Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Red flags were missed for the July 4 suspect

- By Bernard Condon and Jim Mustian

HIGHLAND PARK, ILL. >> Illinois' “red-flag” law could have stopped the suspect in the Independen­ce Day parade shooting from buying a gun or at least delayed the purchase of the weapon he's accused of using to kill seven people and wound dozens.

Police in the Chicago suburb of Highland Park were called twice to the home of Robert Crimo III in 2019 — once after he tried to commit suicide and again when he allegedly threatened to “kill everyone” in his family. On either occasion, they could have immediatel­y exercised part of the law that allowed them to seek a restrainin­g order to prevent Crimo from buying guns for anywhere from 14 days to six months.

Obtaining such a delay could have bought critical time for police to seek more informatio­n to ask a judge for a longer order preventing a gun purchase.

But Highland Park police did not seek such an order, and they were not required to do so. And just four months after the reported threat that prompted officers to seize 16 knives, a sword and a dagger from Crimo's home, Illinois State Police approved him for a firearms permit. The agency explained the decision in part by saying that it didn't consider him a “clear and present danger” because he didn't consider himself such a danger.

“When police went to the home and asked the individual if he felt like harming himself or others, he responded no,” the state police said in a statement this week, adding “importantl­y” that Crimo's father assured officers that the collection of knives seized from the home was his and would be stored safely.

That fateful decision in early 2020 to issue the then-19-year-old Crimo a firearms permit allowed him to legally purchase five guns, including the Smith & Wesson semi-automatic rifle authoritie­s say he used from his rooftop perch to unleash more than 80 rounds on a Fourth of July parade below.

The episode highlights how, even in a state with some of the nation's most restrictiv­e gun laws, opportunit­ies can be missed to keep weapons from dangerous and disturbed people. While the authoritie­s who crossed paths with Crimo contend their hands were tied by the law, several people familiar with Illinois' statutes told The Associated Press there were more than enough ways to block him from getting guns.

“Laws don't mean much unless they're followed,” said Sean Holihan, the state legislativ­e director for Giffords, a gun safety advocacy group. “This fell through the cracks.”

Added Nicholas Suplina, senior vice president for law and policy at Everytown for Gun Safety: “Redflag laws are designed for precisely this kind of situation . ... It's an important tool in the gun violence prevention toolbox.”

A tool Highland Park police did make use of, they said, was the “clear and present danger” report filed with the state after their two visits to his home in 2019.

Such reports are intended to alert state police to people who, if allowed to buy a gun, may pose an “imminent threat of substantia­l bodily harm to themselves or others.”

 ?? NAM Y. HUH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Visitors pay their respects at altars for the seven people killed in Monday's Fourth of July mass shooting on Thursday in Highland Park, Ill.
NAM Y. HUH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Visitors pay their respects at altars for the seven people killed in Monday's Fourth of July mass shooting on Thursday in Highland Park, Ill.

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