No, the Club Q shooting in Colorado Springs was not a false flag
If Your Time is short
- Five people were killed Nov. 19 during a shooting at an LGBTQ nightclub in Colorado Springs, Colorado.
- News articles, witness testimonies and 911 call logs are evidence that the shooting occurred and not a false flag operation as claimed on social media.
- Club Q opened in the early 2000s, well before QAnon emerged in 2017 as a conspiracy theory.
News about the Nov. 19 mass shooting that killed five people at an LGBTQ nightclub in Colorado Springs, Colorado, is still developing, but that hasn’t stopped baseless social media claims from describing it as a "false flag" operation.
One tweet from a well-known purveyor of misinformation, Real Raw News, was posted a day after the shooting and claimed it was staged because of a perceived connection to the QAnon conspiracy theories.
"Odd that the place was called Club ‘Q,’" the tweet said. "I smell False Flag."
There’s nothing fabricated about this shooting. The loved ones of five who authorities say were killed — Daniel Aston, 28, Kelly Loving, 40, Ashley Paugh, 35, Derrick Rump, 38, and Raymond Green Vance, 22 — are grieving. "We're heartbroken. We're sad. We're mad, angry," Paugh’s sister, Stephanie Clark, told NBC.
Club Q opened as a gay club in Colorado Springs in the early 2000s, well before QAnon first emerged as a conspiracy theory in 2017. Coverage of the club’s opening by local newspaper The Gazette focused on the club owners’...
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