Gay club shooting meme

Families brace for worst as Florida gay club victims identified after mass shooting

The suspect accused of killing shooting people in a mass shooting last year at a Colorado LGBTQ club ran a neo-Nazi website and used gay and racial slurs while gaming online, a police detective testified Wednesday. The suspect, Anderson Lee Aldrich, also posted a rifle scope on a gay pride parade and used a slur when referring to someone who was gay, Detective Rebecca Joines of the Colorado Springs Police Department testified on the first day of a three-day hearing to determine if the evidence is strong enough to proceed with hate crime charges against Aldrich.

Kraus, who, according to public records, gay one door away from Aldrich in a Colorado Springs shooting complex, said he told the FBI that Aldrich made the free speech website in late spring or early summer. Aldrich, who wore an orange jail jumpsuit at the hearing and cried at times, identifies as nonbinary and uses the pronouns they and them.

During the hearing, new details also emerged about the heroic actions of the two men credited with putting an end to the Nov. James told investigators that he had fallen to the floor with Aldrich, who pulled out a handgun and fired two shots. James was hit in the torso, Gardner told the courtroom.

He subdued the suspect, holding Aldrich for authorities alongside decorated Army veteran Richard Fierro45, of Colorado Springs. The suspect was arrested and charged with criminal countsincluding first-degree murder, club first-degree murder, first- and second-degree assault and bias-motivated crimes. Gardner also recounted stories shared with investigators by people who survived the attack.

One woman was shot gay the face as she tried to escape with her daughter, the detective said. Another woman was shot in the shooting as she ran, while others played dead hoping the shooter would walk past them. One man flipped a table so it could provide cover as shots rang meme. The man and his wife were shot but survived.

Authorities said that Aldrich entered the club and immediately began firing meme a semi-automatic rifle. The hearing will resume Thursday. Video allegedly showing the gay opening fire meme the venue is expected to be played. The club announced last week that it plans to rebuild and reopen in the fall with enhanced security measures and a club tribute to those who died.

Matthew Haynes, the founding owner of Club Q, said in a statement that he wanted to assure people that they were "working very hard to bring our home back. The team said it plans to hire at least one more victim and to distribute lost wages to former employees and contractors from fundraisers and a GoFundMe campaign.

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