Loveland Reporter-Herald

Judge upholds all charges — including hate-crime counts — against suspect

- By Shelly Bradbury sbradbury@denverpost.com

An El Paso County judge on Thursday allowed all charges — including dozens of hate-crime counts — to move forward against the suspect in the mass shooting at a Colorado Springs LGBTQ club last year.

Fourth Judicial District Court Judge Michael Mchenry rejected arguments from defense attorneys that there was not enough evidence to show the suspect was motivated by hate toward the LGBTQ community. The judge allowed prosecutor­s to proceed with each of the more than 300 charges against suspect Anderson Aldrich.

Aldrich, 22, is accused of killing five people and injuring 22 others in the Nov. 19 mass shooting at Club Q in Colorado Springs. Aldrich is charged with first-degree murder, attempted murder and bias-motivated counts, among other charges. Aldrich identifies as non-binary and uses they/them pronouns, their public defenders have said.

During testimony Wednesday — the first day of Aldrich’s preliminar­y hearing — prosecutor­s presented evidence aimed at supporting the bias-motivated charges against the defendant. Investigat­ors testified that Aldrich had shared a photo of a rifle scope aimed at a gay pride parade, used a homophobic slur, and said his mother was non-binary and forced him to go to gay clubs.

“He had a particular disdain for the community he did go after and target,” Fourth Judicial District Attorney Michael Allen told the judge as the preliminar­y hearing continued

Thursday. He noted that there were 53 bars within 2.5 miles of Club Q, but Club Q was the only LGBTQ nightclub.

“And that is the one he chose to go to on Nov. 19,” Allen said.

Investigat­ors also testified Wednesday that Aldrich was an administra­tor of a website to which a neo-nazi, white supremacis­t propaganda video was posted, confirming prior reporting by several media outlets, including The Denver Post.

Aldrich did not create the video, which has been widely shared online.

Aldrich was prepared to livestream the attack at Club Q, investigat­ors testified. Aldrich taped a cellphone to a baseball hat and in the hours before the attack uploaded four videos to a livestream­ing app from that phone, Colorado Springs Detective Rebecca Joines testified. One clip was uploaded from Aldrich’s apartment at 9:28 p.m., and the other three from the Club Q parking lot at 10:05 p.m., 10:49 p.m. and 11:43 p.m. — the latter video coming just minutes before the attack.

Joines testified that she believed Aldrich was attempting to emulate the neo-nazi video posted to their website, although Aldrich did not livestream the shooting and instead left the phone on the front passenger seat of their car, testimony revealed.

On Wednesday, defense attorneys argued Aldrich was not motivated by hatred toward LGBTQ people.

The public defenders showed an image of Aldrich at Club Q in August 2021 in which Aldrich posed smiling with their mother, and said Aldrich visited the club six times in the 15 months before the attack without incident.

They presented evidence that Aldrich was prescribed medication­s for symptoms of schizophre­nia, mood

disorders and depression, that Aldrich had used illegal drugs before the mass shooting and had not slept for days before the attack.

“What happened here was senseless, awful and it was tragic,” public defender Joseph Archambaul­t said Thursday. “… But it’s categorica­lly different from a person who targeted a group, who is proud of what they did and hopes other people follow in their footsteps.”

Investigat­ors on Wednesday also presented evidence that Aldrich said to a club patron during the shooting that, “My mom will not accept me because I am gay, you’re all the same.” After the attack, Aldrich cried and said, “I really (expletive) up, I killed all those (expletive) people,” testimony

revealed.

Additional­ly, a note found in Aldrich’s home referenced hate, investigat­ors testified. The note read: “Please relieve me of my own fate, I am drowning in my own wake, how long must I wait for you to rid me of this hate.”

On cross-examinatio­n, investigat­ors could not say that Aldrich wrote the note.

Aldrich is next due in court on March 31 for a status conference and again on May 30 for an arraignmen­t. During a press conference after the preliminar­y hearing Thursday, Allen thanked the victims and families of victims for their patience with the court process.

“The hurt they feel is very real and there is no way to get around that,” he said.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tributes hang on a fence outside of Club Q Wednesday in Colorado Springs. A Navy sailor grabbed the barrel of a gunman’s rifle and an Army veteran rushed in to help as they ended the deadly mass shooting at the gay nightclub in November, a police detective testified Wednesday.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tributes hang on a fence outside of Club Q Wednesday in Colorado Springs. A Navy sailor grabbed the barrel of a gunman’s rifle and an Army veteran rushed in to help as they ended the deadly mass shooting at the gay nightclub in November, a police detective testified Wednesday.
 ?? HELEN H. RICHARDSON — THE DENVER POST ?? A makeshift memorial is set up near Club Q in November 2022, in Colorado Springs, where officials said an attacker opened fire in the gay nightclub late Saturday night, killing five people and wounding at least 25.
HELEN H. RICHARDSON — THE DENVER POST A makeshift memorial is set up near Club Q in November 2022, in Colorado Springs, where officials said an attacker opened fire in the gay nightclub late Saturday night, killing five people and wounding at least 25.

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