State Police questioned over handling of
report on alleged Highland Park shooter
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[August 18, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Officials from the Illinois State Police faced questioning
Wednesday from Republican lawmakers who said the agency had authority to
reject a gun permit application from a man who later allegedly carried
out a mass shooting at a July 4 parade in Highland Park.
The alleged gunman, Robert Crimo III, is being held without bond on a
117-count indictment for the mass shooting that left seven dead and
dozens more injured.
State Sen. John Curran, R-Downers Grove, criticized ISP for claiming
that it had no authority to deny Crimo a Firearms Owners Identification,
or FOID card, when he applied for one in December 2019, just three
months after he had been the subject of a “clear and present danger”
report filed by an individual who alleged Crimo had threatened to “kill
everyone.”
“This report clearly, by any independent review, would meet the level of
preponderance of the evidence,” Curran said. “It is clearly above the 50
percent threshold, more likely than not, that there (was) a threat of
violence in that home.”
The questioning came during a meeting of the Joint Committee on
Administrative Rules, a legislative panel that has oversight of the
administrative rulemaking process.
On Sept. 5, 2019, Highland Park police received a report, believed to be
from a juvenile member of the Crimo family, that Crimo had made a threat
in the household a few days earlier and that he intended to “kill
everyone.” The reporting individual told authorities of being afraid to
go home due to the nature of the threat.
When police arrived at the residence, according to the report, they
interviewed both Crimo and his mother, Denise M. Pesina. Crimo
reportedly admitted to being depressed when he made the statement and
admitted having a history of drug use. The reporting officer noted that
neither Crimo nor his mother was forthcoming about the language he used
when making the threat.
Police then recovered a tin lunch box containing 16 miscellaneous knives
along with a 12-inch dagger and a 24-inch Samurai-type blade. The
weapons reportedly belonged to Crimo’s father, who did not live in the
residence, but were being stored in Crimo’s bedroom closet.
During the interview, Crimo denied that he felt like hurting himself or
others.
ISP said in a statement after the July 4 shooting that no arrest was
made following the September 2019 incident and that no one, including
Crimo’s family, was willing to move forward with a complaint or provide
further information on threats or mental health issues that would have
allowed law enforcement to take additional action.
Highland Park police then forwarded a copy of the report to ISP, which
is responsible for administering the state’s FOID law. But because Crimo
did not have a FOID card at the time and had not yet applied to obtain
one, ISP discarded the report.
Under the administrative rule in place at the time, ISP was required to
maintain records of people who are determined to present a clear and
present danger. But the rule also said ISP “shall not maintain a record
of those persons who are not determined to present a clear and present
danger for these purposes.”
The rule also defined a “clear and present danger” as someone who poses
“an actual, impending, or imminent threat of substantial bodily harm to
themselves or another person that is articulable and significant” or a
person “who will be likely to act in a manner dangerous to public safety
or contrary to the public interest if they were granted access to a
weapon.”
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Republican Sen. John Curran questions officials from
the Illinois State Police about its handling of a "clear and present
danger" report on the alleged shooter in the July 4 Highland Park
mass shooting. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Peter Hancock)
Curran, however, questioned whether any determination had been made in
Crimo’s case, pointing to what he interpreted to be inconsistencies in
ISP’s public statements.
He noted that on July 5, the day after the shooting, ISP issued a news
release stating that the agency took no action on the report because
Crimo did not have a FOID card to revoke or a pending application to
deny.
But the following day, Curran noted, ISP issued another release
indicating the agency had, in fact, reviewed the Highland Park police
report which indicated that officers found no probable cause to arrest
Crimo.
“Upon review of the report at that time, the reviewing officer concluded
there was insufficient information for a clear-and-present-danger
determination,” the release stated.
Curran said the conflicting statements have led to confusion.
“We don't know if the determination was ever made because you're not
telling us,” Curran said. “You put two different versions out there. I'd
like to know which one (is accurate).”
Other Republicans on the panel criticized the Pritzker administration
over its handling of the incident.
“The Pritzker administration’s purported review of the FOID card process
following the Aurora shooting in 2019 failed to recognize this gap in
the interpretation and application of clear-and-present-danger reports
submitted to the ISP,” Sen. Donald DeWitte, R-St. Charles, said in a
statement. “Had the Pritzker administration done what they said they
were going to do, which was to review and make sure laws already on the
books were being implemented more effectively, the tragedy in Highland
Park might never have occurred.”
But Kelly Griffith, ISP’s acting chief legal counsel, defended the
agency’s actions, saying its hands were tied by the rules in place at
the time.
“At the time that the clear present danger came to the Illinois State
Police in September 2019, the rule would not have allowed us to keep
that information,” she said. “The person didn't have a FOID card. They
didn't have an application on file. And so that report was actually not
kept.”
On July 21, ISP published a new emergency rule to make it clear that the
agency will maintain records of clear-and-present-danger reports, even
if the person does not have a FOID card or pending application.
It also broadens the definition of a clear and present danger to match
the definition in statute, which does not require that the person pose
an “ impending, or imminent threat” or that the threat be “articulable
and significant."
State agencies are allowed to issue emergency rules under some
circumstances, but they are still subject to JCAR review and can stay in
effect for only 150 days before they either expire or are replaced with
permanent rules. ISP has indicated it intends to submit permanent rules,
which will also be subject to public comment and further review by JCAR.
JCAR did not issue an objection to the emergency rule Wednesday, meaning
it is allowed to remain in place through the 150-day window.
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