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Colorado supermarket shooting suspect charged with over 40 more felonies

A couple stands by a fence covered with memorial cards and flowers outside the King Soopers store.
Mourners outside the parking lot of the King Soopers grocery store in Boulder, Colo., where 10 people died in a mass shooting last month.
(David Zalubowski / Associated Press)
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Prosecutors in Colorado have filed over 40 more felony charges against a man charged with killing 10 people at a Boulder supermarket last month, including for allegedly using a large-capacity magazine banned by state lawmakers in response to recent mass shootings.

The court document with the new charges, filed Wednesday, lists 19 new victims — including 11 law enforcement officers — whom Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, 21, is accused of trying to kill during the attack. Some victims have more than one count of attempted first-degree murder associated with the attacks on them, reflecting two different theories as to how Alissa allegedly tried to kill them: intentionally or through “extreme indifference” to human life.

In 2013, Colorado lawmakers banned the sale of ammunition magazines that hold more than 15 rounds in response to mass shootings the year before at a suburban Denver movie theater and at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut. Despite that, an investigation by television station KUSA found that some gun shops have been skirting the law by selling the disassembled parts of high-capacity magazines that buyers can put together themselves.

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Investigators have said Alissa legally purchased the Ruger AR-556 pistol, which resembles an AR-15 rifle with a slightly shorter stock. He is accused of using it in the shooting after having passed a background check six days earlier.

Alissa’s defense has asked for time to evaluate what it called his “mental illness” but has not offered any details about the condition. He has not been asked to enter a plea yet, and the public defenders who represent him are barred from talking to the media about the case under office policy.

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