Robert E. Crimo III (left) listens to the judge during a case management conference at the Lake County Courthouse in Waukegan on February 6, 2025, in a case where he later pleaded guilty in the mass shooting that occurred at the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park in 2022. | Photo: Nam Y. Huh/AP (Pool)

A judge sentenced the Highland Park Fourth of July parade shooter to seven consecutive life sentences after he pleaded guilty to killing seven and wounding 48 others.

Lake County Judge Victoria Rossetti on Thursday sentenced Robert Crimo III, 24, of Highwood, to seven consecutive natural life sentences in the Illinois Department of Corrections following a two-day sentencing hearing at the Lake County Courthouse in Waukegan.

Rossetti additionally sentenced Crimo III to 50 years for each attempted murder charge. He will not be eligible for parole.

The judge said there was “chaos” and “people running for their lives” in a “warzone” when the July 4, 2022, shooting occurred.

Rossetti recalled the evidence in the case, including how Crimo III disguised himself as a woman to commit the shooting, fleeing from the rooftop and then being captured during a traffic stop.

She said Crimo III was interviewed by police where he exhibited a “cavalier” attitude as he admitted to the shooting while describing his actions in detail.

Family of victims and media members wait before the sentencing hearing for Robert E. Crimo III at the Lake County Courthouse in Waukegan on Wednesday.| Photo: Nam Y. Huh/AP (Pool)

“You have to break a few eggs to make an omelet,” the judge quoted Crimo III as saying to investigators during his police interview.

She called that statement callous and said he has shown a “complete disregard for human life” while terrorizing the community.

Rossetti said she hoped the sentence would bring a sense of justice. The judge also said Crimo III was beyond any point of rehabilitation.

The sentence was handed down on the second day of the sentencing hearing.

Just prior to the sentence being given, Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart addressed the court as he called for seven consecutive life sentences — the maximum sentence.

The state’s attorney recalled that the lives of Katie Goldstein, Irina McCarthy, Kevin McCarthy, Stephen Strauss, Jackie Sundeim, Nicolas Toledo-Zaragoza and Eduardo Uvaldo were lost in the incident.

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The seat for Robert Crimo III is empty at the defense table during Crimo III’s sentencing hearing at the Lake County Courthouse in Waukegan on Wednesday after the defendant refused to appear in court. | Photo: Nam Y. Huh/AP (Pool)

Rinehart described the mass shooting as an “ocean of damage” and questioned how one person could want to hurt so many. “He was arrogant, merciless…” Rinehart said.

Crimo III refused to be transported from the Lake County Jail to the courtroom for the hearing, as he did on Wednesday on the first day.

Lake County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Chief Christopher Covelli said Crimo III has been previously admonished by the court that the court proceedings against him will continue even if he does not come to court.

Crimo III did not have access to watch the sentencing hearing remotely after he refused to attend. He is currently considered a high-risk inmate and is not housed with any other inmates.

Numerous survivors and law enforcement officers took the witness stand during the first day of the hearing, revealing new details on the July 4, 2022, parade shooting in downtown Highland Park.

Retired Highland Park Police Commander Jerry Cameron answers questions from Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart during the sentencing hearing for Robert E. Crimo III at the Lake County Courthouse in Waukegan on Wednesday. | Photo: Nam Y. Huh/AP (Pool)

Now-retired Highland Park Police Commander Gerald Cameron Jr. said thousands of people lined the parade route for the Independence Day parade as a band performed.

Cameron described hearing the gunshots and responding toward the scene. He said people had sought shelter in businesses and “they were horrified.”

Video was played in court showing the band marching as shots were fired and people fled.

“I was panicked,” Highland Park mother Dana Ruder Ring testified, saying that she had been hit by shrapnel in the right foot while fleeing the scene.

She also said that she and her husband helped a toddler to safety as Crimo III opened fire.

Dana Ruder Ring answers a question from Lake County Assistant State’s Attorney Lauren Kalcheim-Rothenberg during the sentencing hearing for Robert E. Crimo III at the Lake County Courthouse in Waukegan on Wednesday. | Photo: Nam Y. Huh/AP (Pool)

The toddler’s parents, Kevin and Irina McCarthy, were later learned to have been fatally shot in the incident.

Dr. Jeremy Smiley, who works for Endeavor Health, said he traded shifts so he could attend the Fourth of July parade in Highland Park as he does every year with his family.

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Smiley said he heard what he thought were firecrackers but were actually gunshots.

He described his father as being in a daze and he questioned whether he should go back for his father or keep pushing forward to safety with his children. Smiley said, “It was scary for me.”

Dr. Jeremy Smiley reacts as he answers a question from Lake County Assistant State’s Attorney Ben Dillon during the sentencing hearing for Robert E. Crimo III at the Lake County Courthouse in Waukegan on Wednesday. | Photo: Nam Y. Huh/AP (Pool)

Smiley also said that he ended up going to the hospital to help treat the shooting victims.

He said that he cared for Cooper Roberts, who was eight at the time and was left paralyzed when a bullet severed his spinal cord.

Smiley said he thinks about Cooper every day as he recalled his initial feeling of walking in and seeing the critically injured boy.

Prosecutors played video from the interrogation of Crimo III and his confession after Highland Park Police Officer Brian Bodden, who was a detective at the time of the shooting, took the stand.

Victims Keely Roberts (left), Sheila Gutman (center) and Dana Ruder Ring (right) react during the sentencing hearing for Robert E. Crimo III at the Lake County Courthouse in Waukegan on Wednesday. | Photo: Nam Y. Huh/AP (Pool)

Bodden participated in the interview with Crimo III and said the suspect had told him he was trying to aim at the adults, not children. Crimo III said he was specifically aiming for the chest and up.

Crimo III told detectives he watched the crowd of people keep running into each other after he started shooting. He also said that big groups were trying to run away from the shooting but were unknowingly running toward him.

Crimo III was able to describe the first victim whom he shot and where exactly he first began shooting.

The suspect mentioned the terms “sleepwalker” and “zombie” during the interrogation.

Highland Park Police Officer Brian Bodden answers a question from a prosecutor during the sentencing hearing for Robert E. Crimo III at the Lake County Courthouse in Waukegan on Wednesday. | Photo: Nam Y. Huh/AP (Pool)

Bodden said Crimo III had written songs making reference to those terms just before the shooting.

Crimo III told investigators he had planned the mass shooting for a couple of years and rode on his e-bike to scout the area. He had taken photos of the area and had previously been on the rooftop where he fired the shots.

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Crimo III said that he watched the police department and even timed officer response times to other calls.

Leah Sundheim read a victim impact statement to the court on behalf of her father, whose wife, Jacki Sundheim, was killed in the shooting.

“For many of us, the pain and sorrow of our loss is still fresh, visceral, and at times too much to bear,” Bruce Sundheim said in the statement.

Family members of a victim react during the sentencing hearing for Robert E. Crimo III at the Lake County Courthouse in Waukegan on Wednesday. | Photo: Nam Y. Huh/AP (Pool)

“You murdered my soulmate, my wife of 33 years, and the mother of my only child,” he said, describing his wife as a “wonderful person” and a “loving wife.”

Many other survivors and family members of victims took the stand to read victim impact statements after Sundheim.

Crimo III pleaded guilty on March 3 to all 69 charges — 21 counts of first-degree murder and 48 counts of attempted murder. The surprise plea came as Crimo III’s trial entered its fourth day.

Crimo III opened fire on parade-goers near Second Street and Central Avenue in Highland Park.

Judge Victoria A. Rossetti (center) talks with Lake County Assistant State’s Attorney Ben Dillon (left) and Robert E. Crimo III’s attorney Gregory Ticsay (right) during the sentencing hearing for Crimo III at the Lake County Courthouse in Waukegan on Wednesday. | Photo: Nam Y. Huh/AP (Pool)

Prosecutors said Crimo III admitted to “looking down his sights” of his Smith & Wesson M&P 15 semi-automatic rifle before opening fire on the Highland Park crowd.

Crimo III told investigators he fired two full 30-round magazines before loading a third 30-round magazine and firing.

Seven people were killed and 48 others were shot. 83 spent shell casings were recovered at the scene.

It is unclear when Crimo III will be transferred from the Lake County Jail to the Illinois Department of Corrections to begin serving the sentence.