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Most victims had been released by Monday afternoon, but at least three remained hospitalized. More information on their conditions wasn't available. John Sawicki of Mount Prospect, Ill., watched the horses from his hotel's balcony and said he tried to scream at people to move, but no sound came out because he was so shocked. "They were flying right down the sidewalk," said the 42-year-old, was in town to visit his mother. "I felt so helpless." Jim Evilsizer, a former paramedic who ran a food cart on the parade route, said he helped put a 10-or-12-year-old boy who apparently took a hoof to the head on a backboard and carry him to a triage area on the Mississippi's shore. "It looked like a war zone," the 61-year-old said. "Backboards everywhere, kids strapped to them." Police are continuing to investigate the incident. Bellevue Mayor Virgil Murray said he did not know whether any charges would be filed. The parade is normally the highlight of the year in Bellevue, which hugs the picturesque bluffs on the edge of the Mississippi River on the far northeastern Iowa-Illinois border. The town of 2,300 swells well beyond that number as thousands of people from miles around line the streets. "It's bigger than Christmas," Murray said. Horses have been in the parade for decades, and the Steines' carriage has been a fixture of the procession among tractors, fire trucks and floats. "We've had a lot of confidence in the people who come into our parade," Murray said. "It's just a freak accident that's not explainable."
[Associated
Press;
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