So that FB link is the Dad's sandwich shop? I would hope the community refuses to eat his shat sandwich.
IndividualFreedom said:
So that FB link is the Dad's sandwich shop? I would hope the community refuses to eat his shat sandwich.
Just to correct this, it is not anyone that has been a patient of a psychiatrist or psychologist. It is only if you have been in an inpatient psychiatric facility (ie. psychiatric/mental hospital). I don't think he was. His suicide attempt resulted in someone making a report, and police made contact over a week later. Obviously the second event where he threatened to "kill everybody" did not result in any charges, much less inpatient psychiatric admission. It may be that he had been in a psych hospital, but I have seen zero reference to it. For Illinois FOID, if you are denied on the basis of inpatient psychiatric hospitalization, you can appeal, which requires a forensic psychological evaluation.Irish 2.0 said:
Not the case in Illinois. His father sponsored him for a FOID which is required to purchase a firearm in Illinois. His father committed fraud by doing so because the guy had been under psychiatric evaluation within the last five years. This could've been prevented by the family.
Tabasco said:Just to correct this, it is not anyone that has been a patient of a psychiatrist or psychologist. It is only if you have been in an inpatient psychiatric facility (ie. psychiatric/mental hospital). I don't think he was. His suicide attempt resulted in someone making a report, and police made contact over a week later. Obviously the second event where he threatened to "kill everybody" did not result in any charges, much less inpatient psychiatric admission. It may be that he had been in a psych hospital, but I have seen zero reference to it. For Illinois FOID, if you are denied on the basis of inpatient psychiatric hospitalization, you can appeal, which requires a forensic psychological evaluation.Irish 2.0 said:
Not the case in Illinois. His father sponsored him for a FOID which is required to purchase a firearm in Illinois. His father committed fraud by doing so because the guy had been under psychiatric evaluation within the last five years. This could've been prevented by the family.
This is from the presser that "..." posted yesterday afternoon.Quote:
Press conference:
(About prior contact with law enforcement)
First was in April 2019, an individual contacted Highland Park PD a week after learning of Mr. Crimo attempting suicide. This was a delayed report so Highland Park still responded a week later, spoke with Crimo and his parents, was being handled by mental health professionals at that time. There was no law enforcement action to be taken.
September 2019: Reported Crimo said he was going to kill everyone, had collection of knives; police responded and removed 16 knives, a dagger and a sword. At that time, there was no probable cause to arrest. HP did notify Illinois State Police.
Victim count: approximately 45 injured or deceased
(September incident) The police responded there. They can't make an arrest unless there's probable cause or someone is willing to sign complaints. … The threat was directed at family inside the home.
Purchased 5 firearms. 2 rifles, some pistols and possibly a shotgun. Seized at his father's home.
Not sure if correct or not but its associated with Hitman: Agent 47 movie/game.fixer said:
What is the obsession with "47"?
I'm way out of the loop on this.
Dro07 said:Not sure if correct or not but its associated with Hitman: Agent 47 movie/game.fixer said:
What is the obsession with "47"?
I'm way out of the loop on this.
Tabasco said:Just to correct this, it is not anyone that has been a patient of a psychiatrist or psychologist. It is only if you have been in an inpatient psychiatric facility (ie. psychiatric/mental hospital). I don't think he was. His suicide attempt resulted in someone making a report, and police made contact over a week later. Obviously the second event where he threatened to "kill everybody" did not result in any charges, much less inpatient psychiatric admission. It may be that he had been in a psych hospital, but I have seen zero reference to it. For Illinois FOID, if you are denied on the basis of inpatient psychiatric hospitalization, you can appeal, which requires a forensic psychological evaluation.Irish 2.0 said:
Not the case in Illinois. His father sponsored him for a FOID which is required to purchase a firearm in Illinois. His father committed fraud by doing so because the guy had been under psychiatric evaluation within the last five years. This could've been prevented by the family.
It is related to his "book", supposedly it is a key to decipher the random numbers in the text. Other key numbers are 23 and 115fixer said:
What is the obsession with "47"?
I'm way out of the loop on this.