Robert Crimo Jr. sponsored son's application for a firearm owners card
The man accused of carrying out a mass shooting in Illinois on July 4 discussed a shooting the night prior, his father said in a new interview after authorities said they’re opening a criminal investigation into the dad. Robert Crimo Jr., the father, told the New York Post that he and his son, Robert Crimo III, talked the evening before the Independence Day shooting about the mass shooting in Denmark that had just taken place. “He goes, ‘Yeah, that guy is an idiot.’ That’s what he said!” Crimo Jr. said. “People like that … [commit mass shootings] to amp up the people that want to ban all guns,” Crimo III also said, according to his father. Crimo Jr. said he was shocked that his son apparently killed seven people and injured others by firing on a parade in Highland Park, just outside Chicago, speculating Crimo III had “a psychiatric break or something.” “I had not an inkling, warning, that this was going to happen,” Crimo Jr. told ABC News. He said his son seemed to be in a “great mood” the night before the attack. Crimo III was taken into custody hours after the shooting in Lake Forest. He was charged with seven counts of murder and faces life in prison without the possibility of parole. Crimo III was ordered held without bond in a hearing on Wednesday. The Lake County Public Defender’s Office, which is representing the accused, referred a request to comment to Lake County, which did not respond to a query. Crimo III has not yet entered a plea. Law enforcement authorities have said little about the accused shooter’s motivation for carrying out the attack. But they said he confessed to the crime, and that an investigation showed he drove to Madison, Wisconsin, after the shooting and contemplated another attack before driving back to Illinois.
Father Under Scrutiny
Crimo III, 21, obtained five firearms legally after turning 18, officials have said. Crimo Jr. passed a background check each time he went to get a weapon, according to the Illinois State Police (ISP). Crimo III obtained a Firearm Owners Identification Card despite being the subject of a Clear and Present Danger report in 2019. Officers were told Crimo III “stated that he was going to kill everyone” and had a collection of 16 knives, a dagger, and a samurai sword in his closet. But officers could not find evidence to substantiate the report and no one, including family members, was willing to provide information “on threats or mental health that would have allowed law enforcement to take additional action,” according to the ISP, which was informed of the interaction with the Crimo family. The process “is ‘so dependent upon the people that may be closest around the individual of concern,” ISP Director Brendan Kelly said at a news conference on Wednesday. Crimo Jr. claimed the knives were his and were being stored in his son’s closet for safekeeping. Crimo Jr. told ABC that the situation was “taken out of context,” describing his son’s language at the time as “a child’s outburst” and identifying the person who alerted law enforcement as the suspect’s sister. State law requires parental consent for a person under the age of 21 to obtain a card. Crimo Jr., several months after the law enforcement visit to the family’s home, sponsored his son’s application for the firearm owners card. Each sponsor must sign a form saying they understand they “shall be liable for any damages resulting from the minor applicant’s use of firearms or firearm ammunition.” While Lake County State Attorney Eric Rinehart, a prosecutor, declined on Wednesday to say whether relatives of Crimo III could face charges, Kelly indicated hours later that he may be prosecuted, depending on what the investigation uncovers. Crimo Jr. told ABC he doesn’t regret sponsoring his son and Steve Greenberg, a lawyer representing Crimo Jr. and Crimo III’s mother, has attempted to shift blame to the police, questioning why the application was approved. “The ‘system’ is trying to make this about parenting,” Greenberg said on Twitter. It is “up to ISP to decide if the individual is competent to own a gun,” he added.
Usually how it goes. Family knows before hand person isn’t necessarily stable. But does nothing about it. Person snaps with or without outside help and people die.
Family left dumbfounded they did it. Even though they knew prior and may in fact have been the ones to call the cops in the first place about deteriorating mental state.