Colorado shooting suspect changed name as teenager in Texas
Summary by New York Post
Accused Colorado mass shooter Anderson Lee Aldrich had a troubled life growing up in California and Texas -- one largely hidden by a complete name change for his 16th birthday.
0 Articles
0 Articles
All
Left
Center
Right
Times of India
Colorado Springs nightclub shooting suspect makes first court appearance via video
The young lad who got hold of a gun and shot down five people at Club Q in Colorado Springs faced the judge for the first time, on camera from jail.
Court records suggest why Colorado Springs shooting suspect changed his name as a teenager
The suspect in the fatal shooting of five people at a Colorado LGBTQ2S+ nightclub changed his name more than six years ago as a teenager, after filing a legal petition in Texas saying he wanted to "protect himself" from a father with a criminal history.
Battered Colorado Springs shooting suspect appears in wheelchair at hearing
The suspect in a mass shooting that killed five people and wounded 17 at a Colorado Springs LGBTQ nightclub appeared in a court hearing on Wednesday with obvious facial injuries, mumbling their name while slumped to the side in a wheelchair.
What is collateral relief? Colorado Springs suspect had criminal record wiped before shooting
A new trend in criminal justice reform wipes the slate clean for some accused of crime. That happened for Anderson Aldrich, the suspect in the Colorado Springs attack.
Suspect in Colorado LGBTQ2 nightclub shooting changed name as teen in Texas - National
Anderson Lee Aldrich, who faces murder and hate crime charges, petitioned a Texas court to change his name when he was 16 from Nicholas Franklin Brink to his current name.