USA – Chabad rabbi says alleged July 4 Chicago shooter entered his synagogue on Passover

Robert E. Crimo III
Robert E. Crimo III

Highland Park, IL – Following the shooting during an Independence Day parade in the Chicago suburb of Highland Park that killed at least six people, a local Chabad emissary said he had witnessed the suspected shooter entering a synagogue during the Jewish festival of Passover in April.

Rabbi Yosef Schanowitz recognized the photo of 22-year-old Robert E. Crimo III released by police following the shooting, and realized he had encountered the suspect a few months earlier, according to the Israel National News website.

“During the last Passover holiday, that person entered the Chabad synagogue. We have an armed security guard sitting in front… I approached him and sternly asked him to leave as I noticed he was not a member of our community,” Schanowitz was quoted as saying.

He said he was in touch with the families of the victims and was “trying to be as helpful as we can at this difficult time.”

According to a report by The Forward, Schanowitz, whose synagogue is located two blocks away from the site of the shooting, helped shelter four teenage boys who were preparing a Chabad booth for the parade after shots were first heard.

After taking them in and making sure they called their parents, the Chabad rabbi drove to the Highland Park Hospital to visit the over 30 people injured in the incident.

“There was chaos… There was an overload of unexpected trauma,” he told The Forward.

But that didn’t stop the 66-year-old rabbi, who volunteered as a chaplain before the pandemic, from rushing to the emergency room and trying to comfort the injured while reciting the Shema prayer.

“I told them I was clergy and I wished them all the best,” Schanowitz said, noting that while “most of the people I saw were not of the Jewish faith, there were a few who were.”

He continued, “You have to do what you have to do. I thought I should at least make sure that there’s clergy on the premises.

“It just drives home that we’re living in an imperfect world, and we have work to do,” he said.

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