martes, 5 de julio de 2022

JULY 4: CRAZY WORLD, AGAIN


Highland Park shooting: 6 dead and 2 dozen others shot at parade; suspect arrested
Jul 05, 2022 at 11:01 pm
https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/breaking/ct-highland-park-shooting-fourth-of-july-parade-20220704-ai4yuthlqfac7ljmv5zj2tiybe-story.html

On an idyllic summer morning, from a rooftop high above the Highland Park Independence Day parade, a gunman aimed down at the floats and lawn chairs and strollers and opened fire.
The high school marching band’s members sprinted for their lives, still carrying their flutes and saxophones. Bystanders scooped up young children and fled. In all, six people were killed. Some two dozen others were injured, either by rifle fire or in the stampede away from the scene. The victims ranged in age from 8 to 85.
It was the Fourth of July, and the North Shore suburb of Highland Park became the latest American community to be terrorized by a mass shooting.
For hours after the attack, officers searched building by building near the parade route, which was littered with belongings abandoned in the chaos: A double stroller. Balloons. Bikes. Pacifiers. Sandals. A hat printed with stars and stripes.
On Monday evening, after an hourslong search, authorities arrested a person of interest: 22-year-old Robert “Bobby” Crimo III. North Chicago police spotted him and gave chase; he was ultimately arrested without incident in Lake Forest, according to the Highland Park police chief. Crimo was taken back to Highland Park as the investigation continued.
Police recovered a rifle from the crime scene, and federal authorities are performing a trace to try to determine its origin.
Authorities had not released the names of those killed as of Monday evening.

Howard Prager was playing his tuba aboard a float with six other musicians from the Maxwell Street Klezmer Band, entertaining the crowd with freilach — a “joyous” type of Jewish music.
The piano player was the first to notice everyone scatter. Prager thought at first they had spotted a celebrity and were racing over. The band kept playing.
Then he saw the faces of the people running: “panic and scared mode.”
“I am shellshocked by the whole thing,” he said. “I don’t know what was in (the shooter’s) mind that he was so hateful that would cause this type of carnage.”
Hospital leaders said Monday that 26 people were rushed to Highland Park Hospital, all but one of whom had suffered gunshot wounds.
Four or five of the patients were children, said Brigham Temple, medical director of emergency preparedness at NorthShore University HealthSystem.
While most were treated and discharged, others were taken to other local hospitals, including a child who was transported by helicopter to Comer Children’s Hospital at the University of Chicago.
“There’s been a lot of different events that have happened in the United States, and this obviously now has hit very close to home,” Temple said. “It is a little surreal to have to take care of an event such as this but all of us have gone through extensive training.”
Among those shot and injured were a Northwest Side elementary school teacher and her husband, according to a Twitter statement from the Chicago Teachers Union. An online fundraiser for the family said the teacher’s father and brother-in-law were also shot, and were undergoing surgery.
In response to the gun violence, many northern suburbs canceled their planned Fourth of July celebrations due to safety concerns or out of respect for the victims. Metra halted inbound and outbound train movement near Highland Park due to the shooting. And for hours, the parade route remained eerily quiet.

Highland Park is an affluent suburb nearly 30 miles north of downtown Chicago. In 1998, Vanity Fair magazine said the largely white and Jewish community “has the feel of a gated community without the actual gates.” Michael Jordan made his home there for a time when he was with the Bulls.
Some witnesses worried that the community may have been targeted because of its significant Jewish population. The northern suburbs have seen a rash of anti-Semitic sentiment in recent months, including on Holocaust Remembrance Day in April, when someone left anti-Semitic flyers in driveways in Highland Park.
Crimo appears to perform under the name Awake the Rapper. Videos connected to that name online, some of which feature Crimo’s face, include eerie and violent imagery, including drawings of a person with a long gun and animations of injured people.
Police on Monday evening shut off access to the streets near what was believed to be Crimo’s home. An armored police vehicle drove down his street, and officers gathered, chatting on the nearby street corner, though the home was out of sight from the police perimeter. Police guarded the perimeter with rifles. Reporters and neighbors gathered nearby, and a helicopter hovered overhead.

Speaking outside a Highland Park fire station late Monday afternoon, Gov. J.B. Pritzker decried the shooting, saying he spoke with President Joe Biden about it earlier. They both agree on one thing, Pritzker said: “This madness must stop.”
“If you’re angry today, I’m here to tell you, be angry. I’m furious. I’m furious that yet more innocent lives were taken by gun violence. I’m furious that their loved ones are forever broken by what took place today. I’m furious that children and their families have been traumatized,” Pritzker said, flanked by several elected officials including U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth. “While we celebrate the Fourth of July just once a year, mass shootings have become our weekly — yes, weekly — American tradition.”
Pritzker noted how some might feel like “today is not the day” to talk about gun control or gun rights, but then he said, “There is no better day and no better time than right here and right now.”
“It is devastating that a celebration of America was ripped apart by our uniquely American plague,” said Pritzker. “A day dedicated to freedom has put into stark relief the one freedom we as a nation refuse to uphold — the freedom of our fellow citizens to live without the daily fear of gun violence.”
In a Facebook post from Skokie, where Darren Bailey was scheduled to march with supporters in a Fourth of July parade until it was canceled, the Republican governor nominee joined with backers as he took a moment for prayer for the families of victims after declaring, “Let’s move on and let’s celebrate.”
Bailey is an ardent gun rights supporter who opposes firearm regulations and supports the elimination of the state’s firearm owner’s identification card registry. In his prayer, he called on God to heal “the mental illness that is creating these problems.”
“So let’s pray for justice to prevail and then let’s move on and let’s celebrate, celebrate the independence of this nation. We know the mission. We have got to get corruption and evil out of our government and we have to elect men and women of honor and of courage to get this country and this state back on track,” he said in a poor-quality video.
“Bless us and protect us as we go about our day celebrating,” he said in his prayer.
Hours after the video was released, his campaign issued a statement that aimed to quell criticism by stating the video was posted when Bailey and his campaign knew few details about the shooting.
“I am heartbroken by today’s tragic events and the pain and loss felt by so many. My intent was to pray for the victims and those affected by today’s tragedy and for the shooter to be caught and prosecuted without further loss. I apologize if in any way we diminished the pain being felt across our state today. I hope we can all come together in prayer and action to address rampant crime and mental health issues to make sure these horrific tragedies don’t happen again,” the statement said.
Biden on Monday afternoon said he offered Pritzker the full support of the federal government.
He also said he was “shocked by the senseless gun violence that has yet again brought grief to an American community on this Independence Day.” He then touted his recent signing of “the first major bipartisan gun reform legislation in almost 30 years into law, which includes actions that will save lives. But there is much more work to do, and I’m not going to give up fighting the epidemic of gun violence.”

Vice President Kamala Harris, who is slated to be in Chicago on Tuesday, echoed the sentiment.
“We are thankful to law enforcement and the first responders who arrived at the scene today and undoubtedly saved lives,” she said in a statement. “Today’s shooting is an unmistakable reminder that more should be done to address gun violence in our country.”
More than ten hours after the carnage, dazed residents lingered around Central Avenue in Highland Park.
Claudia Rinehart, who lives in nearby Lake Bluff, gazed in disbelief at a colorfully decorated abandoned bike, hundreds of empty lawn chairs and an American flag flying in the distance.
“What caught me as I look this way was the American flag as the backdrop of Main Street USA,” Rinehart said. “This is as mainstream as you get. To think between here and that flag, such horror happened, it takes your breath away.”
Normally, full of commerce and visitors, downtown Highland Park was occupied mostly by emergency vehicles late Monday, blocking traffic on Central from Green Bay Road to St. Johns Avenue.
“In a moment, everything is just littered,” Rinehart’s husband, Keith Einwiller, said. “People ran out of their shoes.”
Rinehart said that with so many shootings around the country, she’d remarked to her husband before that “one one day it’s going to happen in our backyard, and today it did.”
Amy Bazelon has attended Highland Park’s Fourth of July parade since her childhood. She has warm memories of riding along in her grandfather’s novelty cars as part of the celebration in years past.
On Monday morning, as the shots began, Bazelon took off running with her granddaughter in her arms.
“I don’t think you ever know, unless you’re in it, how you will respond,” Bazelon said. “People were frozen and couldn’t move, people were running, people were helping, people were not helping.”
She said she quickly lost track of her other family members, but that everyone found each other shortly afterward and was unharmed.
“We have a sense of security, which we’re no longer entitled to, but neither is anybody in any community,” Bazelon said. “We’re not special. We’re not protected.”
Near St. Johns Avenue, some people were unable to retrieve the cars they abandoned during the carnage because police still had much of Central Avenue closed off. One group, which explained to an officer that they were trying to retrieve medicine from a car, was told they would have to return later.
Ashley Koziol, who said she grew up in Libertyville and has lived in Highland Park for several years, was thankful she slept in on Monday.
Otherwise, she said, she would likely have been walking around the area when the shooting began. Koziol said safety was one reason she chose to move to Highland Park.
“I can go on walks late at night and I feel safe,” Koziol said. “I don’t have a fear at all. But, unfortunately, I can’t see that anymore.”
“You’re not safe anywhere,” she added. “Just because it seems like a safe place, unfortunately, that doesn’t stop anybody.”
Democratic U.S. Rep. Brad Schneider, whose district includes Highland Park, said he was at the parade with his campaign team when the shooting started.
“Hearing of loss of life and others injured. My condolences to the family and loved ones; my prayers for the injured and for my community; and my commitment to do everything I can to make our children, our towns, our nation safer,” Schneider tweeted. “Enough is enough!”
Highland Park was the setting of a large gathering in support of gun control on June 11. The March for Our Lives rally was one of hundreds that took place across the country with the goal of pushing legislators to take bipartisan action on the matter.
And less than a decade ago, Highland Park found itself at the center of the national gun-control debate, when a local pediatrician unsuccessfully challenged the town’s ban on assault weapons in a case that made its way to some of the nation’s highest courts.

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