DAY 397 | Colorado: Club Q mass shooter sentenced to over 2,000 years in prison


Club Q was long considered a safe haven for the LGBT community in a city with a history of being anti-gay

The suspect accused of using an AR-style rifle to terrorize a Colorado LGBT nightclub – killing five people and injuring 19 others – has pleaded guilty to five counts of first-degree murder and 46 counts of attempted murder.

Anderson Lee Aldrich, 23, was sentenced Monday to five consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole (LWOP) for the 2022 massacre at Club Q in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Judge Michael McHenry also sentenced Aldrich to an additional 2,208 years in prison for the attempted murder charges. Aldrich also received a four-year sentence for bias-motivated charges, which are akin to hate-crime charges in other states.

Prosecutors could not seek the death penalty because in 2020, Colorado abolished the death penalty – becoming the 22nd state to do so.

During victim’s impact statements Monday, some families of those killed and wounded implored the judge to give the harshest possible punishment.

“Please your honor, I’m pleading with you: Lock this animal away to the depths of hell,” said Cheryl Norton, whose daughter Ashtin Gamblin was shot nine times but survived.

She said Gamblin was covered in the blood of Daniel Aston, another shooting victim. But Aston did not survive.

The other four victims killed – Raymond Green Vance, Kelly Loving, Derrick Rump and Ashley Paugh – were either employees or patrons at Club Q, which attracted customers from different backgrounds and orientations.

Club Q was long considered a safe haven for the LGBT community in a city with a history of being anti-gay. The massacre at the beloved venue evoked memories of the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, Florida, which left 49 people dead.

Previous charges and a red-flag law

Aldrich, who identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns, was charged with more than 300 state counts for the Club Q massacre – including murder, assault, attempted murder and hate crimes.

Ed Sanders, who was shot in the back at Club Q, said Aldrich shouldn’t have had access to an assault-style rifle at all.

“Assault weapons are way too easy to access,” Sanders told the court Monday.

In 2021, Aldrich was charged with felony menacing and first-degree kidnapping after allegedly making a bomb threat. But those charges were later dropped, and the records were sealed. It’s not clear why they were sealed.

And while Colorado has a red-flag law aimed at temporarily removing gun access from those deemed a danger to themselves or others, it might not have been applied to Aldrich if his 2021 case had never been adjudicated or if no one ever pursued the intervention.

The red-flag law requires family members, police or others to actively start the process of trying to temporarily remove gun access from someone who might cause harm.

Gamblin’s father decried the relentless scourge of gun violence. “We cannot allow this to become commonplace, and we cannot become complacent,” Bill Norton said in a statement read in court by his wounded daughter.

The Club Q victims were among at least 642 people killed in 2022 in US mass shootings – those with four or more people shot, excluding perpetrators, according to the Gun Violence Archive.

And the rate of mass shooting deaths so far this year is even worse. At least 385 people have been killed in US mass shootings in just the first 177 days of this year, according to the Gun Violence Archive.

Source: CNN, A. Babineau, June 26, 2023







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