Highland Park shooting suspect description, name released after July 4 parade attack

The Highland Park July 4 parade shooter remained at large hours after the attack Monday

WARNING: GRAPHIC IMAGES: Illinois police are looking for a White male suspect with black hair and a slim build after a gunman attacked an Independence Day parade in Highland Park, a wealthy suburb of Chicago, according to authorities and everyone living near the scene was being told to shelter in place. Investigators believe he is around 19 years old.

Police have recovered a rifle but said the unidentified gunman is still considered armed and dangerous. Authorities identified 22-year-old Robert E. Crimo III, who is considered to be armed and dangerous, as a person of interest and later a suspect. He was driving a 2010 Honda Fit with an Illinois license plate DM80653. He is from the area, authorities said. 

He killed at least six people and wounded about two dozen more from a rooftop perch before fleeing, Lake County Sheriff's Office Deputy Chief Chris Covelli said during an afternoon news briefing. Five of those killed were found at the scene and were adults, authorities said. Another was taken to a hospital where they died. 

A child was among those hurt and was critically injured, authorities said. 

"The families of six individuals woke up today to join a community celebration of our nation's independence," Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said during a news briefing. "They will go to bed tonight less than whole. There are no words I can offer to lessen the pain of those families who will no longer associate the Fourth of July with celebration, but instead, with grief."

HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS, FOURTH OF JULY PARADE SHOOTING

Robert E. Crimo, 22, has been identified as a person of interest in the July 4th parade attack in Highland Park, Illinois in which at least six people were killed.  (Highland Park Police Department)

The governor said he spoke with President Biden, who pledge federal support. 

Gunfire broke out at the intersection of Central Avenue and 2nd Street in Highland Park around 10:24 a.m. CT Monday, according to authorities. The gunman remained at large as of 3 p.m., and police said he had not barricaded himself anywhere or taken hostages to their knowledge.

Covelli said the suspect used "a high-powered rifle" but declined to give a detailed description of the weapon. The attack began near the last leg of the parade route, he said, and targeted spectators along the sidelines.

He added that the attack marked a "very random, very intentional and a very sad day."

Authorities said the gunman accessed a roof of a business possibly via a ladder in an alley attached to the building. 

State police and Chicago officers raced to the scene to assist Highland Park Police in the investigation, and so did deputies from the Lake County Sheriff's Office. The FBI is also assisting, authorities said, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives was working on tracing the weapon used in the attack.

ILLINOIS MANHUNT UNDERWAY AFTER 4TH OF JULY PARADE SHOOTING IN HIGHLAND PARK; AT LEAST SIX CONFIRMED DEAD

Empty chairs sit along the sidewalk after parade-goers fled Highland Park's Fourth of July parade after shots were fired, Monday, July 4, 2022 in Chicago. (Lynn Sweet/Chicago Sun-Times via AP) (Lynn Sweet/Chicago Sun-Times via AP)

Officials are asking residents to avoid the area as they continue to hunt for the suspect. 

"All we know right now is that he's not in custody, and he's not deceased," said Mike Verden, a local resident, the founder and CEO of The Lake Forest Group security consulting firm and a former Secret Service agent, police officer, and senior director of security for the NBA. "Sometimes these guys get away… Some want to do suicide by cop, some kill themselves, and some just don't want to get caught."

Verden lives just four miles from the parade route and said he could hear police responding after the attack from his home. Like other area residents, he said he was sheltering in place as police conducted a large-scale search for the suspect.

"The biggest thing right now is that this person is not in custody," he said. "Usually in these types of incidents, they die at the scene…This is kind of unique."

HIGHLAND PARK, IL: First responders work the scene of a mass shooting at a Fourth of July parade on July 4, 2022.   (Photo by Jim Vondruska/Getty Images)

He said it's normal for authorities to assume the suspect is still armed after recovering a weapon because active shooters typically carry more than one firearm.

The Federal Aviation Administration temporarily banned aircraft from flying over Highland Park. The agency issued a five-mile "Temporary Flight Restriction" for up to 3,000 feet before canceling it at 3 p.m. local time.  

Officials at Highland Park Hospital said they received 26 patients, of which 25 sustained gunshot wounds. The ages of the victims ranged from 8 to 85 years of age. Around 4 to 5 children were among those hurt. Of those injured, 19 were treated and released. Two patients were transferred to Evanston Hospital, said Dr. Brigham Temple, medical director of NorthShore University Health System.

While speaking with reporters, Pritzker advocated for elected officials to do more to prevent gun violence. 

"It is devastating that a celebration of America was ripped apart by our uniquely American plague," he said. "I'm furious that yet more innocent lives were taken by gun violence. While we celebrate the Fourth of July just once a year, mass shootings have become our weekly, yes weekly, American tradition."

The 2010 Honda Fit believed to be driven by Robert Crimo, the suspect in the Highland Park July 4th parade shooting.  (FBI)

ILLINOIS FOURTH OF JULY PARADE ERUPTS INTO CHAOS AFTER MULTIPLE PEOPLE SHOT: REPORT

The parade began around 10 a.m. at the intersection of Laurel and St. Johns Avenues, less than a mile from the scene of the shooting at Central Avenue and 2nd Street. A celebration called Fourth Fest was supposed to follow the parade at 11 a.m., located at Sunset Park. Authorities canceled the event.

Anyone with video surveillance, phone video, still images, is asked to contact investigators. Business owners in the area asked to review security cameras and share with police, Covelli said, "even if you don’t see anything in there."

Phone video posted to social media that appears to have been taken at the scene captured the sound of more than 30 gunshots booming out over the parade as spectators fled in a panic. 

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Fox News’ Anders Hagstrom contributed to this report.

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