Colorado Politics

Preliminary hearing for alleged Club Q shooter to begin Wednesday

Three months after the Club Q mass shooting, the alleged shooter is scheduled to appear in court Wednesday for a preliminary hearing in which prosecutors could present new evidence.  

At the hearing, a judge will determine if the prosecution can continue to pursue a trial against Anderson Aldrich, who faces 323 charges in the Nov. 19 shooting, which killed five patrons at Club Q, an LGBTQ+ nightclub on North Academy Boulevard in Colorado Springs. 

The hearing is expected to last at least two days, and the prosecution will present evidence and testimony to establish probable cause for the charges. 

District Attorney Michael Allen said during a hearing in January that extensive surveillance footage of Aldrich committing the shooting is among the evidence prosecutors will present at the preliminary hearing. 

Aldrich’s attorney Joseph Archambault has been vocal about his desire to have the preliminary hearing postponed over concerns of not being ready by Wednesday, but Judge Michael McHenry denied Archambault’s requests for a continuance in both January and February. 

Earlier this month, during Aldrich’s most recent court appearance, there was discussion over potential video evidence of Aldrich being in Club Q “multiple times” before the shooting. However, the prosecution said the video evidence in question will not be ready in time for the preliminary hearing. 

While neither Archambault nor prosecuting attorney Reginald Short explicitly said Aldrich was at Club Q before the shooting, both attorneys said video surveillance footage from Club Q hours before the incident is noteworthy in this case. 

If McHenry at the end of the preliminary hearing opts to bind over Aldrich on the 323 charges, Aldrich’s attorneys will then be forced to enter a plea at an arraignment at a later date.

Prosecutors have mentioned over the past few months that the mental competency of Aldrich could play a role after the preliminary hearing, implying that Aldrich may plead not guilty by reason of insanity. 

Aldrich, who was 22 years old at the time of the shooting, originally faced 305 charges. But since the time of Aldrich’s arrest, the prosecution has added 18 charges. Aldrich remains in custody at the El Paso County jail pending trial. 

In this image taken from El Paso County District Court video, Anderson Lee Aldrich, 22, center, sits during a court appearance in December in Colorado Springs.
4th Judicial District Court via AP
Tags

PREV

PREVIOUS

'You guys will get me someone to talk to' not a request for counsel, appeals court rules

Colorado’s second-highest court ruled last week that an El Paso County defendant did not clearly invoke his constitutional right to an attorney when he wondered whether police could “get me someone to talk to right now” during his interrogation. Even though a Colorado Springs detective told Jacolby Hasan Williams he would “just proceed with the […]

NEXT

NEXT UP

House committee tackles first of several fentanyl-related bills

The first of three bills attempting to deal once again with fentanyl won approval from a House panel on Tuesday. House Bill 1167, which applies to the state’s Good Samaritan law, attempts to fix problems that the sponsor said came out of last year’s omnibus legislation on the deadly drug. As amended by last year’s […]


Welcome Back.

Streak: 9 days i

Stories you've missed since your last login:

Stories you've saved for later:

Recommended stories based on your interests:

Edit my interests