World
Patrons in gay club shooting hit gunman with his own weapon
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — As bullets tore by a homosexual nightclub in Colorado Springs, killing 5 folks and wounding many extra, one patron who’d been partying moments earlier than rushed into motion, grabbing a handgun from the suspect, hitting him with it and pinning him down till police arrived simply minutes later.
He was one among not less than two prospects who police and metropolis officers credit score with stopping the gunman and limiting the bloodshed in Saturday evening’s taking pictures at Membership Q. The violence pierced the comfortable confines of an leisure venue that has lengthy been a cherished secure spot for the LGBTQ neighborhood within the conservative-leaning metropolis.
“Had that particular person not intervened this might have been exponentially extra tragic,” Colorado Springs Mayor John Suthers informed The Related Press.
Police recognized the alleged gunman as 22-year-old Anderson Lee Aldrich, who was in custody and being handled for accidents.
A regulation enforcement official stated the suspect used an AR-15-style semiautomatic weapon within the assault, however a handgun and extra ammunition magazines additionally had been recovered. The official couldn’t focus on particulars of the investigation publicly and spoke to The Related Press on situation of anonymity.
Membership Q on its Fb web page thanked the “fast reactions of heroic prospects that subdued the gunman and ended this hate assault.” Investigators had been nonetheless figuring out a motive and whether or not to prosecute it as a hate crime, stated El Paso County District Legal professional Michael Allen. Expenses in opposition to the suspect will probably embody first-degree homicide, he stated.
Already questions had been being raised about why authorities didn’t search to take Aldrich’s weapons away from him in 2021, when he was arrested after his mom reported he threatened her with a selfmade bomb and different weapons. Although authorities on the time stated no explosives had been discovered, gun management advocates are asking why police didn’t attempt to set off Colorado’s “pink flag” regulation, which might have allowed authorities to grab the weapons his mom says he had. There’s additionally no public report prosecutors ever moved ahead with felony kidnapping and menacing costs in opposition to Aldrich.
Of the 25 injured at Membership Q, not less than seven had been in vital situation, authorities stated. Some had been harm making an attempt to flee, and it was unclear if all of them had been shot, a police spokesperson stated. Suthers stated there was “motive to hope” all of these hospitalized would get well.
The taking pictures rekindled recollections of the 2016 bloodbath on the Pulse homosexual nightclub in Orlando, Florida, that killed 49 folks. Colorado has skilled a number of mass killings, together with at Columbine Excessive College in 1999, a movie show in suburban Denver in 2012 and at a Boulder grocery store final 12 months.
It was the sixth mass killing this month and got here in a 12 months when the nation was shaken by the deaths of 21 in a faculty taking pictures in Uvalde, Texas.
Authorities had been referred to as to Membership Q at 11:57 p.m. Saturday with a report of a taking pictures, and the primary officer arrived at midnight.
Joshua Thurman stated he was within the membership with about two dozen different folks and was dancing when the photographs started. He initially thought it was a part of the music, till he heard one other shot and stated he noticed the flash of a gun muzzle.
Thurman, 34, stated he ran with one other particular person to a dressing room the place somebody already was hiding. They locked the door, turned off the lights and obtained on the ground however may hear the violence unfolding, together with the gunman getting crushed up, he added.
“I may have misplaced my life — over what? What was the aim?” he stated as tears ran down his cheeks. “We had been simply having fun with ourselves. We weren’t out harming anybody. We had been in our area, our neighborhood, our residence, having fun with ourselves like all people else does.”
Detectives had been analyzing whether or not anybody had helped the suspect earlier than the assault, Police Chief Adrian Vasquez stated. He stated patrons who intervened through the assault had been “heroic” and prevented extra deaths.
Membership Q is a homosexual and lesbian nightclub that encompasses a drag present on Saturdays, based on its web site. Membership Q’s Fb web page stated deliberate leisure included a “punk and different present” previous a birthday dance social gathering, with a Sunday all-ages drag brunch.
Drag occasions have grow to be a spotlight of anti-LGBTQ rhetoric and protests lately as opponents, together with politicians, have proposed banning youngsters from them, falsely claiming they’re used to “groom” youngsters.
To substantiate a hate-crime cost in opposition to Aldrich, prosecutors must show he was motivated by the victims’ precise or perceived sexual orientation or gender identification. To this point, the suspect has not been cooperative in interviews with investigators and has not given them clear perception but concerning the motivation for the assault, based on the official who spoke on situation of anonymity.
President Joe Biden stated that whereas the motive for the shootings was not but clear, “we all know that the LGBTQI+ neighborhood has been subjected to horrific hate violence in recent times.”
“Locations which can be imagined to be secure areas of acceptance and celebration ought to by no means be was locations of terror and violence,” he stated. “We can’t and should not tolerate hate.”
Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, who grew to become the primary brazenly homosexual man to be elected a U.S. governor in 2018, referred to as the taking pictures “sickening.”
“My coronary heart breaks for the household and buddies of these misplaced, injured and traumatized,” Polis stated.
A makeshift memorial sprang up Sunday close to the membership, with flowers, a stuffed animal, candles and an indication saying “Love over hate” subsequent to a rainbow-colored coronary heart.
Seth Stang was shopping for flowers for the memorial when he was informed that two of the useless had been his buddies. The 34-year-old transgender man stated it was like having “a bucket of scorching water getting dumped on you. … I’m simply bored with working out of locations the place we will exist safely.”
Ryan Johnson, who lives close to the membership and was there final month, stated it was one among solely two nightspots for the LGBTQ neighborhood in Colorado Springs. “It’s type of the go-to for satisfaction,” the 26-year-old stated of the membership.
Colorado Springs, a metropolis of about 480,000 situated 70 miles (112 kilometers) south of Denver, is residence to the U.S. Air Drive Academy, the U.S. Olympic Coaching Middle, in addition to Give attention to the Household, a outstanding evangelical Christian ministry that lobbies in opposition to LGBTQ rights. The group condemned the taking pictures and stated it “exposes the evil and wickedness contained in the human coronary heart.”
In November 2015, three folks had been killed and eight wounded at a Deliberate Parenthood clinic within the metropolis when authorities say a gunman focused the clinic as a result of it carried out abortions.
The taking pictures got here throughout Transgender Consciousness Week and simply initially of Sunday’s Worldwide Transgender Day of Remembrance, when occasions all over the world are held to mourn and bear in mind transgender folks misplaced to violence.
Since 2006, there have been 523 mass killings and a pair of,727 deaths as of Nov. 19, based on The Related Press/USA Right this moment database on mass killings within the U.S.
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Bedayn is a corps member for The Related Press/Report for America Statehouse Information Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit nationwide service program that locations journalists in native newsrooms to report on undercovered points.
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Related Press reporters Colleen Slevin in Denver, Michael Balsamo in Washington, Jamie Stengle in Dallas, Jeff McMillan in Scranton, Pennsylvania, and Matthew Brown in Billings, Montana, contributed.
World
NATO head and Trump meet in Florida for talks on global security
BRUSSELS (AP) — U.S. President-elect Donald Trump and the head of NATO have met for talks on global security, the military alliance said Saturday.
In a brief statement, NATO said Trump and its secretary general, Mark Rutte, met on Friday in Palm Beach, Florida.
“They discussed the range of global security issues facing the Alliance,” the statement said without giving details.
It appeared to be Rutte’s first meeting with Trump since his Nov. 5 election. Rutte had previously congratulated Trump and said “his leadership will again be key to keeping our Alliance strong” and that he looked forward to working with him.
Trump has for years expressed skepticism about the Western alliance and complained about the defense spending of many of its member nations, which he regarded as too low. He depicted NATO allies as leeches on the U.S. military and openly questioned the value of the alliance that has defined American foreign policy for decades. He threatened not to defend NATO members that fail to meet defense-spending goals.
Rutte and his team also met Trump’s pick as national security adviser, U.S. Rep. Michael Waltz, and other members of the president-elect’s national security team, the NATO statement said.
Rutte took over at the helm of NATO in October.
World
US scrambles as drones shape the landscape of war: 'the future is here'
FIRST ON FOX: The U.S. Army this week took steps to advance American military capabilities by ordering close to 12,000 surveillance drones small enough to fit in a backpack as the reality of battle shifts in favor of electronic warfare.
Conflicts around the globe, particularly the war in Ukraine, have drastically changed how major nations think about conducting war, explained drone expert and former U.S. Army intelligence and special operations soldier Brett Velicovich to Fox News Digital.
The nearly three-year-long war in Ukraine has often depicted scenes not witnessed since World War II, with children loaded onto trains, veins of trenches scarring the eastern front and renewed concern over how the geopolitics of this conflict could ensnare the entire Western world.
1,000 DAYS OF WAR IN UKRAINE AS ZELENSKYY DOUBLES DOWN ON AERIAL OPTIONS WITH ATACMS, DRONES AND MISSILES
But Ukraine’s scrappy response to its often outnumbered and at times outgunned reality has completely changed how major nations look at the modern-day battlefield.
“Think about how we fought wars in the past,” Velicovich, a Fox News contributor, said, pointing to the Vietnam War. “When you were fighting the enemy over that trench line, you didn’t know who was over that hill. You saw a red hat and you fired at it.”
“Now you have the ability to see what’s over that hill and maneuver your forces quickly based on that,” he added.
A report by The Wall Street Journal this week said the U.S. Army secured potentially its largest-ever purchase of small surveillance drones from Red Cat Holding’s Utah-based Teal Drones.
This move is a significant step that the U.S. has been eyeing for more than a decade after terrorists first began employing small-drone tactics against the U.S. military in the Middle East.
According to Velicovich, who routinely visits Ukraine to advise on drone technology, the U.S. is trailing its top adversaries like Russia and China when it comes investment in drone capabilities.
US BRIEFED UKRAINE AHEAD OF PUTIN’S ‘EXPERIMENTAL INTERMEDIATE-RANGE BALLISTIC’ ATTACK
While the U.S. invested heavily in sophisticated systems like Predator and Reaper drones — which are multimillion-dollar systems designed for intelligence collection and lengthy navigation flight times and possess missile strike capabilities — it is the small, cheaply made unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) which are changing battlefield dynamics.
“These handheld, small UAS systems that you are able to take a drone with a bomb strapped to it [have become] basically an artillery shell now. It’s guided artillery shells,” Velicovich said in reference to Unmanned Aircraft Systems, which include not only the UAV, but also the controller manned from the ground. “Frankly, it’s changing how countries are going to fight wars in the future, and the U.S. has been so slow to get ahead of this.”
It has reportedly taken the U.S. Army some 15 years to start beefing up its Short Range Reconnaissance program with these backpack-sized drones, in part because there was a mental hurdle the Department of Defense needed to push through.
“It’s the mentality of senior leaders,” Velicovich explained. “These guys are hardened battle infantry guys. They didn’t grow up with fancy technology.”
“It really takes a lot of people understanding, changing their thought process. And that’s happening now because of the accelerating war in Ukraine, where they’ve seen how effective drones are,” he said, noting that drones can no longer be dismissed as gimmicks or toys of the future.
“Now it’s real. Now it’s here, the future is here,” Velicovich said. “We will never fight another war without drones.”
Teal Drones worked to develop a UAS system based on battlefield needs identified by the U.S. Army, and eventually created the drone that has been dubbed the Black Widow, explained Red Cat CEO Jeff Thompson to Fox News Digital.
BIDEN ADMINISTRATION TO ANNOUNCE $275 MILLION UKRAINE WEAPONS PACKAGE THIS WEEK
This sophisticated system is capable of being operated by a single man, can resist Russian jammers, has strike capabilities, and can fly in GPS-denied zones — an important factor that has been highlighted by the war in Ukraine.
“The Short Range Reconnaissance drone is really going to be able to help the warfighter be more lethal and be a safer soldier,” Thompson said.
The U.S. Army greenlighted the purchase of nearly 12,000 drones. Each soldier kitted out with the Black Widow technology will be given what is called a “system,” which includes two drones and one controller — all of which can fit in one’s rucksack.
Each system, including the drones and controller, costs the U.S. government about $45,000.
But, as Johnson pointed out, Ukraine’s armed forces are going through about 10,000 drones a month — which suggests the U.S. will need to acquire far more than 12,000 drones.
The war in Ukraine has shown that affordably made drones, particularly FPV drones, which stands for “first-person view,” can be made for as low as $1,000 a drone and frequently strapped with explosives and utilized as kamikaze drones.
But drone warfare is about significantly more than sheer quantity — it’s a “power game.”
“This is a cat and mouse game,” Velicovich said, explaining that drone and counter-drone technology, like jamming systems, are constantly evolving. “This is playing out at a level that most people don’t realize.”
“It’s like we were almost peering into the future,” he continued. “We are seeing what’s happening on the ground now, there in Ukraine, and eventually we’ll have to fight a war similar to it, and we just need to be ready.”
World
At least 11 killed and dozens injured in Israeli strikes on Beirut
The strikes came a day after heavy bombardment of Beirut’s southern suburbs and as heavy ground fighting between Israeli forces and Hezbollah militants continues in southern Lebanon, with Israeli troops pushing further into the country.
At least 11 people were killed and dozens more injured after Israeli airstrikes devastated parts of central Beirut on Saturday – with diplomats scrambling to broker a ceasefire in the country.
The strike destroyed an eight-story building, leaving a crater in the ground, and was the fourth on the Lebanese capital in less than a week.
Lebanon’s civil defence said the death toll was provisional as emergency responders were still digging through the rubble looking for survivors.
A separate drone strike in the southern port city of Tyre killed one person and injured another, according to the country’s National News Agency.
Israel’s military did not issue a warning for residents to evacuate prior to the strikes in central Beirut and would not comment on those strikes or on the one in Tyre.
The news comes as heavy ground fighting between Israeli forces and Hezbollah militants continues in southern Lebanon, with Israeli troops pushing farther from the border.
US envoy Amos Hochstein travelled to the region this week in an attempt to broker a ceasefire deal to end the more than 13 months of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, which escalated into full-on war over the last two months.
More than 3,500 people have been killed and over 15,000 wounded by Israeli bombardment in Lebanon, according to the Lebanese health ministry. 1.2 million people, or a quarter of the Lebanese population, were reportedly displaced by the fighting.
On the Israeli side, about 90 soldiers and nearly 50 civilians have been killed by rockets, drones and missiles in northern Israel and in fighting in Lebanon.
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