Fourth of July shooting suspect’s strange and violent online trail

World

The young man suspected of killing six people and injuring dozens at a Fourth of July parade uploaded a video showing the location of the attack before the mass shooting.

Robert E Crimo III, 22, was arrested by police hours after shots were fired into the crowd during the celebrations in the Chicago suburb of Highland Park.

An aerial view of the parade route after a mass shooting at a Fourth of July parade route in the Chicago suburb of Highland Park, Illinois, U.S. July 4, 2022. REUTERS/Cheney Orr
Image:
An aerial view of the parade route after the mass shooting

Accounts that appear to belong to Crimo posted a number of violent and strange videos online, including crudely drawn animations of a violent shooting.

A screenshot of a crude animation in one of Crimo's music videos. It shows him in a pool of blood after being shot by police
Image:
This drawing features in one of Crimo’s music videos. It shows him in a pool of blood after being shot by police

Scene of the shooting

The video showing Central Avenue, where the shooting took place, was filmed almost a year before the attack.

It appears to have been filmed early in the morning and shows the street empty apart from American flags fluttering in the wind.

The street where the shooting took place was filmed and uploaded by Carrio before the attack. This crossing is less than 500ft from where the attack is believed to have begun firing from
Image:
The street where the shooting took place was filmed and uploaded by Crimo before the attack. This crossing is less than 500ft from where the attacker is believed to have begun firing

Crimo edited it into a longer video that shows him smoking while looking at an American flag at half-mast over a memorial.

In the video, he wears a clear backpack. These bags have been adopted by some American schools in a bid to combat school shootings because they make it harder to hide a gun.

Crimo poses looking at an American flag at half-mast, usually a mark of respect for people who have died
Image:
Crimo poses looking at an American flag at half-mast, usually a mark of respect for people who have died

The song Spirit in the Sky accompanies the video and begins with the lyrics “When I die and they lay me to rest/ Gonna go to the place that’s the best.”

‘My actions will be valiant’

A second video, uploaded in October last year, combines a number of his videos into one.

It is being widely referred to as a possible video manifesto by those analysing his online trail because it includes a recorded audio message from him.

In the rambling voiceover, he says: “Like a sleepwalker, I am breaking through… my actions will be valiant and my thought is unnecessary. I know what I have to do.”

In the background, a newspaper clipping on the wall marks the death of Lee Harvey Oswald, the man who shot US President John F Kennedy in 1963.

Crimo filmed a video with a newspaper showing the death of Lee Harvey Oswold
Image:
Crimo filmed a video with a newspaper showing the death of Lee Harvey Oswald

Oswald notoriously fired upon the passing presidential parade from above as he hid on the sixth floor of a building. Similarly, the person who carried out the mass shooting in Chicago is believed to have fired from the rooftop of a building down on to the parade.

Crimo’s reference to the former president’s assassin appears to be part of a wider interest in presidents and patriotism.

Carrio appears to have waited to see then-President Donald Trump drive off from Air Force One
Image:
Crimo appears to have waited to see Donald Trump drive off from Air Force One when he was president

He uploaded a video of himself in 2020 waiting for Donald Trump to land in Air Force One and captured the moment the president at the time drove past as part of a motorcade. There is also a photo of him draped in a Trump flag and attending a rally for the former president.

Crimo is draped in a Donald Trump flag
Image:
Crimo is draped in a Trump flag

American flags feature in a number of his archived videos. Crimo is an aspiring rapper and in one of his music videos he holds an American flag behind him after making allusion to school shootings.

Robert Crimo poses in tactical gear in front of an American flag in one of his music videos
Image:
Crimo poses in tactical gear in front of an American flag in one of his music videos

Another video uploaded in 2020 features a reference to “enemies in the US”.

In it, Crimo films himself staring and close-up to the camera during a remix of people speaking and music.

At the end, he suddenly blinks repeatedly as the recording asks “as you see it, who and what are the enemies of freedom in the US?”

‘Robert Crimo archive’

This content uploaded by Crimo was easily findable, despite social media platforms taking swift action to remove his accounts.

He appears to have deliberately created an archive of content that would be simple to find with basic internet search skills.

Crimo used the stage name Awake. He made multiple accounts under his different names and set up at least two blogs that indexed his content.

A specific YouTube account under a third name was also created. Videos uploaded to that channel were dated and give the label “Robert Crimo archive”.

Crimo carefully labelled videos as part of an archive made using one of this secondary accounts
Image:
Crimo carefully labelled videos as part of an archive made using one of his secondary accounts

He also created back-ups of his content by duplicating many of his videos and photos across different platforms and accounts.

Some of the content includes jokes, some of which appear to have been designed to taunt or fool those looking for answers.

At the end of one uneventful 18-minute long video of him building a cabin next to his family home he says “Goodbye, Mr FBI agent”.

Crimo’s motive for building his archive is unknown.


The Data and Forensics team is a multi-skilled unit dedicated to providing transparent journalism from Sky News. We gather, analyse and visualise data to tell data-driven stories. We combine traditional reporting skills with advanced analysis of satellite images, social media and other open source information. Through multimedia storytelling we aim to better explain the world while also showing how our journalism is done.

Why data journalism matters to Sky News

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Book review of The Rulebreaker by Susan Page
How Does Aaron Taylor-Johnson’s 28 Years Later Casting Play Into Those James Bond Rumors?
Three men arrested after deaths of five people, including a child, who attempted to cross Channel | UK News
Google Reportedly Working on Fast Pair Setup for New Android Phones, May Debut on Samsung Galaxy S23 Series
Morgan Wallen Apologizes for Throwing Chair Off Roof of Nashville Bar