Darrell Brooks convicted in deadly Wisconsin Christmas parade attack
Send a link to a friend
[October 27, 2022]
By Brendan O'Brien
(Reuters) - Darrell Brooks, a Wisconsin man
who killed six people and injured dozens of others when he drove his SUV
into a Christmas parade near Milwaukee last year, was found guilty on
Wednesday of intentional murder and other charges.
A 12-member jury convicted Brooks, 40, of more than 76 charges,
including six counts of intentional homicide, each of which carries a
mandatory penalty of life in prison.
Brooks, wearing a suit and tie and a blue surgical mask over his nose
and mouth, bowed his head against his clasped hands while Waukesha
County Circuit Judge Jennifer Dorow read the verdicts.
Brooks was accused of deliberately driving his sport utility vehicle
through police barricades on Nov. 21 and plowing into crowds of people
participating in the annual parade in Waukesha, about 15 miles (25 km)
west of downtown Milwaukee.
The dead ranged in age from 8 to 81, and more than 60 others were
injured, including at least 18 children. Among the casualties were
members of a dance troupe known as the "Dancing Grannies."
Brooks, a Milwaukee resident, represented himself during the three-week
trial.
During his closing argument on Monday, Brooks told the jury that he had
no intention of hurting anyone. He said he sounded the vehicle's horn as
he drove through the crowd, attempting to warn people to get out of the
way.
"When you ride through a parade route and roll over children ... your
intent is known, Mr. Brooks," Waukesha County District Attorney Sue
Opper said during closing arguments. "That's not an accident."
[to top of second column]
|
Darrell Brooks, charged with killing
five people and injuring nearly 50 after plowing through a Christmas
parade with his sport utility vehicle on November 21, appears in
Waukesha County Court in Waukesha, Wisconsin, U.S. November 23,
2021. Mark Hoffman/Pool via REUTERS
Before the verdicts were read on Wednesday, Brooks asked the judge
to rule on several motions, including a request for a mistrial. She
denied all of them as she waited for the jury to return to the
courtroom.
On numerous occasions during the proceedings, Dorow admonished
Brooks for failing to follow court rules and arguing with her. She
removed Brooks from the courtroom several times, sending him to
another room where he watched the proceedings.
At one point, Brooks took off his shirt in the other room, before
Dorow, seeing him on a camera feed visible in the courtroom, stopped
the proceedings and gave the court a break, journalists covering the
trial reported.
At the time of the attack, Brooks was out on bail on a domestic
abuse charge. He was arrested near the scene and has been in custody
ever since.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Chicago; Editing by Howard Goller)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |