Robert Crimo Jr., father of accused Highland Park shooter, charged with reckless conduct
Robert Crimo Jr. (center), father of Robert Crimo III, walks out of the Lake County Courthouse in August with Denise Pesina, mother of Robert Crimo III, and attorney George Gomez. Crimo Jr. was charged on Friday. Robert Crimo III faces multiple murder counts and other charges stemming from the Highland Park massacre.
Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
The father of the alleged gunman from the Highland Park mass shooting was charged with seven counts of reckless conduct, Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart announced Friday afternoon.
Robert E. Crimo III is accused of fatally shooting seven people and wounding dozens of others who lined the streets of Highland Park for its Fourth of July parade earlier this year.
In 2019, Robert Crimo Jr. sponsored his son’s application for a gun permit because Crimo III was underage at the time. In early 2020, Crimo III obtained a state firearm owner’s identification card, despite his previous threats to kill himself and his family, authorities said back in July.
“Robert Crimo Jr., the father, took a reckless and unjustified risk to sign his son’s application for a firearm owner identification card,” Rinehart said.
Each count is for the seven people who were killed. Crimo Jr. surrendered Friday and will appear in court Saturday, where a judge will set his bond.
“As we all work together to address the root causes of crime, to hold shooters accountable for their crimes in the courts and to pass common sense gun regulation, we must also remember the longstanding principle that people bare responsibility when they recklessly endanger others,” Rinehart said.
“These are the moral and legal foundations on which these charges rest.”
Crimo needed the FOID card to legally purchase the Smith & Wesson M&P15 semiautomatic rifle that police and prosecutors said he used to carry out the Fourth of July massacre.
“Parents and guardians are in the best position to decide whether their teenager should have a weapon. They are the first line of defense,” Rinehart said.
Police recovered the rifle in Highland Park and found another rifle in the car Crimo drove that day. He also had pistols in a home where he lived in nearby Highwood, authorities said.
The two rifles were bought legally in the Chicago area, authorities said.
“In this case, the system failed when Robert Crimo Jr. sponsored his son. He knew what he knew, and signed the form anyway,” Rinehart said. “This was criminally reckless and a contributing cause to the bodily harm suffered by the victims on July 4th.”
Back in July, Brandon Kelly, director of the Illinois State Police, said there wasn’t enough evidence to deny Crimo III a FOID card based on the report of violent threats toward his family.