Highland Park community in ‘unbelievable shock’ after deadly July 4 shooting

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The Chicago suburb of Highland Park was reeling on Tuesday morning, the day after a gunman rained down gunfire from a rooftop overlooking a Fourth of July parade, killing six people and wounding dozens more in the latest outburst of mass gun violence in the United States.

Highland Park Mayor Nancy Rotering told NBC News of the “unbelievable sadness” and “unbelievable shock” that the community of 30,000 was encountering.

“This tragedy should have never arrived at our doorsteps,” she said. “As a small town, everybody knows somebody who was effected by this directly and, of course, we are all still reeling.”

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Just a day prior, the streets were decked out in red, white and blue as families watched the annual parade. Children sat on curbs, wagons and strollers waving American flags as parents and grandparents relaxed in their folding chairs.

As the parade began rolling through downtown, police said a gunman climbed to the roof of a business using a ladder in an alley and then, without notice, opened fire with an assault rifle at the crowd below.

0:46Police name person of interest in 4th of July parade shooting in Illinois

Police name person of interest in 4th of July parade shooting in Illinois

On Monday evening, police announced that they had a suspect, 22-year-old Robert E. Crimo III, in custody after he surrendered to authorities. Police said they did not know what the motive was for the shooting.

A retired four-star general, who wished not to be named, was in the crowd when the gunfire began. He told Reuters he scooped up one of his granddaughters and sprinted for safety to the Sunset Foods grocery store across the street when the shooting began.

“They were scared to death, they didn’t know what was going on,” he said as he was brought to tears. “I had her up against my chest and she told my daughter later on ‘Grandpa’s heart was pounding.’”

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Arrest made in shooting that killed 6, injured 30 at Chicago-area Fourth of July parade

The 72-year-old man said he was with his family, including his twin grandchildren, at the parade.

“Listen, I have 30 years in the military and this has rattled the shit out of me,” as his eyes welled up with tears. “I thought I was done with this nonsense.”

The wounded ranged in age from 8 to 85, including four or five children, police said.

Gun violence is fresh on the minds of many Americans, less than two months after a gunman murdered 19 school children and two teachers at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, just 10 days after a man shot dead 10 people at a grocery store in Buffalo, New York.

3:36Police confirm 6 dead, 24 injured in ‘random’ shooting at 4th of July parade in Illinois

Police confirm 6 dead, 24 injured in ‘random’ shooting at 4th of July parade in Illinois

Rotering said she knew the suspect when he was a little boy and a Cub Scout, when she was a Cub Scout leader.

“What happened? How did somebody become this angry, this hateful?” she said.

Social media and other online posts written by accounts that appeared to be associated with either Crimo or his rapper alias, Awake The Rapper, often depicted violent images or messages.

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One music video posted to YouTube under Awake The Rapper, for example, showed drawings of a stick figure holding a rifle in front of another figure spread on the ground.

Rotering said on Tuesday that she did not know where the gun the gunman used came from, but added that it was legally obtained.

“Our nation needs to have a conversation about these weekly events involving the murder of dozens of people with legally obtained guns,” she said.

Law enforcement conduct a search after a mass shooting at the Highland Park Fourth of July parade in downtown Highland Park, Ill., a Chicago suburb on Monday, July 4, 2022.

AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh

The attack is likely to rekindle the debate about gun control and whether stricter measures can prevent the mass shootings that happen so frequently in the United States.

In response to the shootings in New York and Uvalde, Congress last month passed its first major federal gun reform in three decades, providing federal funding to states that administer “red flag” laws intended to remove guns from people deemed dangerous.

The law does not ban sales of assault-style rifles or high-capacity magazines but does take some steps on background checks by allowing access to information on significant crimes committed by juveniles. Read full story

(Additional reporting by Brendan O’Brien in ChicagoEditing by Alistair Bell)

© 2022 Reuters