Tag Archives: parade

Man accused of driving a car through the Waukesha Christmas parade delivers tearful closing arguments



CNN
 — 

Darrell Brooks told jurors Tuesday during closing arguments he did not intentionally plow a SUV through a Christmas parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin, last year, which left six dead and dozens more injured.

Brooks has been representing himself during this roughly three-week trial. He tearfully asked jurors during his 50-minute closing argument to consider whether the car could have malfunctioned during the incident last November and the effects the trial – along with the negative press – has had on his family.

“What if the vehicle couldn’t stop because of malfunction? What if the driver of the vehicle was unable to stop the vehicle? Because of that fact, what if the driver may have panicked? Does that make the driver in a rage and intent on killing people?” Brooks asked, claiming there was a recall on the vehicle he drove that day. Waukesha County Judge Jennifer Dorow struck those comments from the record.

“I’ve never heard of someone trying to intentionally hurt someone while attempting to blow their horn while attempting to alert people of their presence,” Brooks said.

The defendant went on to repeatedly allege there had been “misconceptions” and “lies” told about him during the trial. After saying that his conscience is clear and that he had made peace with God, Brooks spent much of the final 10 minutes of his closing remarks repeatedly telling the jury to be at peace with their verdict and not to have any regrets.

“Whatever you decide, make sure you yourself can live with it. That’s the magnitude of the power that you have,” Brooks said. “Be at peace with what you decide.”

Waukesha County District Attorney Susan Opper rebutted Brooks’ claims, saying he wants jurors to care about his family when other families in this tragedy will never be able to see their loved ones again.

“There are 68 victims in this case, folks. That’s not an accident,” Opper said.

Despite Brooks’ claims of him not intentionally striking people with an SUV, Opper repeatedly told the jury there is overwhelming evidence showing Brooks was fully aware of his actions when he drove his SUV through a crowd of hundreds of people.

“He reached speeds of approximately 30 mph. That’s intentional. He plowed through 68 different people, 68. How can you hit one and keep going? How can you hit two and keep going?” Opper asked.

Opper also told jurors not to be distracted in their deliberations by the conduct of Brooks during the trial.

“You must not, not, not consider anything about Darrell Brooks other than his conduct in downtown Waukesha on the evening of November 21, 2021,” Opper told the jury. “Nothing he’s done before that, nothing he’s done since that. When you go back to that deliberation room, please obey Judge Dorow. Confine your comments to his conduct on November 21.”

Jurors will now deliberate whether to convict Brooks. After deliberating for an hour and 45 minutes Tuesday, the jurors completed their first day of deliberations without reaching a verdict. The jury is expected to return to court to continue their deliberations on Wednesday at 9:30 a.m. ET.

Brooks pleaded not guilty to more than 70 charges, including six counts of first-degree intentional homicide. He previously pleaded not guilty by insanity, but his public defenders withdrew the insanity plea in September. The attorneys later filed a motion to withdraw from the case, and the judge ruled to allow Brooks to represent himself at trial.

Brooks’ unusual decision to represent himself in court and his persistent disruptions along outlandish behavior have caused constant disruptions throughout the trial. He has spoken over prosecutors and the judge, asked vague questions, challenged the court’s jurisdiction and declared “Darrell Brooks” is not his name.

Judge Dorow has repeatedly removed Brooks from the court for his outbursts and placed him in a nearby courtroom, where he can communicate via a monitor and microphone which is most often muted.

Read original article here

Waukesha parade trial opening statements set for Thursday after judge denies Darrell Brooks’ request to adjourn

Waukesha parade trial comes after 6 killed, dozens injured after Darrell Brooks accused of driving through those marching

ByABC7 Digital Team via

WAUKESHA, Wis. (WLS) — Opening statements are expected to get underway Thursday following delays in the Waukesha parade trial.

Darrell Brooks is asking a judge to adjourn the proceedings, saying he’s come down with COVID symptoms.

The man on trial for the Waukesha Christmas Parade attack says he has come down with COVID symptoms.

RELATED: Man accused of killing 6 in Waukesha holiday parade attack removed from court after outburst

Brooks is on trial for allegedly driving his SUV through the parade crowd last November killing six. The judge denied Brooks’ request to adjourn.

For the third day in a row, Brooks, who is representing himself was removed from the courtroom.

Last week the judge decided to allow Brooks to represent himself at trial, finding that he suffers from a personality disorder and faces an uphill fight against an experienced prosecutorial team but is mentally competent.

Copyright © 2022 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.



Read original article here

Waukesha Christmas parade trial: Man accused of driving into dozens of people is set to represent himself



CNN
 — 

The man accused of intentionally driving his SUV through a crowd of Christmas parade attendees in Waukesha, Wisconsin, last year, killing six people and wounding dozens more, is set to represent himself at his homicide trial Thursday amid concerns over his mental health.

Darrell E. Brooks, 40, was identified as the driver of a red SUV who plowed into a crowd of people celebrating the city’s Christmas parade on November 21, 2021, turning a joyous afternoon into a massacre.

Brooks had been released from jail less than two weeks prior in a domestic abuse case, on a $1,000 bail that prosecutors recommended and have since said was “inappropriately low.” In that case, he allegedly ran over a woman who said she’s the mother of his child, according to court documents.

Brooks is charged with six counts of intentional homicide with the use of a dangerous weapon, and more than 60 counts of first-degree recklessly endangering safety and six counts of fatal hit and run, according to an amended complaint.

The trial is particularly unusual because Brooks will be representing himself in court.

He previously pleaded not guilty by insanity, but his public defenders withdrew the insanity plea in September. The attorneys later filed a motion to withdraw from the case, and the judge ruled to allow Brooks to represent himself at trial.

However, his mother, Dawn Woods, wrote to the judge and spoke to CNN affiliate WTMJ about her concerns that her son was not stable enough to defend himself. “I hate to say this,” Woods told the affiliate. “You’re going to see manic, full-blown.”

Indeed, jury selection began Monday and quickly devolved into farce as Brooks repeatedly interrupted the judge, argued with her rulings and stated he did not have enough time to prepare, CNN affiliate WISN reported. Judge Jennifer Dorow ordered Brooks moved to a separate courtroom to participate remotely and kept him muted until it was his turn to speak.

“This court is on day one, it is 2:15 p.m., this court within five minutes of starting court this morning had to remove Mr. Brooks based upon his interruptions at that time,” Dorow said, according to WISN.

In the other courtroom, Brooks could be seen speaking to himself and making hand gestures while on mute. At one point, he put his head on the table and put the top of his suit jacket over his head.

The trial will feature a series of witnesses who will be expected to recount the violence and chaos of the day of the attack.

The victims included an 8-year-old boy and three of Milwaukee’s “Dancing Grannies” group that marched in the parade.

A video of the parade recorded by Angela O’Boyle, who was watching from her fifth-story apartment balcony, shows the SUV hitting an individual in a marching band. The vehicle then continued forward, hitting and running over others in the band and crowd before driving away.

“It hit at least two people right away and rolled over them. And then continued down the road to People’s Park which is at the end of the block – and then kept going, it didn’t stop,” O’Boyle told CNN.

One officer described the vehicle as driving in a zig-zag-like pattern, the complaint states.

Angelito Tenorio, another witness, said at the time the scene was “absolutely chaotic.”

“Nobody knew if this was an attack or if this was an accident or if it was a deliberate attack on the people of the parade,” he said in an interview with CNN. “People just started fleeing, running away from the scene, leaving behind their belongings, grabbing their children, calling, screaming, looking for their loved ones.

“And when the crowd cleared out, that’s when it looked like I saw people, who appeared to be lying in the middle of the street, lying still, lying lifeless.”

After he allegedly ran over people and fled the scene, Brooks went to a stranger’s home, asked for help and said he was homeless, a Waukesha resident said. Police eventually arrived to the home and took Brooks into custody.

Read original article here

Waukesha Christmas parade trial: Man accused of driving into dozens of people is set to represent himself



CNN
 — 

The man accused of intentionally driving his SUV through a crowd of Christmas parade attendees in Waukesha, Wisconsin, last year, killing six people and wounding dozens more, is set to represent himself at his homicide trial Thursday amid concerns over his mental health.

Darrell E. Brooks, 40, was identified as the driver of a red SUV who plowed into a crowd of people celebrating the city’s Christmas parade on November 21, 2021, turning a joyous afternoon into a massacre.

Brooks had been released from jail less than two weeks prior in a domestic abuse case, on a $1,000 bail that prosecutors recommended and have since said was “inappropriately low.” In that case, he allegedly ran over a woman who said she’s the mother of his child, according to court documents.

Brooks is charged with six counts of intentional homicide with the use of a dangerous weapon, and more than 60 counts of first-degree recklessly endangering safety and six counts of fatal hit and run, according to an amended complaint.

The trial is particularly unusual because Brooks will be representing himself in court.

He previously pleaded not guilty by insanity, but his public defenders withdrew the insanity plea in September. The attorneys later filed a motion to withdraw from the case, and the judge ruled to allow Brooks to represent himself at trial.

However, his mother, Dawn Woods, wrote to the judge and spoke to CNN affiliate WTMJ about her concerns that her son was not stable enough to defend himself. “I hate to say this,” Woods told the affiliate. “You’re going to see manic, full-blown.”

Indeed, jury selection began Monday and quickly devolved into farce as Brooks repeatedly interrupted the judge, argued with her rulings and stated he did not have enough time to prepare, CNN affiliate WISN reported. Judge Jennifer Dorow ordered Brooks moved to a separate courtroom to participate remotely and kept him muted until it was his turn to speak.

“This court is on day one, it is 2:15 p.m., this court within five minutes of starting court this morning had to remove Mr. Brooks based upon his interruptions at that time,” Dorow said, according to WISN.

In the other courtroom, Brooks could be seen speaking to himself and making hand gestures while on mute. At one point, he put his head on the table and put the top of his suit jacket over his head.

The trial will feature a series of witnesses who will be expected to recount the violence and chaos of the day of the attack.

The victims included an 8-year-old boy and three of Milwaukee’s “Dancing Grannies” group that marched in the parade.

A video of the parade recorded by Angela O’Boyle, who was watching from her fifth-story apartment balcony, shows the SUV hitting an individual in a marching band. The vehicle then continued forward, hitting and running over others in the band and crowd before driving away.

“It hit at least two people right away and rolled over them. And then continued down the road to People’s Park which is at the end of the block – and then kept going, it didn’t stop,” O’Boyle told CNN.

One officer described the vehicle as driving in a zig-zag-like pattern, the complaint states.

Angelito Tenorio, another witness, said at the time the scene was “absolutely chaotic.”

“Nobody knew if this was an attack or if this was an accident or if it was a deliberate attack on the people of the parade,” he said in an interview with CNN. “People just started fleeing, running away from the scene, leaving behind their belongings, grabbing their children, calling, screaming, looking for their loved ones.

“And when the crowd cleared out, that’s when it looked like I saw people, who appeared to be lying in the middle of the street, lying still, lying lifeless.”

After he allegedly ran over people and fled the scene, Brooks went to a stranger’s home, asked for help and said he was homeless, a Waukesha resident said. Police eventually arrived to the home and took Brooks into custody.

Read original article here

A parade against book-banning in Doylestown, as Central Bucks School District targets “sexualized content”

One marcher was costumed as the cover of Lawn Boy, the Jonathan Evison book that was banned for its gay and lesbian content and because it was considered to be sexually explicit.

Another was outfitted as All Boys Aren’t Blue, by George M. Johnson, which was banned for similar reasons.

Others wore the oversized dust jackets of other books that have been targeted in libraries and school districts for supposedly inappropriate content.

On Saturday, several walking, talking books were trailed by about 15 parents and kids, an author, and readers of all stripes and interests, a parade that carried a warning through the streets of Doylestown to cap Banned Books Week, the nationwide celebration of the freedom to read.

“Read banned books!” they chanted as they moved across State Street.

Car horns honked.

“We’re facing a huge influx of book bans,” said Anusha Visvanathan, accompanied by her 5-year-old son and 3-year-old daughter, and dressed as The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas. “Frankly, it’s un-American.”

The parade was more than symbolic in Bucks County, where the Central Bucks School Board recently enacted a contentious library policy that community members said amounted to a ban. The policy aims to exclude books from school libraries that might be deemed inappropriate for unspecified “sexualized content.”

The district superintendent said the measure would ensure that students read “age-appropriate material,” but civil-rights groups have been alarmed.

“No one is saying that every book is or should be appropriate for every child,” said parade organizer Kate Nazemi, a parent with two children in the Central Bucks district, one of the state’s largest. “Librarians and teachers work actively to find the right books for the right kids. They are educators. And they’re being treated like they’re not.”

Nazemi, a member of Advocates for Inclusive Education, a coalition that opposes extremism, said district parents have the power to restrict the books seen by their own child. But they shouldn’t have the right, she said, to have a book removed for nearly 18,000 district students.

In this country and around the world, book bans have occurred for decades.

J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye has been targeted by censors almost from the time it appeared in 1951, because of complaints of sex, violence, and profanity. E.B. White’s gentle Charlotte’s Web was banned in Kansas in 2006 because some parents thought its depiction of talking animals was blasphemous. In January, a Tennessee school board pulled Art Spiegelman’s graphic novel Maus, which helped push the two-volume work on the Holocaust to the top of Amazon best-seller lists.

Today, bans, restrictions, and challenges have reached levels not seen in decades, often pushed by conservative parents, school boards, and government leaders who object to what they see as sexual or “woke” content, according to the American Library Association and other groups.

A study by Pen America, the literary free-expression group, found that book bans have been enacted in 26 states, impacting more than two million students. Texas ranked first with 713 bans, followed by Pennsylvania with 456, and Florida at 204.

The organization defines a school book ban as an action taken against a book based on its content and as a result of parental or community challenges, administrative decisions, or in response to lawmakers or government officials.

On Saturday, paraders donned glittery, silver and purple top hats as they traversed the area around State and Main. They paused to present mock awards to the most-often-banned books, handed stickers to children on the street and gave flyers to adults that warned of the dangers of censorship.

Business-owners walked to their front steps to watch, and people in neighborhood pubs paused mid-sip, looking on as the oversized “books” navigated the chairs and tables of sidewalk cafes.

Glenda Childs, owner of the Doylestown Bookshop, set up two displays of banned books in her store, proudly offering them for sale. She would have attended the parade, she said, except the Bucks County Book Fest is this weekend, and the store has no staff to spare.

“It’s so important for us to be reading books that challenge us, that have characters that are different from us, that have broader views,” she said.

Last year in the United States, 1,597 books were affected by “censorship attempts,” according to the ALA and other groups. About 44% of those efforts were aimed at books in school libraries and 37% at those in public libraries.

Among people who wanted certain books barred, 39% were parents, 24% were library patrons, and 10% were members of political or religious groups.

The biggest reasons cited for wanting books removed were that they were allegedly sexually explicit, explored Critical Race Theory, featured gay, lesbian or transsexual people, or were “obscene” or “woke,” according to the ALA.

“We’re a family that reads,” said parader Amanda Paschke, who was dressed as The Bluest Eye, by Toni Morrison, banned because it depicts child abuse and was considered sexually explicit. “I’m very disappointed to see what’s going on in the district.”

Last year the most-banned, challenged or restricted books were Gender Queer, by Maia Kobabe, Lawn Boy, and All Boys Aren’t Blue. Also in the top 10 were The Hate U Give, for a supposed anti-police message and social agenda, and The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, by Sherman Alexie, for profanity and sexual references.

Nazemi sees bans becoming more insidious, with vaguely worded policies around sex and nudity that make teachers and librarians cautious about adding new titles.

“What I have learned is that you actually don’t need a policy of censorship to have censorship,” she said. “In Central Bucks we’ve seen teachers removing their classroom libraries, because they don’t want to be targeted, and they don’t know who will object to what.”

Read original article here

Multiple injured, including two police officers after vehicle drives through New Mexico parade

Several people were being treated on the scene, where people were enjoying the Gallup Intertribal Ceremonial Centennial Celebration, the New Mexico State Police said in a Twitter post. The extent of their injuries is unknown.

The driver and passengers are in custody, officials said, and state police are investigating the incident.

Thursday night’s ceremonial parade was scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. in downtown Gallup, according to the event website. The parade was part of a days-long celebration of Native American culture and heritage, according to a news release on the event.
A video taken by witness Sean Justice shows a group of people performing in the street when the crowd bursts into screams, with people leaping up and rushing in the opposite direction of what appears to be a moving car.

Another video captured by witness Keisha Joe shows what appears to be the SUV that was driven through the parade. In front of the SUV is a damaged car on the sidewalk, its front door crumpled in.

Navajo Nation Council Speaker Seth Damon released a statement saying, “The Navajo Nation stands with resilience against any acts of violence and sends prayers of protection to those affected. This was a traumatic and triggering event for many, especially for our youth, elders, and our veterans who acted quickly.”

“Hold Gallup in your prayers tonight as we come together in faith and strength for one anther. May the Creator and Holy People bless you all tonight as we move forward together,” he said.



Read original article here

Sesame Place Philadelphia apologizes after mother posts video of daughters’ experience with ‘Rosita’ at parade

LANGHORNE, Pennsylvania (WPVI) — Sesame Place is apologizing for a family’s experience at the park this past weekend that was captured in a now-viral video.

After the continuing backlash following an initial statement, the family venue now says it knows that what happened is not OK and is committed to making things right.

In a statement Monday night, the theme park said it will be conducting training for employees so “they better understand, recognize and deliver an inclusive, equitable and entertaining experience to our guests.”

The statement was in response to a video a mother posted online showing her two Black daughters reaching their hands out to the Sesame Street character “Rosita” during a parade at the park in Langhorne, Bucks County on Saturday.

The video shows the character giving high-fives to others paradegoers as she nears the two kids.

Jodi Brown and her attorney told CNN on Tuesday that the Sesame Place character, Rosita, was intentionally racist toward her family.

The mother alleges the character motioned “no” and ignored her daughter and niece while interacting with other children.

“Right after the character passed them, there was another little girl next to them who was of a different race and [Rosita] hugged her,” Brown said.

She said the character embraced the other child with two arms. “At that time I had already stopped recording the video. … I was upset so I stopped the video because I was like ‘what just happened?'”

“The fact that this even happened, the fact that this is going to be a core memory for them when it comes to Sesame Place is actually disgusting and unbelievable,” added Brown.

In its original statement on Sunday, Sesame Place said in part, “The performer portraying the Rosita character has confirmed that the ‘no’ hand gesture seen several times in the video was not directed to any specific person…rather it was a response to multiple requests from someone in the crowd who asked Rosita to hold their child for a photo which is not permitted.”

Sesame Place said, “The costumes the performers wear sometimes make it difficult to see at lower levels and sometimes our performers miss hug requests from guests.”

In the initial statement, Sesame Place said the performer “did not intentionally ignore the girls” and was “devastated about the misunderstanding.”

“We apologize to these guests for not delivering the experience they expected and we commit to do our best to earn their and all guests’ visit and support,” the initial statement read.

But amid the fallout, several new videos have surfaced that appear to show similar incidents.

The park has not responded to those videos but says it has reached out to the family from last weekend’s video and invited them for a special meet-and-greet opportunity with the park characters.

On Monday night, Sesame Place issued a follow-up to the initial statement:

“We sincerely apologize to the family for their experience in our park on Saturday; we know that it’s not OK. We are taking actions to do better. We are committed to making this right. We will conduct training for our employees so they better understand, recognize and deliver an inclusive, equitable and entertaining experience to our guests.

For over 40 years Sesame Place has worked to uphold the values of respect, inclusion and belonging. We are committed to doing a better job making children and families feel special, seen and included when they come to our parks.”

B’Ivory LaMarr, who represents the family, said the park’s response is not enough.

LaMarr emphasized he’s still investigating what happened and looking at all their available options.

Brown and LaMaar are planning to have a news conference Wednesday with more details.

“At this point we’re calling for a genuine, authentic, apology, acknowledging the harm that has been caused in outrageousness of the actions and to do right, to make amends with the damage that’s been caused to these two young girls,” LaMarr said.

Sesame Workshop, the organization behind Sesame Street, issued a statement of its own:

“Sesame Workshop is aware of the recent incident at Sesame Place Philadelphia, which we take very seriously. What these children experienced is unacceptable.

We have been in contact with Sesame Place, our licensed park partner, and they have assured us that they will conduct bias training and a thorough review of the ways in which they engage with families and guests.

As a global nonprofit educational organization with a mission to help children grow smarter, stronger and kinder, Sesame Workshop has always stood for respect, inclusion and belonging and is committed to providing the highest quality engaging experiences for all children and families. We hold our partners to the same high standards. We will continue working with our long-term partner Sesame Place to ensure that appropriate actions are taken and that incidents like this do not happen in the future.”

Copyright © 2022 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.



Read original article here

Highland Park gunman’s family was in turmoil for years leading up to parade shooting

The deli quickly became a popular local fixture: a hangout spot for teenagers, a friendly gathering place for the neighborhood, and a pit stop for an affordable, delicious lunch.

But behind the scenes, the Crimo family was in turmoil. Police reports show that officers were regularly called to their home over domestic disputes between Crimo and his wife, and in 2019, police briefly confiscated a collection of knives after then 18-year-old Bobby threatened to “kill everyone.”

More recently, after the once-bustling deli closed, the family appeared to fall into dire financial straits, with foreclosure cases proceeding against both of the homes they owned and Bob Crimo telling a judge several weeks ago he was on food stamps.

In the wake of the tragedy, the close-knit community of Highland Park is reeling and trying to understand a massacre with no apparent motive. Locals said that it was even more shocking that the shooter was Bobby Crimo — the son of a well-known local figure beloved by his regular customers, who even ran for mayor several years ago.

The elder Crimo is facing scrutiny in part because he sponsored a permit allowing his son to purchase firearms before he turned 21, including the gun he used in the shooting. Locals who once lined up for “Nicky D” sandwiches at Bob’s say they can’t comprehend how the family could have missed warning signs, including violent imagery in the music videos Bobby posted online, or why Crimo would have signed the gun permit application.

“To be that irresponsible and signing off is mind-blowing to me,” said Barbara Medina, a longtime Highland Park resident who often shopped at the deli and was marching in the parade when the shooting took place. “It’s a shock that it’s anybody in your town, that they could come in and do that to their own community.”

Crimo did not respond to CNN’s requests for comment, but in an interview with the New York Post, he said he had no idea Bobby was preparing to commit the shooting and that he wasn’t responsible for his son’s actions.

“I’ve been here my whole life, and I’m gonna stay here, hold my head up high, because I didn’t do anything wrong,” he declared.

Police called to family home several times

More than a dozen Highland Park residents who knew the shooter or his family spoke to CNN about his upbringing, as they tried to piece together how their city had joined the long list of American communities whose names have become shorthand for mass shootings.

By all accounts, Bobby Crimo was a quiet kid, who could be seen running around his dad’s shop as he grew up. His father ran the White Hen Pantry, a franchise of a local convenience store chain that became known for its sandwiches.

In an affluent lakeside suburb where most shops closed early, the White Hen Pantry was open 24 hours, giving teenagers a safe hangout spot at night. Regulars remembered the elder Crimo as a gregarious, generous presence who would let customers waiting on a paycheck buy food on credit, and who seemed to be manning the counter at all hours of the day and night.

Locals described Crimo as “the mayor of Ravinia,” the local neighborhood where the store was located, who knew all his customers and their regular orders.

Crimo could be eccentric: One time, a friend said, he competed with another local restaurant owner to see which business could go longer without replacing any lightbulbs — until both stores were almost completely dark.

Crimo’s shop closed after 7-Eleven bought out the White Hen Pantry chain. But Crimo reopened in a new location under his own name, and his loyal clientele followed.

Still, there were signs of trouble in the family. One longtime customer and friend of Crimo’s — who asked to remain anonymous to speak candidly about the family — remembered that he and his wife, Denise Pesina, would have heated arguments in the deli, even in front of customers.

“It was awkward for people,” the friend said. “I remember thinking, if that’s the public arguments, I can only imagine the private ones.”

Police reports released this week show that the couple’s fights continued behind closed doors. In the six years after the deli opened, officers were called to their home at least a dozen times to settle domestic disputes or respond to allegations that one or the other was intoxicated.

In one 2010 incident, Crimo alleged that Pesina “had hit him with a screwdriver on the left forearm” — before recanting once he got to the police station — and in another, he claimed she hit him on the head with a shoe.

“He threatens to call the police for any and every argument we get in,” Pesina wrote in one handwritten witness statement. “He says he wants the police to think I’m crazy.”

There is no record that any of those incidents led to criminal charges against either Crimo or Pesina.

The two separated at some point, according to friends, with Pesina staying in their Highland Park home and Crimo moving to his father’s home in neighboring Highwood. Bobby lived in both homes over the years.

Pesina had had another brush with the law as well: In 2002, when Bobby was nearly two years old, she was arrested for child endangerment after allegedly leaving him in a locked car at a Toys-R-Us parking lot for about 27 minutes on a 79-degree day with the windows rolled up, according to court documents. Pesina pleaded guilty to misdemeanor child endangerment, and completed a year of court supervision.

Pesina did not respond to CNN’s requests for comment. Her lawyer at the time, Steven Lunardi, said that she admitted having made a mistake.

Jeremy Cahnmann, who taught Bobby and his brother in an elementary after-school sports program, said the boys stuck out in his memory because their parents almost never picked them up on time.

“I remember talking to faculty at the school about how uninvolved the parents were,” he said. Bobby was “always the kid there at the end who didn’t get picked up.”

Former classmates describe suspect as withdrawn and odd

At school, Bobby kept to himself, with former classmates of the future gunman describing him as an odd, soft-spoken kid who showed little interest in class, school activities or his peers. But he explored a different side of his personality with rap songs and music videos he posted online — some of which included troubling imagery.

Molly Handelman, who attended middle school and high school with Bobby, described him as a “very quiet” guy. “When he did talk, he was very soft. He didn’t seem aggressive ever, at all,” she said.

Handelman, who worked with Bobby on class projects a few times, said “something definitely seemed off” about him. “He made it very clear he didn’t care about school,” she said.

Another former classmate who asked not to be named due to privacy concerns said he and Bobby used to hang out, play video games and skateboard together in middle school. “He would make YouTube videos all the time back then,” the classmate said, “DIY videos on how to grip a skateboard or replace a wheel, stuff like that.”

But in high school, the former classmate said, Bobby grew more insular and distant. “He was always by himself,” he said. “No one seemed to try to be his friend.”

According to a school district spokesperson, Bobby stopped attending Highland Park High School in 2016, after his freshman year. It’s unclear whether he went to another school after dropping out.

In recent years, Bobby revealed a louder side of himself online, posting music videos he apparently made — some of which featured ominous lyrics and animated scenes of gun violence. Bobby, who made music under the moniker “Awake the Rapper,” uploaded his music on several major streaming outlets and on a personal website.

In one video titled “Are you Awake,” Bobby sports multicolored hair and face tattoos and declares, “I need to just do it. It is my destiny.” The video shows a cartoon animation of a stick-figure man resembling Bobby in tactical gear, carrying out an attack with a rifle.

In another video, a similar stick-figure cartoon character resembling Bobby is depicted lying face down on the ground in a pool of his own blood, surrounded by police officers with their guns drawn. And in a third, Bobby is seen wearing a helmet and a tactical vest and dropping bullets onto the floor of a classroom.

Financial struggles took a toll

As Bobby was struggling in school, his father’s business was also having trouble staying afloat. Regular customers said that they noticed more of the shelves in the store going empty, and the hours it was open shrinking. In conversations with friends, Bob Crimo complained about a downturn in the business, increases in rent, and fees he said he had to pay the city.

In 2018, Crimo settled on a solution: running for mayor of Highland Park. People who knew him said they were puzzled about why he would embark on what seemed like a quixotic campaign against the popular incumbent, Nancy Rotering, who was Bobby’s former Cub Scout leader.
In a local news profile, Crimo talked about making the city more business-friendly, but he didn’t seem to actively campaign, and it’s unclear how seriously he took the race. State records show Crimo didn’t receive any campaign donations other than a $560 loan from himself, which he spent on yard signs. In the end, Rotering won 72% of the vote in the April 2019 election, soundly defeating Crimo.
In another blow, Crimo’s deli shuttered around the same time. Google Street View photos show that while the shop had a big “Bob Crimo for Mayor” poster hanging in the window in late 2018, by September 2019, the storefront was vacant and empty.

According to court documents, the store was under a mountain of debt: A lender sued the deli and Crimo in late 2018, alleging he owed more than $764,000. A judge ruled in the lender’s favor by default in March 2019 after Crimo failed to appear in court. It’s unclear whether the debt was ever paid.

Gun permit granted despite ominous threats

Around the same time, Bobby started showing more troubling behavior.

In April 2019, according to police reports released by Highland Park, officers performed a wellness check on the 18-year-old Bobby after receiving a report that he had “attempted to commit suicide by machete” a week prior. Mental health professionals handled the episode, officers wrote.

Then in September of that year, police received the report that Bobby had “stated that he was going to kill everyone.” Bobby admitted that he was depressed and had a history of drug use, according to the report. His father turned over a collection of 16 knives, a dagger and a “Samurai type blade” to police, and officers sent the Illinois State Police a “clear and present danger” report related to the threats Bobby made. But the state police declined to approve that determination, which could have blocked Bobby from buying guns, because there wasn’t enough evidence to do so, the agency said this week.
Just three months later, Crimo signed his son’s application for a Firearm Owners Identification card, a requirement to buy guns in Illinois. Under state law, young adults under 21 years of age need a parent or guardian to sponsor them in order to get the permit.
Crimo told the New York Post that he sponsored the application so his son could shoot at a gun range. This week, an attorney for Bob Crimo — who no longer represents him — told the Chicago Tribune that Crimo was not aware of the incident that resulted in the confiscation of the knives when he signed the card. Yet, according to the state police, Crimo was actually the one who reclaimed the knives from officers. In the Post interview, Crimo downplayed Bobby’s threats in that incident as a “childish outburst.”

Attorney George Gomez, who is representing both parents, told CNN that “the family denies that there was any issues of suicide at the time,” and stressed law enforcement found “no safety risk.”

Bobby went on to use the card to legally purchase multiple guns before he turned 21 last year, passing a total of four background checks, according to the state police. That included the semi-automatic rifle he used in the shooting.

Meanwhile, the family’s finances appeared to unravel in recent years. HSBC Bank filed for foreclosure on their Highland Park house, where Bobby had grown up, in December 2019, alleging Crimo, Jr. owed more than $460,000. The case was delayed amid the coronavirus pandemic, and the lender restarted efforts to take possession of the home last year.

In April 2022, a mortgage servicing company filed to foreclose on a second property Crimo owns in the neighboring town of Highwood. The company, NewRez LLC, alleged that he had failed to make payments since July 2020, and owed more than $197,000.

In the Highland Park case, a judge granted Crimo a full waiver of court fees in May after he appeared in person and provided proof that he was receiving food stamps, according to court documents.

Last Thursday — four days before the shooting — Crimo filed a last-ditch motion to block foreclosure of the house, arguing the lender hadn’t given him sufficient notice of being in default or of accelerating the due date for the balance of the mortgage.

Paul Crimo, Bob’s brother, who lives with him and worked at his delis, told CNN he didn’t think the financial stress affected Bobby.

“My brother always made sure his kids always had a roof over (their) head at all times,” he wrote in a text message, adding that Crimo “is a great father.”

Community looks to family for answers

Some of the Highland Park residents who were at the parade when Bobby opened fire said they blamed the father for allowing his son to buy guns.

The elder Crimo “should be held liable for it and responsible for it,” declared Fred Kroll, a three-decade Highland Park resident who attended the parade with his wife and daughter and said he saw multiple people shot dead. “Whether it’s civil lawsuits by the survivors or he goes to jail … he should be punished.”

State officials have poured cold water on the idea of Crimo facing criminal responsibility over the deaths. “There’s not a criminal liability that’s directly attached to vouching for someone else… and they end up doing something terrible like this,” said Eric Rinehart, the Lake County State’s Attorney.

Gomez said the family is “trying to cooperate with all local, state, and federal authorities at the moment.” When asked if he felt there was any criminal wrongdoing on part of his clients, particularly the father, Gomez said, “we take the position that my client, Crimo Jr., did nothing wrong in this case.”

Crimo reportedly has said he wants “a long sentence” for his son, who faces seven counts of first-degree murder and a sentence of life in prison, if convicted. Illinois abolished capital punishment in 2011.

Still, even Crimo’s friends say they doubt he’ll be able to stay in his hometown, or ever open a business here again.

“His kid shot up his hometown, and he’s going to have to come to terms with that action and, honestly, the role he played in his son’s evolution as a person,” one friend said. “It was his son’s name on the news — and that’s his name, too.”

CNN’s Yahya Abou-Ghazala, Isabelle Chapman, Curt Devine, Eric Levenson and Jeff Winter contributed reporting.

Read original article here

Robert Crimo Jr., Dad of Parade Suspect Robert Crimo III, Says Son Discussed Mass Shooting Night Before Attack

The night before Robert “Bobby” Crimo III allegedly carried out his premeditated attack at a Fourth of July Parade—where he is accused of murdering seven people and injuring dozens more—the 21-year-old mocked another mass shooter for his grisly attack, his father revealed.

In a Wednesday interview with the New York Post, Robert Crimo Jr. said that on Sunday evening he and his son were discussing a mass shooting in Copenhagen, where an individual killed three people at a mall. The elder Crimo said his son called the shooter “an idiot” before adding: “People like that… [commit mass shootings] to amp up the people that want to ban all guns.”

“I talked to him 13 hours before [the parade attack],” Crimo Jr. told the paper. “That’s why I guess I’m in such shock… Like, did he have a psychiatric break or something?”

The conversation is shocking, considering that Crimo III has since admitted to investigators he “dressed up like a girl and covered his tattoos with makeup because people recognized him” before allegedly opening fire at the Highland Park Fourth of July parade. During the attack, Crimo III told investigators he used three 30-round clips in his Smith and Wesson MNP 15 to attack parade attendees, stopping to reload twice.

Afterward, prosecutors revealed during a bond hearing Wednesday, Crimo III told investigators he fled the rooftop he used as a sniper’s nest but unintentionally left his rifle behind when it fell out of his bag.

The gun used was legally obtained in 2020. Illinois state police told The Daily Beast that Crimo III’s father sponsored his son’s firearms permit application just months after Crimo III allegedly attempted suicide, talked about “killing everybody,” and had 16 knives, a dagger, and a sword taken from his home.

The weapon was also notably obtained after police revealed they’d had previous harrowing run-ins with Crimo III. In a Sept. 15, 2019, Highland Park police report obtained by The Daily Beast, officers went to the Crimo family home after an individual stated the 21-year-old had “stated he was going to kill everyone” in his family.

On Tuesday, authorities confirmed the September 2019 incident in which Crimo III allegedly threatened to “kill everyone” in his family while hoarding 16 knives, a dagger, and a sword. He had also attempted suicide that April, police said. When officers arrived at the house, both Crimo III and his mother said he had been depressed and had “a history of drug use.”

“Robert was not forthcoming as to the language that he used on [during the threat] nor was his mother,” the report states.

The report added that Crimo Jr. was the one who told police about the son’s collection of knives that were being stored in a “tin can lunch box, along with a 12 inch dagger, and a 24 inch Samurai type blade” in his bedroom closet. Crimo III told police at the time that he was not harming himself or others.

Crimo Jr. dismissed the notion his son’s 2019 incident was dangerous—telling the Post it was simply a “childish outburst” and insisting the vast collection of knives were “just a collection.”

​​“You know I used to collect coins and baseball cards,” the dad added.

Months after the incident, Crimo Jr. sponsored his son’s gun-license application, which allowed Crimo III to buy several guns—including the one he bought online and picked up from local gun dealer Red Dot Arms, The Daily Beast exclusively reported on Wednesday.

On Wednesday, Crimo Jr. dismissed any idea of wrongdoing in aiding his son to obtain a firearm owner’s identification card, telling the Post that he thought his child was simply going to use his gun at the shooting range.

“He bought everything on his own, and they’re registered to him,” the dad added. “You know, he drove there, he ordered them, he picked them up, they did his background check on each one.”

Crimo Jr., who unsuccessfully ran for Highland Park mayor in 2019, also added that he had “zero” involvement in Monday’s attack and slammed anyone who would say otherwise.

“I’ve been here my whole life, and I’m gonna stay here, hold my head high, because I didn’t do anything wrong,” he said, later adding that while he is “devastated” by the incident he hopes that his son pays for his crimes.

“I want a long sentence,” he said. “He made a choice. He didn’t have to do that. I think there’s mental illness there, obviously.”

Read original article here

Finding rifle was pivotal to capturing Highland Park parade shooting suspect, chief says

The 21-year-old suspect in the Highland Park Fourth of July parade shooting showed no emotion during his virtual court appearance on Wednesday. 

Investigators say Robert Crimo III took aim and fired 83 rounds at spectators from a rooftop, stopping to reload his rifle. Then he made a run for it in women’s clothing, leaving his gun behind. 

“He indiscriminately fired at the crowd of people and struck people at random,” Highland Park Police chief Lou Jogmen told CBS News in an exclusive interview. 

It was an attack he’d allegedly been planning for weeks. 

“There was quite a bit of preplanning that went into it and he was quite motivated to carry out the attack,”  Jogmen said.

“My instant thought was this person could potentially get away and not be held accountable for this,” Jogmen said. “And that concern stayed with me throughout the first couple of hours because we had such a poor description. Not a good trail.”

Finding the gun is what “set this investigation on a totally different trajectory,” Jogmen said. 

“In this case, we knew the make, the model, the serial number, and then we went through with the tracing process directly to the manufacturer,” ATF special agent in charge Kristen de Tineo told CBS News.  All of that information allowed the ATF to identify the suspect.

During the frantic eight-hour manhunt, police say the suspect stopped to see an acquaintance and then drove two and a half hours to Madison, Wisconsin, where he contemplated carrying out another attack when he spotted a large gathering. In the car with him was another gun and approximately 60 rounds of ammunition. CBS News obtained a photo of the gun that was in the car. 

The gun that was found in the Highland Park parade shooting suspect’s car when he was arrested after a manhunt. 

CBS News


Jogmen said investigators don’t yet have a motive. 

“We really don’t have any better understanding today than we did when we first started talking to him about the why in particular,” he said. 

Police said the suspect confessed to the shooting that killed at least seven people and wounded 38 others. He’s being held without bond and more charges are expected to be filed against him in the coming weeks. 

The Illinois State Police say the alleged gunman passed four background checks in 2020 and 2021 as he amassed an arsenal of five firearms. The first one was purchased after the suspect’s father signed an authorization form. 

Despite two encounters with police in 2019 involving threats of violence to himself or family members and a series of troubling social media posts, his parents’ attorney says they saw no warning signs. 

“To them, he was just their son,” attorney Steve Greenberg told CBS News. “He was a little bit eccentric. He was into music. He was into art. But to them, he was just their son and there weren’t really any red flags. It’s a terrible tragedy for everybody.” 

Read original article here