Suspect in Parade Shooting Charged With 7 Counts
of Murder
Police officers had previously visited the suspect’s
home twice in the years before the shooting in Highland Park, Ill., removing
knives and a sword.
Published
July 5, 2022
Updated
July 6, 2022, 12:21 a.m. ET
Robert
Chiarito and Mitch Smith
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/07/05/us/highland-park-shooting
The police said they had twice visited the home of the
suspect, who had bought his weapons legally.
HIGHLAND
PARK, Ill. — The man accused of killing seven people and wounding dozens of
others in a shooting that terrorized a Fourth of July parade had been
investigated by the local police before. Officers had responded in 2019 after
someone reported that he had tried to kill himself. And they came to his home a
few months later — seizing a knife collection — after a family member reported
that he had pledged to “kill everyone.”
Still, in
the years since, the man, Robert E. Crimo III, 21, was able to legally buy
several guns in Illinois, including a high-powered rifle that officials said
was used in the attack on Monday in Highland Park, a lakefront suburb north of
Chicago. On Tuesday, Mr. Crimo was charged with seven counts of first-degree
murder.
The details
of those prior police visits raised questions about whether the Illinois
authorities missed opportunities to use their relatively strict firearm laws to
block Mr. Crimo’s gun purchases, and about whether a newly signed federal gun
law might have made a difference had it been in force earlier. In a statement,
the Illinois State Police defended its decision to grant Mr. Crimo a permit to
own a gun, which he applied for in December 2019, three months after the police
took the knives from his home.
In Highland
Park, the police said that Mr. Crimo appeared to have prepared for weeks to
attack the parade on Monday morning, and that he had used a fire escape to
climb atop a downtown business to fire dozens of rounds from a high-powered
rifle into the crowd. Afterward, they said, he escaped by discarding his rifle
and blending into the crowd while wearing women’s clothing. The authorities
released a picture that appeared to show him wearing an American flag scarf
around his neck — perhaps, they said, to conceal his distinctive neck tattoos.
Mr. Crimo
was arrested about eight hours later when a resident spotted him on a highway
in a nearby suburb. Although the authorities said they had uncovered no evidence
that the shooting was motivated by racial or religious hate, they acknowledged
that they did not know what motivated the attack. Prosecutors said Mr. Crimo
would make an initial court appearance on Wednesday. It was not immediately
clear whether he had a lawyer.
The
sequence of events in Highland Park — in which law enforcement was told about a
troubled young man, one who later acquired guns and was accused of using them
to kill — was not unique. In the massacre at a high school in Parkland, Fla., in
2018, the F.B.I. received tips about the person who has pleaded guilty in the
case, Nikolas Cruz, before the shooting occurred. And a judge ruled that the
Air Force was mostly responsible for a mass shooting at a Texas church in 2017
because it had not entered the gunman’s domestic violence conviction into a
federal database.
The attack
on Monday was also not the first to raise questions about vulnerabilities in
Illinois’s strict gun laws, which require a permit to own a weapon, and which
include a red flag provision that allows law enforcement to seize weapons from
people deemed dangerous.
“We must
vastly increase awareness and education about this red flag law,” Eric F.
Rinehart, the Lake County state’s attorney, said on Tuesday when he announced
the murder charges. He also called for the passage of a ban on assault weapons.
A man
convicted of killing four people at a Waffle House restaurant in Tennessee in
2018 had previously surrendered his guns to law enforcement in his Illinois
hometown. But those guns, including the AR-15-style rifle used in the attack,
were returned to the gunman’s father, officials said at the time.
The laws
also came under scrutiny in 2019, when a man fatally shot five people at an
Aurora, Ill., factory where he worked. That man, who died in a shootout with
the police, had been banned from owning a gun for five years but continued to
possess one.
In Highland
Park, officials said Mr. Crimo did not have a Firearm Owner’s Identification
Card at the time officers seized 16 knives, a dagger and a sword from his home
in 2019. They said they believed he bought several guns in the years since,
including the rifle used on Monday and another that was in his car when he was
arrested. Those guns were bought legally by Mr. Crimo in Illinois, officials
said, meaning he would have had to have applied for and received a firearm
owner’s card from the State Police.
A
spokeswoman for Gov. J.B. Pritzker, a Democrat who supports gun control laws,
declined to answer questions on Tuesday about whether the governor believed
that the state’s laws had worked as intended in the Highland Park case, but
issued a statement calling for stricter gun laws and greater awareness of existing
restrictions.
“Unfortunately,
every time a mass shooting occurs it serves as a stark reminder that our gun
laws often fall short of the rigorous standards that feel like common sense to
most Americans,” the governor said.
Mr.
Pritzker’s office directed inquiries about Mr. Crimo’s case to the State
Police, who defended how they handled it, saying, in part, that “at the time of
FOID application review in January of 2020, there was insufficient basis to
establish a clear and present danger and deny the FOID application.” The State
Police said that Mr. Crimo’s father had sponsored his application for the
permit.
Steven
Greenberg, a lawyer representing the father, acknowledged that the father had
done so, and said there were possible explanations why. Mr. Greenberg said his
client did not believe there was an issue, and might not have understood what
happened with the knife seizure because it did not happen in his house. “It was
perfectly legal,” he said of sponsoring the gun permit.
The
shooting in Highland Park also closely followed the passage of a federal law
that has been hailed as the most significant piece of gun legislation in
decades. That measure, passed in the wake of mass shootings in Buffalo and
Uvalde, Texas, enhances background checks for buyers ages 18 to 21, requiring
for the first time that juvenile records, including mental health records
beginning at age 16, be vetted for material that identifies young buyers as a
danger to themselves or others.
While many
details about Mr. Crimo’s personal history remained hazy, it was possible — but
not certain — that he could have been flagged for additional scrutiny had the
federal law been passed earlier. Officials did not provide the exact dates that
Mr. Crimo bought his rifles, but indicated that they had been bought in 2020
and 2021. Mr. Crimo turned 21 last year.
As
prosecutors announced charges, residents of Highland Park gathered for prayer
vigils, lamented a shattered sense of suburban security and grieved the deaths
of their neighbors.
The victims
included Nicolas Toledo-Zaragoza, 78, who had recently moved back to Highland
Park from Mexico, and who went to the parade with his family despite not
wanting to; Jacquelyn Sundheim, 63, a beloved employee of a local synagogue
whom one friend called “a beautiful ray of light”; Stephen Straus, a financial
adviser who, at age 88, still took the train every day to his office at a
brokerage firm in Chicago; Katherine Goldstein, 64; and Irina and Kevin
McCarthy, ages 35 and 37, a couple who left behind a toddler son.
“It’s just
sad,” said Adrienne Rosenblatt, a neighbor of the McCarthys.
The
authorities had not yet publicly identified a seventh victim whose death was
announced on Tuesday.
Around
Highland Park, questions also spread about Mr. Crimo, who was from a well-known
local family, and whose father once ran unsuccessfully for mayor.
Nicolas and
Andres Lopez, brothers who went to Highland Park High School with Mr. Crimo,
said they used to be friends with him. Mr. Crimo at one point dropped out of
high school, the brothers said, but they found nothing during the time when
they were friends to suggest a problem.
“He wasn’t
a quiet kid who was dark then,” Andres Lopez, 23, said. “He was quiet because
he was nerdy. He wasn’t sinister.”
In the years
since, concerning signs mounted. Mr. Crimo posted music videos online that
seemed to refer to mass shootings, one of which included cartoon images of a
gunman pointing a large rifle, and of other figures spurting blood. Later in
that video, the gunman lies in a pool of blood near police cars.
Reporting
was contributed by Shawn Hubler, Michael Levenson, Frances Robles, Noam
Scheiber, Dan Simmons and Glenn Thrush.


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