Tag Archives: patrons

Gunman kills 5 in Colorado LGBTQ nightclub before he is stopped by patrons

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., Nov 20 (Reuters) – A gunman opened fire inside an LGBTQ nightspot in Colorado Springs late on Saturday, killing at least five people and injuring 25 others before being stopped by “heroic” clubgoers, police said.

Authorities on Sunday said they were investigating whether the attack was motivated by hate.

Police identified the suspect as Anderson Lee Aldrich, 22, and said he used a “long rifle.” He was taken into police custody shortly after the shooting began and was being treated for injuries, according to officials.

The shooting was reminiscent of the 2016 Pulse club massacre, when a gunman killed 49 people at the gay nightclub of that name in Orlando, Florida, before he was fatally shot by police.

It unfolded as LGBTQ communities and allies around the world prepared to mark the Transgender Day of Remembrance on Sunday, an annual observance to honor victims of transphobic violence.

Club Q, a long-established venue in a modest strip mall, was described by many as a safe haven for the LGBTQ community in Colorado’s second-largest city.

One of the victims was identified as Daniel Aston, 28, a transgender man and bartender at the club who also performed in shows as a dancer, according to a Colorado Public Radio interview with his mother, Sabrina Aston.

“He was the happiest he had ever been,” Sabrina Aston said. “He was thriving and having fun and having friends. It’s just unbelievable. He had so much more life to give to us and to all to his friends and to himself.”

Police said the initial phone call about the shooting came in just before midnight, and that the suspect was apprehended within minutes thanks to the quick action of law enforcement and the bravery of at least two patrons who intervened.

The shooter burst in with a rifle, a military-style flak jacket and what appeared to be six magazines of ammunition, the New York Times reported, citing the club owners, who said they did not know the man.

Multiple firearms were found at the venue, including the rifle, Colorado Springs Police Chief Adrian Vasquez told a news conference on Sunday.

One patron, Joshua Thurman, choked up as he told reporters that he was dancing in the club when he first heard gunshots. He sought refuge in a dressing room and locked himself inside with others, praying for his life and thinking about loved ones.

“We heard everything,” Thurman said. “We heard more shots fired. We heard the assailant being beat up by someone that I assumed that tackled him. We heard the police come in. We heard them yelling at him. We heard them saying, ‘Take certain people because they’re critical.'”

Several of the injured were in critical condition and being treated at local hospitals, authorities said.

Club Q called the incident a “hate attack” in a statement on Facebook and thanked the “heroic customers” for subduing the gunman.

VIOLENCE CONDEMNED

Anxiety within many LGBTQ communities in the United States has risen amid a divisive political climate and after a string of threats and violent incidents targeting LGBTQ people and events in recent months.

In a statement condemning the violence, President Joe Biden said Americans must not tolerate hate.

“Places that are supposed to be safe spaces of acceptance and celebration should never be turned into places of terror and violence,” Biden said.

Colorado Governor Jared Polis, who in 2018 became the first openly gay man in the country to be elected as a governor, called the shooting a “senseless act of evil.”

“I feel that same pit in my stomach that so many of you today do, a feeling sadly all too familiar,” Polis said in a video appearance during a vigil held at a local church.

A spokesperson for the city of Colorado Springs said authorities were aware of a 2021 bomb threat involving an individual with the same name and birth date as the suspect, but have not officially confirmed they are one and the same.

Colorado has a grim history of mass violence, including the 1999 shooting at Columbine High School, a 2012 rampage inside a movie theater in a Denver suburb and a supermarket attack that killed 10 people last year.

Mourners laid flowers outside the club on Sunday as Colorado Springs resident Mark Travis, a former police chaplain, played “Taps” on his bugle.

“We could go in and forget about work and everything else and feel like it was a home,” Travis said of the club.

The shooting, he said, had ripped away that sense of comfort. “It’s akin to, I guess being burglarized or something but much worse. You’re not even safe in your own home.”

Reporting by Kevin Mohatt in Colorado Springs, Keith Coffman in Denver, Maria Caspani in New York and Shubham Kalia in Bengaluru; Writing by Maria Caspani and Daniel Trotta;
Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky, Frances Kerry, Lisa Shumaker, Paul Simao and Daniel Wallis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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NYC bar that let’s patrons destroy stuff isn’t safe, suit says

She went for a smashing good time, but instead, a Manhattan woman severed a tendon at a bar that lets patrons pay to destroy stuff in a “rage room,” according to a lawsuit.

Annaleigh Robbins-Sennewald, 25, says a visit to the Break Bar on Ninth Avenue in the Garment District left her bloodied and needing surgery, and when she asked the manager for help, all she got was a Band-Aid.

The television costume coordinator had gone with friends for a birthday celebration at the bar, which encourages customers to “smash” their glasses after knocking back a few drinks.

The Break Bar also offers 30-minute sessions in a separate room it calls the Wrecking Club, where, for $169.99, everything from plates to old televisions are available for destruction with crowbars and hammers.

The “rampage” session provides eight electronics and 30 “breakables” for smashing. The price includes “weapons & safety gear … so you can get that rage and anger out safely!” the bar notes on its web site.

“I had little heels on so they did give me protective boots and basically gardening gloves. Nothing protective,” the plaintiff claimed.

Annaleigh Robbins-Sennewald visited the Break Bar to celebrate a birthday with her friends.
Handout
Annaleigh Robbins-Sennewald recalled not feeling her severed tendon while she was drunk.
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Patrons at the Break Bar in the Garment District can wreck objects with crowbars and hammers in 30-minute sessions.
Annie Wermiel

Robbins-Sennewald was also wearing a helmet as the destruction derby got underway, she said.

“Within the first 10 minutes, one of my friends threw up a glass and another hit it with a crowbar, and the shard kind of flew at me,” she recalled. “I put my hand up to protect myself, and it went through my protective glove and severed my tendon.”

Drunk, Robbins-Sennewald said the impact of the injury wasn’t immediately clear to her, so she stood back during the rest of the session.

The Break Bar encourages its patrons to “smash” glasses after drinking.
Annie Wermiel

“It didn’t look right. I couldn’t move my finger,” she said, noting the glove was filling with blood.

When it was time to leave, Robbins-Sennewald says she asked an employee for a first aid kit but, “he brought me back burn cream and a mosquito bite wipe. … The manager brought me a band aid.”

She’s seeking unspecified damages and accuses the Break Bar of negligence in Manhattan Supreme Court papers.

Annaleigh Robbins-Sennewald claims the Break Bar only offered “protective boots and basically gardening gloves” as protection while destroying objects.
AP Photo/Jae C. Hong

“They were not prepared for someone to come out of there with any amount of injury,” she said, adding “they gave me safety gear and that safety gear did not do it’s job.”

She eventually had surgery to repair the severed tendon, which had impacted her right ring finger, and underwent six months of physical therapy.

“I definitely had a rough go of it the first couple months,” she said.

Annaleigh Robbins-Sennewald claims a worker gave her “back burn cream and a mosquito bite wipe” to treat her bleeding wound.
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Annaleigh Robbins-Sennewald attended physical therapy for sixth months after surgery on her severed tendon.
Handout

In response to a request for comment, an insurance adjuster for the Break Bar accused The Post of harassment and demanded the newspaper “cease and desist” from reporting on the lawsuit.

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Starbucks employee at NJ location tests positive for hepatitis A, patrons told to be vaccinated

A local New Jersey health department is urging patrons who went to a specific Starbucks coffee shop in Gloucester Township on certain days this month to get vaccinated for hepatitis A after an employee tested positive.

Anyone who patronized the Blackwood Clementon Road Starbucks in Clementon on Nov. 4, 5, 6, 11, 12 or 13 should get the vaccine out of an abundance of caution, the Camden County Department of Health said, according to NJ.com. 

The county was notified of the employee’s infection on Wednesday, FOX 29 in Philadelphia reported. 

Hepatitis, a highly contagious liver infection, is rarely fatal and is usually mild but severe cases can hang on for months. Symptoms include nausea and diarrhea, tiredness, fever, jaundice, stomach pain and dark urine. People with liver conditions are at higher risk. 

FAMOUS ANTHONY’S RESTAURANTS IN VIRGINIA LINKED TO DEADLY HEPATITIS A OUTBREAK 

An employee of a New Jersey Starbucks tested positive of hepatitis A this week, forcing all of the store’s employees to get vaccinated. (Photo by Nathan Stirk/Getty Images) ((Photo by Nathan Stirk/Getty Images / Getty Images)

An investigation at the Starbucks didn’t uncover any health violations. The store was temporarily closed until all of the employees had been vaccinated. 

Patrons who may have been infected were urged to get vaccinated as soon as possible. The county is setting up a vaccination clinic on Friday, NJ.com reported. 

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“There’s a limited time that people can get the vaccine where it’s effective,” Caryelle Lasher with the Camden County Health Department said, according to FOX 29. “For people who were exposed if they get the vaccine within two weeks of that exposure they can prevent hepatitis and prevent getting ill.”

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186 zoo patrons told to get rabies shot due to wild bats

Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium said a wild bat found inside the zoo’s aquarium complex tested positive for rabies and urged 186 people who attended zoo camping events to seek treatment for rabies exposure.The zoo noted the bat was not part of its’ collection, but rather a wild bat that entered the Aquarium.According to the zoo, on July 4th a guest taking part in an overnight campout in the Aquarium building reported she awoke and noticed a wild bat near her head. She did not appear to suffer any scratches or bite marks. But because the bat flew away before it could be captured, the zoo’s veterinarian advised the woman to contact her doctor for the risk of rabies exposure.The zoo says it notified Douglas County Health Department, and a team from the zoo located seven wild, little brown bats inside the Aquarium. All were euthanized. Only one of the seven tested positive for rabies.According to the zoo, both the Nebraska State Veterinarian and the Nebraska Department of Health recommended 186 guests staying in the Aquarium over the nights of July 2nd and 3rd, as well as June 29th and 30th should receive the rabies post exposure prophylaxis. Each attendee has been notified, including children and adults as well as some zoo employees. The zoo is offering guests refunds for the camping events and it is paying for the post exposure rabies treatment.The Henry Doorly Zoo says overnight monitoring and other inspection efforts have found no other bats in the complex, and no evidence of long-term bat roosting.Little brown bats are common in Nebraska and it is not unusual for a wild bat to be infected with rabies. The Nebraska Humane Society offers this advice about what to do if a bat is in your home.

Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium said a wild bat found inside the zoo’s aquarium complex tested positive for rabies and urged 186 people who attended zoo camping events to seek treatment for rabies exposure.

The zoo noted the bat was not part of its’ collection, but rather a wild bat that entered the Aquarium.

According to the zoo, on July 4th a guest taking part in an overnight campout in the Aquarium building reported she awoke and noticed a wild bat near her head. She did not appear to suffer any scratches or bite marks.

But because the bat flew away before it could be captured, the zoo’s veterinarian advised the woman to contact her doctor for the risk of rabies exposure.

The zoo says it notified Douglas County Health Department, and a team from the zoo located seven wild, little brown bats inside the Aquarium. All were euthanized. Only one of the seven tested positive for rabies.

According to the zoo, both the Nebraska State Veterinarian and the Nebraska Department of Health recommended 186 guests staying in the Aquarium over the nights of July 2nd and 3rd, as well as June 29th and 30th should receive the rabies post exposure prophylaxis.

Each attendee has been notified, including children and adults as well as some zoo employees. The zoo is offering guests refunds for the camping events and it is paying for the post exposure rabies treatment.

The Henry Doorly Zoo says overnight monitoring and other inspection efforts have found no other bats in the complex, and no evidence of long-term bat roosting.

Little brown bats are common in Nebraska and it is not unusual for a wild bat to be infected with rabies. The Nebraska Humane Society offers this advice about what to do if a bat is in your home.

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