Highland Park shooting suspect admits to deadly attack, prosecutor says
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[July 07, 2022]
By Brendan O'Brien
WAUKEGAN, Ill. (Reuters) - The man accused
of killing seven people and wounding dozens of others at an Independence
Day parade outside of Chicago admitted to authorities that he carried
out the shooting, a prosecutor said on Wednesday during the suspect's
first court appearance.
Robert Crimo, the 21-year-old suspect facing seven counts of
first-degree murder, appeared at the bond hearing via a video link from
jail, two days after the attack in Highland Park, Illinois. Dressed in
black and wearing shoulder length hair, Crimo was denied bail by Judge
Theodore Potkonjak.
"He does pose, in fact, a specific and present threat to the community,"
the judge said in ordering that Crimo to be held.
Crimo spoke only briefly to confirm that he did not have a lawyer. A
public defender was appointed to represent him.
Ben Dillon, a county prosecutor, told the court that the suspect had
confessed to the July Fourth attack after he was apprehended. There was
no plea entered at the hearing.
Eric Rinehart, the state's attorney for Lake County, said more charges
were expected against Crimo, whose next court appearance is scheduled
for July 28. If convicted on the first-degree murder charges, he would
face a mandatory life prison sentence without the possibility of parole.
In a news briefing following the bond hearing, Rinehart said authorities
questioned the suspect after reading him his legal rights, including the
right to an attorney.
"He went into details about what he had done," Rinehart said. "He
admitted to what he had done."
Highland Park is the latest American community forced to come to grips
with mass gun violence. The bloodshed there was the latest in a string
of mass shootings that have renewed debate about U.S. gun violence,
including a May 24 attack in which 19 schoolchildren and two teachers
were killed in Uvalde, Texas. On May 14, 10 people were slain in a
supermarket in a mostly Black neighborhood in Buffalo, New York.
Authorities said on Tuesday that Crimo planned the Illinois attack for
weeks. As the annual parade marched through downtown Highland Park, he
climbed on to a rooftop from an alley and fired more than 70 rounds at
spectators, they said. He made his getaway dressed in women's clothing
and makeup to cover his facial and neck tattoos, officials said.
The suspect was arrested later on Monday when he was stopped by police
at the wheel of his mother's car, which authorities said he had driven
to Wisconsin and back to Illinois following the shooting.
After Wednesday's hearing Sergeant Chris Covelli, a spokesperson for the
Lake County Sheriff's office said Crimo saw a "celebration" in the city
of Madison, Wisconsin, and "seriously contemplated using the firearm he
had in his vehicle to commit another shooting."
A Smith & Wesson semiautomatic rifle, similar to an AR-15, used in the
shooting was found at the scene in Highland Park, and Crimo had a
similar weapon in his mother's car when arrested, according to county
prosecutors.
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Robert E. Crimo III, suspect in the mass shooting that took place at
a Fourth of July parade route in the Chicago suburb of Highland
Park, Illinois, U.S. is seen in initial booking photograph from the
Highland Park Police Department released July 6, 2022. Lake County
Major Crime Task Force/Handout via Reuters
Police said they had no immediate evidence of any
anti-Semitic or racist basis for the attack. Highland Park has a
large Jewish community. Investigators were reviewing videos Crimo
had posted on social media containing violent imagery.
Crimo's parents said in a statement released by their lawyer that
they are requesting privacy.
"We are all mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers, and this is a
terrible tragedy for many families, the victims, the paradegoers,
the community, and our own," they said. "Our hearts, thoughts, and
prayers go out to everybody."
RED FLAG LAW
Crimo legally purchased five guns in all, rifles and pistols,
despite having come to law enforcement's attention on two prior
occasions for alleged behavior suggesting he might harm himself or
others, Covelli said.
The first instance was an April 2019 emergency 911 call reporting
Crimo had attempted suicide, followed in September of that year by a
police visit regarding alleged threats "to kill everyone" that he
had directed at family members, Covelli said.
Police responding to the second incident seized a collection of 16
knives, a dagger and a sword amassed by Crimo in his home, though no
arrest was made as authorities at the time lacked probable cause to
take him into custody, Covelli said.
Crimo slipped past the safeguards of an Illinois "red flag" law
designed to prevent people deemed to have violent tendencies from
getting guns.
State police said that the knives were returned to the family later
on the day they were confiscated after the father told authorities
they were his and stored in his son's closet for safekeeping. State
police acknowledged having received a report from local authorities
declaring Crimo a "clear and present danger" after the alleged
September 2019 threat to his family.
State police said they closed the matter after determining that
Crimo at that time had neither a gun-owner's identification card to
revoke nor an application to deny. Neither of the 2019 incidents
surfaced in four background checks conducted during his subsequent
firearms purchases, they added.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien and Tom Polansek; Additional reporting
by Kanishka Singh, Jonathan Allen, Tyler Clifford, Christopher
Gallagher, Christopher Walljasper and Doina Chiacu; Writing by
Jonathan Allen and Steve Gorman; Editing by Will Dunham, Robert
Birsel, Chizu Nomiyama and Aurora Ellis)
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