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, seven people were killed.
A Lake Forest police officer walks down Central Avenue in Highland Park on July 4, 2022, after a shooter fired on the northern suburb's Independence Day parade.
Shana Gutman and her mom, Eadie Bear, lifelong residents of Highland Park, take a look at the scene on Central Avenue on July 5, 2022, the day after a mass shooting at the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park. They said they frequently attend the parade but didn't this year. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)
People embrace during a vigil at Central and St. Johns avenues in Highland Park on July 5, 2022, a day after a mass shooting that resulted in seven dead and more than 30 injured at a Fourth of July parade in the north suburb. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)
Law enforcement officers stand guard at the scene of a mass shooting along the Independence Day parade route on Central Avenue in Highland Park on July 4, 2022. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)
Officers search a building near the scene of a mass shooting on July 4, 2022, following the Independence Day parade in Highland Park. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Law enforcement officers clear buildings at the scene of a mass shooting along Highland Park's Independence Day parade route on July 4, 2022, on Central Avenue.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Law enforcement officers respond to the scene of a mass shooting along the Independence Day parade route on July 4, 2022, on Central Avenue in Highland Park.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Chairs, bicycles and strollers remain at the scene of a mass shooting at Highland Park's Independence Day parade route on July 4, 2022, along Central Avenue.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Law enforcement officers help evacuate people from an Anthropologie store in Highland Park on July 4, 2022, after a shooter fired on the northern suburb's Independence Day parade.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Law enforcement officers respond to the scene of a mass shooting along the Independence Day parade route on July 4, 2022, on Central Avenue in Highland Park.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
A law enforcement official moves a stroller, which was left behind after a shooter fired on Highland Park's Independence Day parade on July 4, 2022.
Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune
Law enforcement officers arrive at a staging area at the Hidden Creek Aquapark in Highland Park on July 4, 2022, after a shooter fired on the northern suburb's Independence Day parade.
Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune
FBI agents investigate the scene in Highland Park on July 4, 2022, after a shooter fired on the northern suburb's Independence Day parade.
Rob Dicker/for the Chicago Tribune
People speak to firefighters at the scene of a mass shooting in Highland Park during the town's Independence Day parade on July 4, 2022.
Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune
Toppled-over chairs, bottles of water and other belongings are seen along the parade route in Highland Park on July 4, 2022, after a mass shooting left seven dead and dozens injured.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Law enforcement officers work at the scene of a mass shooting along the Independence Day parade route on July 4, 2022, on Central Avenue in Highland Park.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Law enforcement climb a ladder to work the Central Avenue crime scene, July 5, 2022, the day after a mass shooting at the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park.
Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune
Police officers patrol Central Avenue on July 5, 2022, the day after Highland Park's Independence Day parade mass shooting.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Chairs, bicycles, strollers and balloons remain at the scene of a mass shooting at Highland Park's Independence Day parade route on July 4, 2022, along Central Avenue.
Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune
A stroller is seen left behind at the scene of a mass shooting on July 4, 2022, in Highland Park.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Authorities pick up items left behind by paradegoers along Central Avenue on July 5, 2022, the day after a mass shooting at the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Law enforcement officers collect items, including a bike helmet, left behind at the Central Avenue crime scene, July 7, 2022.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Law enforcement members pick up items left behind by people, including an American flag, along Central Avenue on July 5, 2022, the day after a mass shooting at the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park.
Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune
Members of the community attend an interfaith service on July 10, 2022, at Glencoe Union Church after seven people were killed on July Fourth during a mass shooting in Highland Park.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
People visit one of the memorials to the seven victims along Central Avenue on July 10, 2022.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
People watch as law enforcement continue to investigate the scene along Central Avenue on July 5, 2022, the day after a mass shooting at the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park.
Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune
A law enforcement officer on July 5, 2022, picks up a water-logged American flag left behind after the mass shooting at Highland Park's Independence Day parade the previous day.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
People visit a memorial in Port Clinton Square where seven chairs hold pictures of the victims on July 10, 2022, six days after a mass shooting during the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park.
OLIVER CONTRERAS/AFP / TNS
Uvalde, Texas, and Highland Park mass shootings survivors, families and supporters rally on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., calling for stricter gun controls on July 13, 2022.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Highland Park resident Kernel Parikh leaves flowers near the Central Avenue crime scene on July 5, 2022, the day after a mass shooting at the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
People leave flowers at a growing memorial for victims near the Central Avenue scene, July 6, 2022, two days after a mass shooting at the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park.
Erin Hooley / Chicago Tribune
Highland Park resident Lori Flores Weisskopf becomes emotional as she looks at the scene on July 5, 2022, of a mass shooting that left at least seven people dead and injured more than 30 others during a Fourth of July parade in Highland Park. "I came to see it for myself. You see it on TV, but I had to see myself," she said.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
A crowd of over 400 people gather at 10:14 a.m. in Port Clinton Square in Highland Park for several minutes of silence on July 11, 2022. to mark exactly one week since a mass shooting killed seven people at the city's Fourth of July parade.
Kevin Dietsch / TNS
Felix and Kimberly Rubio, who lost their daughter Lexi in the Uvalde, Texas, school shooting, march in a rally calling for a federal ban on assault weapons on July 13, 2022, in Washington, D.C.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
A woman pauses to visit a memorial in Port Clinton Square in Highland Park on July 11, 2022.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Anna Sandoval brings her daughter, Ariela Antunez, 4, to deliver flowers at a new memorial depicting the seven victims near the Central Avenue crime scene, July 7, 2022, in Highland Park. Antunez, of Highland Park, attended the parade with her father.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
People stop to mourn at a memorial near Central Avenue, July 7, 2022, three days after a mass shooting at the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
People visit the memorial to the victims near the Central Avenue scene on July 6, 2022, two days after a mass shooting at the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park.
Terrence Antonio James / Chicago Tribune
At Iglesia Evangelica Bautista Emanuel in Waukegan, mourners wheel Nicolas Toledo Zaragoza's casket to a hearse after his funeral service on July 8, 2022. One of Toledo's sons, Angel Toledo, is at right at the front of the casket.
Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune
A wagon and flags remain at St. John Avenue near the scene of a mass shooting in Highland Park's Independence Day parade on July 4, 2022. The shooting led to the deaths of at least seven people, authorities said.
Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune
Flowers, candles and a teddy bear lay at the corner of Central and St. Johns Avenue, in Highland Park on July 6, 2022, as a memorial honoring the victims of the July 4th parade mass shooting.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Residents deliver flowers and leave chalk messages at a memorial depicting the seven July Fourth shooting victims near the Central Avenue crime scene on July 7, 2022, in Highland Park.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Law enforcement officers on a rooftop respond to the scene of a mass shooting at Highland Park's Independence Day parade on July 4, 2022, on Central Avenue.
Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune
An American flag flies at half-staff the morning after the mass shooting at Highland Park's Independence Day parade on July 4, 2002.
Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune
Victims of the Fourth of July mass shooting are honored at Sunset Woods Park in Highland Park on July 9, 2022, at a community rally that also promoted ideas on gun violence prevention measures.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Frieda R. and Penny Laing pray together at a growing memorial near the Central Avenue scene on July 6, 2022, two days after a mass shooting at the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park.
Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune
Sara Knizhnik, center left, and Leah Hatcher, center right, embrace as victims of the Fourth of July mass shooting are honored at Sunset Woods Park in Highland Park on July 9, 2022, at a community rally that also promoted ideas on gun violence prevention measures.
Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune
A man pulls a child's tricycle from the parade route along Central Avenue in Highland Park on July 5, 2022.
Erin Hooley / Chicago Tribune
Bicycles and other items remain at the scene on July 5, 2022, after a mass shooting killed seven people and injured more than 30 others during Highland Park's Fourth of July parade.
Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune
The family of Nicolas Toledo-Zaragoza, who was killed in the mass shooting during Highland Park's Independence Day parade, mourn the loss of their family member at a growing memorial for the victims at Central and St. Johns avenues in Highland Park on July 8, 2022.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Pictures of the seven people killed during the Fourth of July parade shooting are displayed at a memorial in Port Clinton Square on July 11, 2022, in Highland Park.
John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune
Two officers stand guard near 2nd and Central avenues at the crime scene of a mass shooting on July 4, 2022, in Highland Park.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Law enforcement officials work the scene along the Highland Park Independence Day parade route after people fled a mass shooting on July 4, 2022.
Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune
A person lights candles at a memorial set up at Central and St. Johns avenues in Highland Park on July 5, 2022.
John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune
An FBI worker carries bags past the scene of a mass shooting on Central Avenue, July 4, 2022, along the route of Highland Park's Independence Day parade.
Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune
A body is removed from the scene of a mass shooting on July 4, 2022, along Highland Park's Independence Day parade route.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Law enforcement officers continue to investigate the Central Avenue crime scene, July 7, 2022, in Highland Park.
Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune
Miranda Pomerance, 17, left, hugs Samantha Gomez, 17, while attending a vigil in Everts Park in Highwood on July 6, 2022, for the seven people were killed and at least two dozen who were wounded in Highland Park in a mass shooting during a Fourth of July parade.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Law enforcement officers evacuate people from a ballet school hours after a mass shooting at Highland Park's Independence Day parade on July 4, 2022, on Central Avenue.
Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune
Messages and roses adorn the podium as victims of the Fourth of July mass shooting are honored at Sunset Woods Park in Highland Park on July 9, 2022, at a community rally that also promoted ideas on gun violence prevention measures.
Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune
Highland Park residents Hillary Heller, right, shares an embrace with her daughter Lucy Heller and friend Shannon Rowe, center, at the corner of Green Bay Road and Central Avenue on July 5, 2022, a day after a mass shooting that resulted in seven dead and more than 30 injured at a Fourth of July parade in Highland Park.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
People visit one of the memorials to the seven people fatally shot on the Fourth of July along Central Avenue on July 10, 2022.
Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune
Parishioners hug after a service at Highland Park Presbyterian Church the day after seven people were killed and at least two dozen were wounded in a mass shooting during a Fourth of July parade in Highland Park.
John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune
A mourner folds her hands in prayer during a community vigil in memory of the victims of the Highland Park Fourth of July parade mass shooting at Market Square, July 7, 2022, in Lake Forest.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Law enforcement officers load a truck with strollers left along the Central Avenue parade route, July 6, 2022, in Highland Park. Some of the belongings left behind by parade goers are being released back to their owners.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
People's belongings sit along the Highland Park Independence Day parade route after people fled the scene during a mass shooting on July 4, 2022.
Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune
Chantal Maldonado hugs her mother Maria Luisa Rodriguez while attending a vigil on July 6, 2022, in Everts Park in Highwood.
John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune
Two girls comfort each other while watching a news report on July 4, 2022, in Highland Park. Earlier in the day a man shot into the crowd, resulting in the deaths of at least seven people and injuring dozens more at the town's Independence Day parade.
Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune
Victims of the July Fourth mass shooting are honored at Sunset Woods Park in Highland Park on July 9, 2022, at a community rally that also promoted ideas on gun violence prevention measures.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Members of the public applaud as Lake County State's Attorney Eric Rinehart announces charges against the suspect, Robert "Bobby" E. Crimo III, on July 5, 2022, in Highland Park.
Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune
Rachel Jacoby, left, and Caryn Fliegler of Illinois Moms Demand Action embrace as victims of the Fourth of July mass shooting are honored at Sunset Woods Park in Highland Park on July 9, 2022, at a community rally that also promoted ideas on gun violence prevention measures.
Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune
People light candles at a memorial set up at Central and St. Johns avenues in Highland Park on July 5, 2022, a day after a mass shooting that left seven dead and more than 30 injured at a Fourth of July parade in the north suburb.
Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune
David Staffilino, 8, center, pets a comfort dog after attending an interfaith service at Glencoe Union Church on July 10, 2022, after seven people were killed on the Fourth of July during a mass shooting in Highland Park.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
Flowers and other mementos are left at a memorial, July 7, 2020, for those who died in the mass shooting at the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
People visit the memorial to the victims near the Central Avenue scene on July 6, 2022, two days after a mass shooting at the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park.
Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune
1 of 75
A Lake Forest police officer walks down Central Avenue in Highland Park on July 4, 2022, after a shooter fired on the northern suburb's Independence Day parade.
The first popping noises sounded like firecrackers or maybe a gun salute honoring the American flag.
Then someone screamed, “There’s a shooter.” And, in an instant, everyone understood the reality. They grabbed their children under their arms and ran. They left behind strollers, lawn chairs, cellphones and purses. They took only what mattered.
“People were terrified, screaming,” Highland Park resident Joe Leslie said. “It was a scene from a nightmare.”
It’s a story witnesses to the deadly shooting at Highland Park’s Fourth of July parade told over and over again in the hours after the tragedy. In painful, chilling detail they recounted how someone opened fire during an annual community celebration, killing at least six people, injuring more than two dozen and leaving an entire town traumatized. Read more here.
Highland Park parade was not the first time a mass shooting took place in the Chicago suburbs
The parents of a toddler. A father of eight and a grandfather to many. A synagogue employee known for her kindness. A family man who loved the arts.
A mass shooting during the Highland Park Independence Day parade claimed the lives of seven people and left some two dozen others injured, ranging in age from 8 to 85 years old. Read more here.
Katie Goldstein, whose neighbors describe her as “welcoming” and “lovely,” brought them baked goods during the holidays.
One of her daughters, 22-year-old Cassie Goldstein, was with her at the parade, she told NBC Nightly News’ Lester Holt in an interview. They wanted to get out of the house to have some fun because Katie Goldstein was mourning the death of her own mother.
Toddler Aiden McCarthy was found wandering alone in the chaotic aftermath as strangers sought to reunite him with his family. A day later, it emerged that the parents of 2-year-old Aiden, Irina and Kevin McCarthy, were among the seven people killed.
Aiden’s grandfather, Michael Levberg, told the Tribune that he was eventually reunited with his grandson after Aiden was taken to the local police station.
“When I picked him up, he said, ‘Are Mommy and Daddy coming soon?” Levberg said Tuesday evening. “He doesn’t understand.”
Steve Straus, 88, was an exceptional joke-teller, an avid reader and a “culture vulture” who enjoyed the artistic fruits of the Art Institute and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, family members said. Energetic beyond his years, Straus commuted on Metra five days a week to his office downtown, where he worked as a stockbroker.
Straus, said his son Peter Straus, was “very curious about the world.”
Jacquelyn Sundheim was a longtime employee and lifelong member of North Shore Congregation Israel in Glencoe, where she taught preschool and helped coordinate events like bar and bat mitzvahs and weddings.
The nature of Sundheim’s work meant that she touched many lives, fellow congregant Lauren Absler said.
“Every life cycle event, you shared with Jacki. Whether it was a baby naming or a bat mitzvah or a wedding, you planned that with her,” Absler said. “We cannot remember a time when we walked into the sanctuary and she wasn’t standing at the door to greet people.”
Nicolas Toledo arrived a few months ago from his native Morelos, Mexico, to spend time with his family after retiring several years ago. The father of eight and grandfather to many, was killed in the mass shooting that has left not only the Toledo family but an entire community traumatized.
He was a loving man, his granddaughter Xochil Toledo wrote on a GoFundMe page created by the family to collect funds for the funeral expenses.
“But today Nicolas is our guardian angel,” Xochil Toledo added. “We ask you (to) please keep our family and all the families of this horrible tragedy in your prayers and stay strong as a community.”
The family of Eduardo Uvaldo prayed for a miracle after the grandfather was shot. His daughters, on social media, pleaded with others to join them in prayer, sharing a photo of Uvaldo sitting in front of the Louvre in Paris, wearing a blue shirt and a soft smile.
But Uvaldo didn’t make it and requests for prayers for a miracle turned into prayers for strength for the family he leaves behind.
The suspect
Robert “Bobby” E. Crimo III, 21, who is charged with seven counts first-degree murder, appears at his bond hearing via video on Wednesday, July 6, 2022, at Lake County Circuit Court in Waukegan. Crimo is suspected of firing into the crowd at a Fourth of July parade in Highland Park on Monday morning. Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/pool
Robert E. “Bobby” Crimo III, 21, is charged with seven counts of first-degree murder in what Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart called a “premeditated and calculated attack.”
Crimo planned the parade attack for weeks, police and prosecutors allege, then climbed a fire escape ladder to the roof of a building and fired as the Independence Day parade was in full swing. The gun that was used in the attack was purchased legally in Illinois by Crimo, authorities said.
Attorneys for Crimo entered a not guilty plea at his arraignment after a grand jury indicted him on 117 felony counts.
In all, about 45 people were either killed or injured during the attack, authorities said. Read more here.
A new banner hangs on a business in downtown Highland Park as residents return to some of their daily routines on July 7, 2022, after a mass shooting at the city’s Independence Day parade.
Highland Park, located on the North Shore of Chicago, sits between the suburbs of Highwood and Glencoe.
On the Fourth of July, after a gunman killed and wounded dozens during the holiday parade here, social media was alive with expressions of shock and grief, outpourings of sympathy and surprise at where this happened ? but also reminders that Highland Park is one of the wealthiest suburbs in America. But actually, Glencoe, to its south, is much richer. And Highwood, to its north, has a poverty rate only slightly above Chicago’s.
Comparably, Highland Park is well-off. Pretty wealthy, just not as uniform as some of the suburbs that surround Highland Park. It is a town shouldering some misconceptions — of what a Midwest suburb looks like now, and what sheltered still means. Read more here.
Highland Park city council members applaud Highland Park Mayor Nancy Rotering, third from left, during a city council meeting on July 25, 2022, for her efforts since the mass shooting at the town’s Fourth of July parade.
Highland Park Mayor Nancy Rotering continued to call for a federal ban on assault-style weapons Monday during the City Council’s first meeting since the Independence Day mass shooting.
Following a moment of silence at the start of the meeting, Rotering, sometimes tearfully, sometimes angrily, summed up her efforts to lobby federal officials to institute the sort of ban Highland Park itself imposed nearly a decade ago. Read more here.