US gunman in Colorado gay club shooting given another 55 life sentences

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(FILES) Flower bouquets, candles, and other items form a memorial near the LGBTQ nightclub, Club Q, in Colorado Springs, Colorado on November 20, 2022. A mass shooter who killed five people at an LGBTQ club in the US state of Colorado pleaded guilty to hate crimes on June 18, 2024 over the horrifying 2022 massacre, and was given another hefty sentence. (Photo by Jason Connolly / AFP)

Anderson Lee Aldrich walked into Club Q on Nov 19, 2022, shooting five people dead with an AR-15-style assault rifle.

PHOTO: AFP

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LOS ANGELES - A mass shooter who killed five people at a

gay club in the US state of Colorado

pleaded guilty to hate crimes on June 18 over the horrifying 2022 massacre and was given another hefty sentence.

Anderson Lee Aldrich was already serving five life sentences for the gun rampage at Club Q in Colorado Springs that also injured 22 people.

A US district judge added a further 55 life sentences and an extra 190 years to that tariff after hearing how Aldrich specifically targeted members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer/questioning, intersex and asexual (LGBTQIA) community with a US$9,000 (S$12,150) arsenal amassed over two years.

“You went to this community’s safe place and mass-murdered people, but I hope what you learnt today is this community is much stronger than you,” Judge Charlotte Sweeney said, noting it was appropriate to sentence Aldrich during Pride Month.

“This community is stronger than your armour, stronger than your weapons, and it is sure as heck stronger than your hatred.”

Federal hate crime charges carry stiff penalties in the United States, and people convicted of them can face the death penalty, but prosecutors agreed to take that off the table in return for Aldrich’s 74 guilty pleas.

Aldrich walked into Club Q on Nov 19, 2022, shooting five people dead with an AR-15-style assault rifle.

Two patrons of the club eventually wrestled the heavyset and bearded shooter to the ground, detaining Aldrich until police arrived.

In court filings, federal prosecutors said Aldrich vented online before carrying out the crime.

“The defendant used an online platform... to disseminate a manifesto purportedly authored by someone who committed a mass shooting earlier that year,” documents said.

“This link revealed predominantly racist and anti-Semitic beliefs but also the following statement: ‘Transgenderism, however, is a mental illness and should be addressed as such.’”

A week before the shooting, Aldrich posted a photo depicting a rifle sight over a pride parade with the comment “lol”, the document said.

Mr Matt Kirsch, acting US Attorney for the district of Colorado, told reporters after the sentence that Aldrich had admitted what lay behind the horrific acts.

“As part of today’s plea, the defendant admitted to committing acts of hate against members of the LGBTQIA community,” Mr Kirsch said.

“I want to make it clear that we have no tolerance for hate in this country, and we have no tolerance for hate crimes in Colorado.

“I hope that today’s sentence demonstrates to the victims and to the many others touched by this horrific crime that we will not tolerate hate-fuelled violence against anyone.”

Defence attorneys said Aldrich, 24, identifies as non-binary. Federal prosecutors used gender-neutral terms in filings, but state prosecutors have reportedly said there is “zero evidence” the attacker identified as non-binary before the horrific episode.

The Club Q shooting was the latest in a long line of attacks on LGBTQ venues in the US, the deadliest of which claimed 49 lives at a nightclub in Orlando, Florida, in 2016.

Members of the LGBTQ community have expressed alarm at what they say is an uptick in hateful rhetoric ahead of a bitterly contested presidential election this November, in which incumbent Joe Biden is being challenged by Donald Trump.

LGBTQ rights are a contentious issue in America’s so-called “culture wars”, which pit liberal values against those of conservatives.

With more firearms than inhabitants, the US has the highest rate of gun deaths of any developed country. AFP

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