Five Dead After Driver Plows S.U.V. Into Holiday
Parade in Wisconsin
Officials said dozens of people were struck after the
vehicle sped down the street during the Christmas parade in Waukesha, Wis.,
near Milwaukee.
By Dan
Simmons, Mitch Smith, Robert Chiarito, Jesus Jiménez and Livia Albeck-Ripka
Published
Nov. 21, 2021
Updated
Nov. 22, 2021, 3:14 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/21/us/wisconsin-parade-crash.html
WAUKESHA,
Wis. — It was supposed to be a celebratory night in Waukesha, Wis. Dance groups
and high school bands and politicians were marching along Main Street in the
Milwaukee suburb’s Christmas parade, which was returning from a pandemic
hiatus.
Then, just
before 4:40 p.m., the driver of a red S.U.V. stormed past barricades and
barreled through the crowd, striking dozens. At least five people were killed
and 40 people were injured, and the numbers could change, city authorities said
in a statement late Sunday. Area hospitals reported treating dozens of
patients, including many children. It was unclear what might have motivated the
episode.
“Today our
community faced horror and tragedy in what should have been a community
celebration,” said Mayor Shawn Reilly, who described seeing smiling children
and happy parents when he marched along the parade route before the incident.
“I’m deeply saddened to know that so many in our community went to a parade but
ended up dealing with injury and heartache.”
Chief
Daniel Thompson of the Waukesha Police Department said on Sunday night that a
person of interest was in custody and that there was no further threat.
Eyewitnesses described the driver as male, but that was not confirmed by the
police. Chief Thompson said shots were fired by the police at the driver.
A spokesman
for Children’s Wisconsin said that hospital, which treats only pediatric
patients, had admitted 15 people on Sunday. Details about their conditions were
not immediately available. Another hospital, Aurora Medical Center–Summit, said
in a statement that it was treating 13 patients, including three in critical
condition. Officials at Froedtert Hospital said they also had received patients
but did not specify how many.
The tragedy
spoiled what participants and onlookers described as a joyous night in
Waukesha, a bedroom community about 20 miles west of Milwaukee. More than 60
entries, from the Waukesha Fire Department to the Old Car Club to Santa, were
scheduled to march through downtown.
This was
the 58th Christmas parade for Waukesha, an annual event that was canceled last
year because of the pandemic. The theme of this year’s event was simply
“Comfort and Joy.”
Mikey
Randa, 14, said he was marching in the parade with his high school football
team when he saw a young girl hit by the car.
“The car
just flew past us, there was a lot of panic,” he said, adding that he initially
didn’t grasp what had happened. Mr. Randa said he then saw five or six bodies
lying on the ground. “I’m still in a bit of a shock,” he said.
All
Waukesha public schools will be closed Monday, the police department said in a
statement Sunday night.
Jason
Kellner, 49, said that he had just watched his son, a drum player in the
Waukesha South High School marching band, pass by, when he first saw a red Ford
Escape heading toward the crowd. After passing through an intersection, Mr.
Kellner said, the car “started mowing people down.”
“I’ve never
felt a worse feeling; wondering what I’m going to find when I get to my kid,”
Mr. Kellner said of the moment he ran toward his son, whom he found standing
unharmed by the side of the road.
Mr. Kellner
said he pulled a bloody saxophone off the street and saw several people,
apparently injured, on the ground.
“Right now,
I’m just angry,” Mr. Kellner said. “It seems everywhere we turn, it’s just
another violent day in the U.S.”
Tyler
Kotlarek, 28, was watching the parade with family members when they heard what
at first sounded like cheering, but then they realized “it was screams,” he
said. “It was the worst thing I’ve ever seen in my life.”
Mr.
Kotlarek said the driver appeared to intentionally steer toward people. That
account had not been confirmed by the police.
“He was
going from side to side, targeting people,” Mr. Kotlarek said. “The car bombed
through. He was flying through there going intentionally from left to right.”
The
Milwaukee Dancing Grannies, which were among the parade entrants, said on
Facebook that members and volunteers had been impacted “and we are waiting for
word on their conditions.” Officials with the Xtreme Dance team, another group
that marched, asked for thoughts, prayers and “privacy to process the tragic
events.” The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee said a priest, as well as
parishioners and students at a local Catholic school, were among the injured.
Tom Hickey,
25, was walking near a friend’s float at the back of the parade when he heard
honking behind him. A man wearing a sweatshirt and gray hat who was driving the
red Ford Escape was trying to make his way through the crowd, he said. Mr.
Hickey said he thought the driver was lost.
Then, the
driver took a right turn onto the main parade route, gunned the engine and
moved through the parade route at what appeared to be top speed, he said.
“When he
made that right turn, that’s when he turned really dangerous,” Mr. Hickey said.
Angelito
Tenorio, a candidate for state treasurer, had just finished marching in the
parade and was circling back to Main Street when he saw the S.U.V. speeding
along the route.
“All of a
sudden I heard a loud bang,” said Mr. Tenorio, an alderman for nearby West
Allis. “Then I heard deafening cries and screams. It was very gut-wrenching.”
He
described a chaotic scene that left him stunned and shaking.
“People
were running away, leaving their belongings behind, sobbing,” he said. “When
the crowd cleared out, it looked like there were people on the ground who might
have been struck by the vehicle.”
In a video
posted on the city’s Facebook page, the S.U.V. can be seen speeding down the
parade route and screams can be heard from those in the crowd. Then, seconds
later, a police officer runs by, followed by a number of police vehicles as a
group of children stops performing.
Peggy Tom,
58, said that after the car sped past her, she walked down the street searching
for a friend, whom she later found out was injured.
There were
“piles of instruments,” Ms. Tom said, “and shoes.”
Others
walking through the chaotic scene, she added, were shouting the names of lost
loved ones.
Don Paul
Browne, a city alderman, was marching in the parade with the mayor but had already
left and did not witness what happened. He said the city was celebrating its
125th anniversary.
He
described the parade as a family-friendly event that draws spectators from
other counties. He struggled to understand what happened, he said, because
there were no political undertones or controversy connected with the parade.
Hours
later, the families and band members were gone and residents were being asked
to avoid downtown. But along the parade route, resting against the entrance to
The Steaming Cup coffeehouse, three lawn chairs were illuminated by flashing
red and blue police lights.
Andrés
Martínez, Livia Albeck-Ripka, Vimal Patel, Juston Jones and Elizabeth Dias
contributed reporting.
Mitch Smith
covers the Midwest and the Great Plains. Since joining The Times in 2014, he
has written extensively about gun violence, oil pipelines, state-level politics
and the national debate over police tactics. He is based in Chicago. @mitchksmith
Jesus
Jiménez is a breaking news reporter. @jesus_jimz
Livia
Albeck-Ripka is a reporter for The New York Times, currently based in
California. She was previously a reporter for The Times's Australia bureau. @livia_ar
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