Man convicted of killing 6 with SUV in Wisconsin Christmas parade
A jury has convicted a Wisconsin man of killing six people and injuring dozens of others when he drove his SUV into a Christmas parade last year.
MADISON, Wis. — A Wisconsin man was convicted Wednesday of killing six people and injuring dozens of others last year when he drove his SUV through a Christmas parade, wrapping up a trial in which he defended himself with bizarre legal theories and erratic outbursts.
It took the jury a little over three hours to find Darrell Brooks Jr. guilty of all 76 charges, including six counts of first-degree intentional homicide. He faces a mandatory life sentence on each homicide count.
Brooks, dressed in a suit and tie, silently rested his head on folded hands as the verdicts were read. His subdued demeanor was a stark departure from previous days of the trial, when his sometimes-outrageous behavior drew rebukes from the judge.
Judge Jennifer Dorow scheduled a hearing Monday to set a sentencing date. Victims and their families are expected to make statements then.
Brooks drove his Ford Escape into the Christmas parade in Waukesha in suburban Milwaukee on Nov. 21 moments after fleeing a domestic disturbance with his former girlfriend, prosecutors said.
Six people were killed, including 8-year-old Jackson Sparks, who was marching in the parade with his baseball team, and three members of the Dancing Grannies, a group of performing grandmothers who march in parades. Scores of others were hurt, some severely.
The incident deeply scarred the community of 70,000 people about 15 miles west of Milwaukee. Community members built memorials to the dead and held vigils. The anger was still evident Wednesday: Someone in the gallery yelled, “Burn in hell!†as the verdicts were read. Vehicles passing the courthouse honked their horns in celebration, WITI-TV reported.
Laurie Hogeland, a friend of some of the parade victims, told reporters outside the courthouse after the verdict that justice had been served.
“It was a brief moment of relief,†she said. “But, then all the pain comes back. The pain comes back.â€
Brooks pleaded not guilty by reason of mental disease this year but withdrew the plea before his trial began with no explanation.
Days before the trial started, he dismissed his public defenders, electing to represent himself despite overwhelming evidence against him. Police officers and parade-goers testified they saw Brooks behind the wheel of the SUV. Dist. Atty. Susan Opper presented to the jury several photos of Brooks driving the vehicle.
Brooks’ main defense theory appeared to be that he was a sovereign citizen, echoing a conspiracy theory that every person is a nation and isn’t subject to government restrictions. He refused to recognize the court’s jurisdiction over him, refused to answer to his own name, launched into meandering cross-examinations, and muttered under his breath that the trial wasn’t fair.
He got into daily arguments with the judge that often devolved into shouting matches. At one point he glared at Dorow so intensely she had to take a recess because she said she was scared of him.
Multiple times, she moved him into another courtroom where he could watch the proceedings via video and she could mute his microphone when he became disruptive.
One day, after he was moved to the other room, he stripped off his shirt and sat bare-chested on his table with his back to the camera. On another day, he built a barricade out of his boxes of legal documents and hid behind it. On yet another, he held up a Bible so no one could see his face on camera and tossed his copy of the jury instructions into the garbage.
Opper told jurors during her closing argument Tuesday that Brooks’ decision to keep driving once he entered the parade route shows he intended kill people.
Dorow allowed Brooks back into the main courtroom to deliver his closing statement to jurors face to face. In a rambling, repetitive speech, he tried to raise doubts about whether the SUV’s throttle malfunctioned and whether he had simply panicked. He lamented how he hasn’t been able to see his children since he was arrested and insisted he’s not a murderer.
Opper countered during her rebuttal that a Wisconsin State Patrol vehicle inspector testified earlier that the SUV was in good working order. She warned jurors that Brooks was just trying to play on their sympathy.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.