Highland Park shooting suspect Robert Crimo prank calls NY Post

He must think he’s the Joker.

The man accused of slaughtering seven people at a Chicago-area July 4th parade last year spent the final hours of 2022 making a prank call to The Post, instead of reflecting on the monstrous mass shooting authorities say he committed.

Robert Crimo IlI phoned a Post reporter from Lake County Adult Corrections Facility in Illinois at 8 p.m. on New Year’s Eve.

He then delivered one the oldest jokes in the comedy book.

“Is you refrigerator running?” Crimo, 22, asked, squealing maniacally.

“You better go catch it!” he said, cackling in glee and hanging up.

The Post had attempted to schedule an interview with Crimo through the jail’s communication app in December. While a meeting was never arranged, he did pick up the phone weeks later and called the number on the reporter’s profile. When the reporter picked up the phone on Dec. 31, the inmate was identified by a pre-recorded voice message.

Crimo asked a Post reporter on New Year’s Eve “Is your refrigerator running? You better go catch it!”
Getty Images/Image Source

The sick joke dumbfounded survivor Liz Turnipseed, who was shot in her pelvis while attending the parade with her husband and 3-year-old daughter. 

“He clearly doesn’t have any respect for life and people in any way shape or form,” said Turnipseed, who is suing Crimo in federal court.

“Whether that’s him making an unbelievable lame prank call to a reporter or committing a mass shooting, I think it just speaks to the terrible person that is,” the 41-year-old told The Post, noting that she now walks with a cane and suffers panic attacks in crowded public spaces.

Mugshot of Robert Crimo III
Crimo is accused of murdering seven people in a July 4 parade in Highland Park, IL.
ZUMAPRESS.com

As the Independence Day parade proceeded through Highland Park, revelers quickly realized that the series of loud pops that morning were not the festive sounds of firecrackers but the harrowing blasts of gunfire. 

Crimo allegedly made his way to a rooftop, where he sprayed more than 80 rounds of bullets with a Smith & Wesson M&P 15 semi-automatic rifle into the crowd, killing seven and injuring 48. 

The victims ranged in age from 8 to 80, and included an 8-year-old boy who was paralyzed from the waist down, and a 2-year-old boy found unharmed underneath his father’s corpse.

People grieving at a memorial for the victims of the Highland Park, IL, shooting.
Parade attendees quickly realized the pops they were hearing were not firecrackers but gunfire.
Getty Images
A young girl walking with her mother surrounded by soldiers with rifles
One of Crimo’s victims said she currently walks with a cane and has panic attacks in crowded public spaces.
Getty Images

The suspect ditched the firearm and fled the scene, disguising himself with women’s clothing and driving to Wisconsin, authorities said. 

Crimo confessed to police that he “seriously contemplated” shooting up another holiday celebration in Madison, Wis., but instead returned to Illinois where he was arrested, according to officials. 

Crimo pleaded not guilty in August to more than 117 felony charges for murder, attempted murder and aggravated battery. 

A candlelight vigil is held near the scene of a mass shooting yesterday at a Fourth of July parade
A candlelight vigil held near the scene of the shooting in Highland Park.
Getty Images

The accused shooter’s father, Robert Crimo Jr., was slapped last month with reckless conduct charges for helping his son legally purchase the weapon involved in July’s shooting, despite his history of severe mental health issues and violence, prosecutors said.

Lake County Public Defender’s Office, which is representing the younger Crimo, declined to comment.

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