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After Trial Marred by Constant Outbursts, Jury Finds Darrell Brooks Guilty of Murdering Six People in Waukesha Parade Attack

 
Darrell Brooks

Darrell Brooks hearing the verdict.

Jurors convicted Darrell Brooks, 40, of first-degree intentional homicide for killing six people at the 2021 Waukesha Christmas parade. They also convicted him of charges including first-degree recklessly endangering safety while using a dangerous weapon, hit and run involving death, and battery.

“Burn in hell, you piece of shit,” a man called out to Brooks during the verdict. Judge Jennifer Dorow kicked him out of court.

The slain victims were Jackson Sparks, 8, Tamara Durand, 52, Jane Kulich, 52, Leanna “Lee” Owen, 71, Virginia Sorenson, 79, and Wilhelm Hospel, 81.

In their opening statement and closing argument, prosecutors said that Brooks’ decision to keep driving was evidence he committed an intentional act.

“How can you hit one and keep going?” Waukesha County District Attorney Susan Opper said in her closing. “How can you hit two and keep going? How can you hit three and keep going?”

He was going 30 miles an hour, she said.

“That’s intentional,” she said.

Authorities said Brooks was fleeing because he had just harassed and abused his ex-girlfriend Erika Patterson, and police were inevitably going to get involved.

Brooks, a self-proclaimed “sovereign,” represented himself in court and constantly argued with Dorow before and during trial. He made baseless arguments that he could not be called by his name or that the court lacked proven subject matter jurisdiction to hear his case. In an attempt to prove a point, he called the “state of Wisconsin” to testify, but it could not because it was not a flesh and blood person. Apparently, Brooks was trying to show that he could not be legally held accountable.

So-called sovereign citizens assert that the government holds no true, legal sway over them because they, not the government, are the “sovereign.”

Subject matter jurisdiction is a question of whether a particular court has the power to hear a particular case or controversy. That was not a realistic issue in this case. Here, Brooks was tried before a Wisconsin circuit court judge in Waukesha County. The incident in question happened in that county, and state courts are courts of general jurisdiction when it comes to the subject of criminal law.

Despite Dorow’s repeated admonition that no party could argue for jury nullification, Brooks told jurors in his closing that they had this power.

“Hold me in contempt,” Brooks even told Dorow before closings.

She did not, instead letting him deliver his argument with occasional objections from Opper.

In his closing argument, Brooks acknowledged being the driver of the SUV, but he denied driving to hurt anyone. He maintained that honking his horn was evidence of his lack of intent.

“I’ve never heard of someone intentionally trying to hurt someone while attempting to blow their horn,” he said.

He also tried to blame the SUV, suggesting it may have malfunctioned at the time. Brooks cited a purported recall on the vehicle. Opper successfully objected on grounds of facts not in evidence and misstatement of facts.

“I’m happy to say that my conscience is clear,” Brooks asserted in his closing.

Despite the constant friction during trial, he was quiet, even subdued in manner during the lengthy verdict reading. He often kept his head down.

Note: We added the verdicts of the lesser charges, and we also noted more detail from the verdict reading.

[Mugshot via Waukesha County Sheriff’s Office]

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