an assault rifle, as well as firing inside the entrance. The shooter, who was wearing a bulletproo­f vest, began firing “indiscrimi­nately” at customers almost immediatel­y after entering the nightclub, police said.

Richard Fierro, an army veteran who was at Club Q with his family, described in an interview with police and later with the media how he and another patron, who has since been identified as Thomas James, took down and disarmed the shooter as the assailant headed to the patio, where people had fled to safety.

The shooter also had a handgun, Fierro said. The assailant was detained around 12:02 a.m., the report states.

The arrest affidavit also states that police interviewe­d Voepel at her Colorado Springs home early Sunday morning.

She told authoritie­s that she and Aldrich had plans to go to a movie at 10 p.m., but Aldrich left to run an errand that they said would take only 15 minutes. Voepel did not see Aldrich leave but said they took her phone, according to the report. Voepel told authoritie­s she and Aldrich did not have any weapons aside from Aldrich’s folding pocketknif­e.

The five people who were killed in the club have been identified as Daniel Aston, Derrick Rump, Kelly Loving, Ashley Paugh and Raymond Green Vance.

 ?? Leslie Bowman ?? ANDERSON LEE Aldrich surrenders to police at a Colorado home where their mother lived on June 18, 2021. Aldrich was charged with making bomb threats.
Leslie Bowman ANDERSON LEE Aldrich surrenders to police at a Colorado home where their mother lived on June 18, 2021. Aldrich was charged with making bomb threats.

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