The 22-year-old accused shooter, Robert Crimo III, on July 4 fired more than 80 rounds from atop a commercial building into the crowd at a Fourth of July parade in Highland Park, located on the Lake Michigan shore. The shooting killed seven people and injured 30 others.
Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart said the seven charges are based on Crimo sponsoring his then 19-year-old son’s application for a gun license in 2019.
“Parents and guardians are in the best position to decide whether their teenagers should have a weapon,” Rinehart said at a press conference Friday. “In this case, the system failed when Robert Crimo Jr. sponsored his son. He knew what he knew and he signed the form anyway.”
Crimo Jr.’s attorney, George M. Gomez, told The Associated Press in an emailed statement that the charges in the newly-announced criminal case are “baseless and unprecedented.”
“This decision should alarm every single parent in the United States of America who according to the Lake County State’s Attorney knows exactly what is going on with their 19 year old adult children and can be held criminally liable for actions taken nearly three years later,” the statement from Gomez said. “These charges are absurd and we will fight them every step of the way.”
Gomez said Crimo Jr. “continues to sympathize and feel terrible for the individuals and families who were injured and lost loved ones,” but the attorney called the charges “politically motivated and a distraction from the real change that needs to happen in this country.”
Authorities previously said that Illinois State Police found no reason to deny Crimo III’s December 2019 gun license application because he had no arrests, no criminal record, no serious mental health problems, no orders of protection, and no other behavior that would disqualify him.
The Illinois State Police release noted that Crimo III applied for a Firearm Owners Identification (FOID) card in December 2019 at the age of 19. At the time, being under 21, Crimo III had his application sponsored by his father, Crimo Jr.
Prosecutors in the new criminal case allege that Crimo Jr. was criminally reckless at the time that he helped his son.
Crimo Jr. had said in media interviews after the shootings that he didn’t expect to face charges, and did not believe he had done anything wrong in legally helping his son obtain a gun license.
Crimo III is scheduled to be in court next on Jan. 31, 2023.