The Colorado Springs spree killing of May 17, 1986, stands as one of Colorado's deadliest mass shootings and a case that would foreshadow the wave of mass-casualty violence to come. Gilbert Eugenio Archibeque, a 29-year-old plumber, carried out a calculated double robbery that left five people dead and one survivor across two adjacent businesses—the Grand View Lounge bar and the Kwik-Way convenience store—before setting the bar ablaze in an attempt to cover his tracks. He was found dead the following day, having taken his own life as police closed in, leaving no one to answer for the five lives he extinguished.

The violence began at approximately 11 PM on May 16, 1986, when Archibeque entered the Grand View Lounge, announced a robbery, and over the next several minutes bound and struck the patrons present. He retrieved a .357-caliber revolver and executed each victim with a single gunshot to the head: Debbie Green, 29 (bartender), Joanne McNamara, 46, and James Roepke, 52. He then set fire to the bar in a calculated effort to destroy evidence. Firefighters arriving at approximately 2:50 AM discovered the five bodies inside.

Archibeque then walked directly to the adjacent Kwik-Way convenience store, where two sisters—Sandra Howard, 22, and Elaine Sindlesecker, 19—had locked themselves inside after hearing gunshots. He forced his way in and shot both women, killing them where they stood. At least 15 .22-caliber casings were recovered between both crime scenes.

The only survivor was Robert Kuretich, approximately 40, who was at the Grand View Lounge. He told police he felt a blow to his head, heard successive gunshots, and crawled under a pool table in a desperate attempt to hide. Grazed by at least one bullet, he escaped through a back exit. He was treated at a local hospital and listed in good condition. Police refused to disclose his location out of fear Archibeque might target him for elimination.

Police identified Archibeque through a surveillance photograph from the Kwik-Way store, described as clear and detailed. He was described as a white male, about 30, 5 feet 9 inches, 180 pounds, with dark brown curly hair, wearing a light blue jacket and light-colored pants. Officers arriving at the scenes spotted a man running toward a fence, but he escaped by leaping an 8-foot wooden fence. Police later surrounded his apartment, and when they ordered him to surrender, he shot himself once in the head. He died in his apartment, leaving no one to prosecute.

The motives remained unclear, though investigators suggested a "recognition factor"—the possibility that Archibeque feared someone in the bar could identify him—could have driven the seemingly indiscriminate nature of his attacks. The case became notable for the clear surveillance image that identified the killer, among the most actionable evidence captured on a convenience store camera up to that point in history.

The crime sent shockwaves through Colorado Springs. At the time, it was the second-worst multiple homicide in the city's history, surpassed only by a 1911 ax murder in which six people died. In the decades that followed, the Archibeque case was cited by researchers as an early example of workplace or public-space mass shooting—a category of violence that would become tragically common. In the years before Columbine, Virginia Tech, and Sandy Hook, Archibeque's spree stood as a stark reminder that such capacity for mass violence existed in American communities and that systems to detect and intervene remained inadequate.

Legally, the case was open and shut. With Archibeque dead, there was no one to charge, no one to try, no one to sentence. The families of his victims were denied the closure a trial might have provided. For investigators, the case demonstrated the value of surveillance technology and the terrifying speed with which a single individual could carry out devastating harm. For the families of those five victims, the loss never fully faded from the community's memory, four decades on.