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Club Q shooting suspect made threats against mother last year, landlord confirms

Case is sealed, so prosecutors cannot comment. But case could be unsealed to give investigators more information
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Posted at 4:58 PM, Nov 21, 2022
and last updated 2022-12-02 16:12:33-05

Editor's note: The Club Q shooting suspect identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns, according to court documents filed by their defense attorneys. This article has been updated to reflect the proper pronouns.

DENVER — The suspect accused of killing five people and injuring 19 others at Club Q in Colorado Springs was arrested last year and accused of making bomb and weapons threats against their mother, Denver7 Investigates has confirmed.

But criminal charges were not filed against 22-year-old Anderson Lee Aldrich despite their initial arrest for investigation of two counts of felony menacing and three counts of first-degree kidnapping. They were arrested for investigation on 10 counts after Saturday night's shooting.

According to a June 18, 2021, news release from the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office, Aldrich reported a bomb threat just before 2 p.m. that day at a home in the 9800 block of Rubicon Drive. The sheriff’s office said that the person who reported the threat “said her son was threatening to cause harm to her with a homemade bomb, multiple weapons, and ammunition.”

Deputies eventually realized that Aldrich was at a home about a mile away, in the 6300 block of Pilgrimage Road, and was refusing to surrender. By 5:46 p.m., negotiators were able to get them to walk out of the home’s front door and surrender. Deputies cleared both homes and found no explosives, the sheriff’s office said at the time.

DA explains why he can't comment on prior incident

Michael Allen, the 4th Judicial District Attorney who oversees prosecutions in El Paso County, told Denver7 Monday he could not comment on why charges were not filed in the case because of two separate laws passed by the legislature in 2019 and 2021 that led to criminal cases in which charges were not ultimately filed being automatically sealed.

“If a case is sealed by state statute, I have to say that no such record exists even though there might be other information in the public sphere that says actually a case did exist,” Allen said, reiterating that he was speaking in a general sense and not about this case in particular. “And that can be frustrating for people to hear. It can sound like we’re trying to hide things.”

Allen said in a news conference Monday afternoon that when a person commits another crime after a previous case was sealed, prosecutors often file motions to unseal those cases to get more information to prosecute the current case.

Denver7 has also joined a lawsuit with other media organizations seeking to unseal the 2021 case.

But exactly why the charges were dropped may not be information that prosecutors can ever release. The Colorado Springs Gazette reported Aldrich had called an editor earlier this year asking the paper to remove a previous story on the bomb threat incident because charges were dropped, and prosecutors told the paper the case had been sealed after the charges were dropped.

Suspect's mother's former landlord details bomb threat incident

But Aldrich’s mother’s former landlord, who was involved in reporting the threats to authorities and telling them of Aldrich’s whereabouts during the incident last year, said in an interview Monday she has questions about why charges were not pursued and if pressing charges might have made any difference in what transpired Saturday.

“I think what happened last year was pretty serious. And for the charges to just be dropped just does not make sense to me,” said Leslie Bowman. “So, you know, I don’t know if he had any prior record to that situation, but I think it was severe enough that it should have been dealt with in some way.”

“Even if it was some sort of plea deal with probation, that still would have prevented him from at least legally having a weapon,” Bowman added. “But, you know, it’s just very disappointing and upsetting that that was completely dropped.”

In addition to the interview with Bowman, Denver7 Investigates has connected Aldrich, their mother, and their grandfather, an outgoing California state assemblyman, through public property records and background checks.

Bowman said Aldrich’s mother, Laura Voepel, lived at her house for about 15 months, while Aldrich lived with their grandparents at their home about five minutes away. She owns the home in the 6300 block of Pilgrimage Road, while the grandparents live at the home on Rubicon Drive.

Bowman described Aldrich as quiet, about 6 feet tall and heavyset when they were around in 2020 and 2021. She said they would sometimes come over and watch movies with their mother in her room.

Bowman said she only one time ever got into an altercation with Aldrich, late one day when their mother’s bathroom wasn’t working, and they confronted Bowman.

“He kind of got in my face and told me to get out and she slammed the bedroom door in my face,” Bowman recalled. “But I just kind of took that as, at the time, you know, a young man trying to protect his mom kind of thing. And I just kind of blew it off because there was never any other issues after that up until the bomb threat situation.”

Bowman said on Jun 18, 2021, she was babysitting a friend’s children and Laura started texting her telling her the police were at her parents’ house looking for “Andy,” as she referred to her child. Then she started texting Bowman that she shouldn’t go back to her home.

“And I kind of read between the lines of all of her messages and figured out that the police were probably looking for him and that he was in my house,” Bowman said. “…So, I called the police and say, ‘Hey, I think you’re looking for someone who’s hiding out in my house.’”

Police confirmed with her that they were looking for Aldrich and told her Aldrich had had an altercation with their grandparents, had threatened them with a gun, and decided to go over to where their mom was living to hide from the police.

aldrich-surrender.png
This screenshot of a video shows Anderson Lee Aldrich surrendering to a SWAT team in El Paso County on June 18, 2021.

Bowman said she showed deputies Ring video from her doorbell that showed Aldrich come into the house and that they were still there. After Aldrich eventually surrendered to deputies, Bowman said authorities told her Aldrich had a gun, body armor and helmet inside the house.

Video obtained by Denver7 shows Aldrich streaming live on their mother's Facebook account that day, wearing tactical gear and surrounded by weapons, discussing themself being barricaded in the home.

aldrich-live-stream.png

Bowman learns charges were dropped

After Aldrich was arrested, Bowman said she was confident Aldrich would be punished. She said she was thankful nobody got hurt and that she was trying to move on. Bowman said she had no communication with Voepel or Aldrich after that day.

Bowman said she tried to move on since they had lost communication, and investigators did not follow up with her. But on Oct. 18, she said, law enforcement came to her house trying to conduct a wellness check on Voepel. She told them they hadn’t spoken in more than a year.

“So that kind of prompted me to go back online and see what the status of Andy’s case was and couldn’t find anything in the court dockets or inmate records,” Bowman said.

She said she looked up news articles and found an update the charges had been dropped and the case was sealed.

“I just remember being really confused that it was just completely dropped and that there wasn’t at least some sort of a plea deal or probation or anything, just that it was completely dropped was very confusing to me,” she said.

Bowman said when she heard officials say Aldrich’s name Sunday morning, she was “shocked and heartbroken.” She assumes that Aldrich’s mother pushed for the charges to be dropped.

“She, you know, did something like that when, you know, after what he did last year, that he was able to do something like that was— it was very upsetting and made me angry that they didn’t follow through with those charges from last year,” Bowman said.

The State Court Administrator’s Office said just before noon Sunday that it did not have any “public records” tied to Aldrich in Colorado. Sealed records would not be considered public records.

Applicable law about sealed cases, red flag law

Allen, the district attorney, said the laws passed by the legislature were aimed at protecting people charged with crimes that were later dismissed.

“The case, for some reason, ends up getting dismissed – whether it’s from the prosecution or the court – and get that off of the person because of due process, right?” Allen said. “It means that somebody was not convicted. So, should they have to walk around with that around their neck for the rest of their lives? That’s really what the statute is designed to do.”

“It can cause frustration in the public, though, when we have to say, no record exists,” he added.

The case and the decision — for whatever reason — not to file charges in the case is being further scrutinized because law enforcement officers and private citizens can petition to have guns removed from people proven in court to pose a threat to themselves or others for up to 364 days under Colorado’s Extreme Risk Protection Order (red flag) law. El Paso County’s sheriff has been one of several sheriffs in Colorado that have opposed the law.

California assemblyman connection

Denver7 Investigates has also confirmed that Aldrich is the grandchild of California State Assemblyman Randy Voepel, R-Santee, who initially made statements in support of the Jan. 6 insurrection in a San Diego Union-Tribune article, though he later said he condemned the violence. Some groups called for his expulsion after the comments. Voepel was handily defeated in this year’s election by 35 percentage points.

Laura Voepel, Aldrich’s mother, posted to Facebook in April 2020 to “keep up the work dad.”

Bowman said Laura Voepel had told her that Randy Voepel was also her father.

“Yeah, I was aware that Laura’s dad was in some sort of government position, or mayor, or something out in California,” she said. “But I didn’t really know the details of it. But I do remember Laura telling me about that one.”

What comes next in the case?

Colorado Springs police identified the five people killed in the shooting as Kelly Loving (she/her), Daniel Aston (he/him), Derrick Rump (he/him), Ashely Paugh (she/her), and Raymond Green (he/him) and identified the two “heroes” who fought off the gunman as Richard Fierro and Thomas James.

“I have never encountered a person who had engaged in such heroic actions that was so humble about it,” Colorado Springs Mayor John Suthers said at a Monday afternoon news conference after talking with Fierro.

Allen, ahead of the news conference, said his office and other officials would not be able to comment much further on Aldrich’s past encounters with law enforcement. He also said at the news conference that if anything changed, he would release further details.

“I would rather be safe at the front end about what we say or don’t say so that we can have a fair process, and if we convict somebody, that that conviction is upheld.”

Suthers said he would caution against any assumptions regarding whether the red flag law could have been applicable in the case and cautioned speculation.

“My view of the red flag law is it was passed by the legislature, it’s the law in Colorado, and law enforcement agencies, in appropriate circumstances, should take advantage of it. That’s my view,” Suthers said.

Aldrich was arrested for investigation of 10 charges, including first-degree murder after deliberation and bias-motivated crime, but formal charges have yet to be filed.