Darrell Brooks Jr, 39, the suspected driver of the car that mowed down scores of parade goers in Waukesha on Sunday, killing five people, ...
Darrell Brooks Jr, 39, the suspected driver of the car that mowed down scores of parade goers in Waukesha on Sunday, killing five people, is an amateur rapper whose lyrics include ‘f*** the pigs’ and ‘f*** Donald Trump.’
Brooks, who is also known by his stage name, MathBoi Fly, is also a convicted sex offender.
In 2006, he was convicted in a Nevada court for statutory rape after he had sex with a 15-year-old girl. Brooks was 24 years old at the time of his conviction.
The girl ended up pregnant and gave birth to Brooks’ child. The legal age of consent in Nevada is 16.
Brooks posted songs on SoundCloud with explicit lyrics.
‘They gonna need a cleaner for the s*** we did, all my killers Gacey where them bodies hid.’
The lyrics of another song read: 'Sliding through the city with no safety on.'
His rap songs also make mention of AK-47 assault rifles and killing people.
Darrell Brooks Jr, 39, the suspected driver of the car that mowed down scores of parade goers in Waukesha on Sunday, killing five people, is an amateur rapper whose lyrics include ‘f*** the pigs’ and ‘f*** Donald Trump.’
Brooks, who is also known by his stage name, MathBoi Fly, posted songs on SoundCloud with explicit lyrics
Earlier on Monday, the shamefaced Milwaukee District Attorney's Office admitted it was 'inappropriate' for Brooks to be allowed out of jail on a $1,000 bond three weeks ago after trying to run over his ex-girlfriend, as he was charged with five counts of murder for the lives he took at the Waukesha Christmas Parade on Sunday night.
Brooks, 39, was taken into custody in Waukesha, Wisconsin, on Sunday night after police found his red Ford SUV parked neatly in a driveway five blocks from where he drove through crowds of kids and elderly dancing groups.
The amateur rapper has a long criminal history dating back to 1999 with more than 15 arrests in the state of Wisconsin alone for charges including possession of drugs, strangulation and suffocation, battery, illegally possessing firearms as a convicted felon and resisting arrest.
On Sunday, he was fleeing the scene of a domestic dispute when he crashed into the crowds after smashing through safety barriers and breezing past cops. One officer tried to stop him by shooting at his car but he stopped because there were too many people around for him to safely fire his weapon.
Police had just arrived at the home that Brooks had fled when he plowed into the parade crowds, killing five adults. The victims have been identified as Dancing Grannies Virginia Sorenson, 79, Leanna Owens, 71 and Tamara Durand, 52, Citizen Bank employee Jane Kulich, 52, and 82-year-old Wilhelm Hospel, the husband of one of the grannies. The Waukesha Police Department have now arrested Brooks on five murder charges.
On November 2, he was arrested on domestic violence charges after trying to 'run over' his ex, the mother of his child, at a gas station. His bond was set at $1,000 and he posted it on November 11th.
On Monday morning, the Milwaukee County DA's Office released a statement admitting it was 'inappropriately low' given his criminal history. They said they'd launched an internal review as to why he was able to get out on bond to commit more crimes.
The shamefaced Milwaukee District Attorney's Office admitted on Monday it was 'inappropriate' for convicted felon Darrell Brooks to be allowed out of jail on a $1,000 bond three weeks ago after trying to run over his ex-girlfriend, as he was charged with five counts of murder for the lives he took at the Waukesha Christmas Parade on Sunday night
Brooks' November 2 criminal complaint reveals he was accused of hunting down the mother of his child, a woman referred to in charging documents as EAP, and running her over while she was walking through a gas station after an argument
Milwaukee County Attorney John T Chisholm previously spoke of trying to reduce his county's prison population. He even let a progressive criminal justice nonprofit called Vera perform an 'audit' on his office.
Vera, which is based in New York, opposes cash bail, with the implementation of that measure partially-blamed for a crime spike in NYC. Milwaukee saw murders spike by 95 per cent between 2019 and 2020, with 2021 currently recording as many homicides as there were by the same stage of 2020.
At a press conference on Monday afternoon, Waukesha Police Chief Dan Thompson said: 'This is not a terrorist event.' Fire Chief Steve Howard said the scene was 'like a warzone'.
'It was just, for lack of a better word, carnage. There were adults, children injured.
'Some of our first responders were there with their families and they left their families to help treat people. People with military backgrounds likened it to a war zone.'
Between July 2020 and February 2021, Brooks was in custody awaiting a trial date on a $7,500 bond for shooting at his nephew after a fight over his old cell phone.
The bond was dropped to $500 in February because the courts couldn't give him a trial quickly enough.
He was arrested again on November 2 in Milwaukee for hunting down the mother of one of his children at a hotel, then following her in the street with his SUV and running her over in the parking lot of a gas station after she refused to get in his car.
DailyMail.com obtained copies of his arrest warrant for that incident on Monday which reveal he followed her to a gas station, punched her 'with a closed fist' and then 'ran her over.'
He was arrested and charged with five counts including bail jumping, for having failed to meet the terms of one of his many other sets of bail or probation requirements.
But on November 11, he posted a $1,000 cash bond. By November 19, he was on the streets again and by November 21, behind the wheel of his Ford again.
After Sunday night's massacre, Milwaukee County District Attorney's Office issued a statement conceding the bail that was set was 'inappropriately low.'
Fire Chief Steve Howard said the scene at the parade was like a 'warzone'. 'For lack of a better word, it was carnage'
Milwaukee Dancing Granny Virginia Sorenson, 79, was one of the five adults killed by the driver when he plowed through the crowd on Sunday night
Jane Kulich (left) was a Citizen Bank employee who was walking with a parade float before she was fatally struck. Right, Betty Butula Streng, another Dancing Granny who was injured
Brooks is shown in this still taken from a video of the incident on Sunday. His motive remains unclear but the incident happened two days after he got out of jail on battery charges
Brooks is an amateur rapper who is shown above in a YouTube video standing in front of his red Ford truck. He has a long criminal history going back to 1999 with charges including weapons offenses, domestic battery, resisting arrest, drugs charges and concealed carry charges
The amateur rapper is shown in a 2019 music video filmed at the back of his house where he and others in the video pose with weapons and money
The Christmas parade began on Sunday at 4pm, with participants starting at Main St. and Whiterock Ave. It was always intended to be a short parade, ending half a mile away at the northeast corner of Cutler Park. At 4.39pm, the red SUV is filmed speeding down Main Street. It smashed into the crowd, and sent bodies flying, before carrying on down towards the end of the parade, where the car broke through barriers. The SUV was found less than five blocks away and the driver was taken into custody but it's unclear exactly where
'The bail recommendation in this case is not consistent with the approach of the Milwaukee County District Attorney’s Office toward matters involving violent crime, nor was it consistent with the risk assessment of the defendant prior to setting of bail.
'This office is currently conducting an internal review of the decision to make the recent bail recommendation in this matter in order to determine the appropriate next steps,' the statement said.
Brooks is also listed as a sex offender in Nevada, where he was charged with having sex with a minor.
A social media video of him taken before Sunday's incident shows him trying to explain that the victim was the mother of his oldest daughter who he 'didn't know was 16' when they had sex.
Police sources told The Washington Post that Brooks he was fleeing the scene of a knife attack on Sunday when he smashed into the crowds at 4.39pm at the Waukesha parade.
The judge who granted the driver's bond was Michelle Havas (left). Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisolm (right) is an enthusiastic bail reform advocate who previously suggested the state should replicate San Francisco's bail reform to do away with cash bond on minor crimes
Terrifying video posted to social media shows a speeding red SUV collide into a group of people marching in the middle of the street during the annual holiday parade in Waukesha, some 20 miles west of downtown Milwaukee
The incident comes just two days after Kyle Rittenhouse, the accused Kenosha shooter, was acquitted of murder charges in the deaths of two men during the unrest that erupted last year in the wake of a police shooting of a black man. Kenosha is located about 55 miles south of Waukesha. There is no indication yet that the two are connected
The SUV was found around five blocks from where the parade carnage took place, parked in a driveway. It's unclear whose home it was or if he was found inside, but he was taken into custody nearby
Brooks' lengthy rap sheet includes felonies for bail jumping, battery, drugs offenses, weapons offenses and domestic abuse but he has never spent a significant amount of time in prison
Pictured, the suspect's home in Milwaukee. A man who came to the door said he could not speak to DailyMail.com. ‘If you’re trying to get some information I can’t talk to you. I know what this is related to but we’re not going to talk to you,' he said
One witness, a father whose daughter was in a dance troupe that was struck, said he made eye contact with him and that he was 'calm and composed.'
Brooks lives some 20 miles away in Milwaukee in a suburban home where he films rap videos in the street. On Monday, a man who answered the door refused to comment on the mounting deaths from Sunday's incident.
‘If you’re trying to get some information I can’t talk to you. I know what this is related to but we’re not going to talk to you,' he told DailyMail.com.
‘Most people on this street have lived here 40 or 50 years. But we’re dying off now,’ one neighbor told DailyMail.com
‘Young punks are moving in here, anyone with a bit of money. But they don’t want to know us and we don’t want to know them. I’ve had no dealings with them at all, but I have seen that red SUV parked outside,' he added.
His motive for Sunday's attack remains unclear; police will not confirm whether it was a deliberate act of terror or if Brooks accidentally ran into the crowds after losing control of his car while fleeing a knife crime.
Social media profiles reveal Brooks was an amateur rapper who went by the name MathBoi Fly, and claimed to have 'turned to the streets at a very young age' while growing up in a 'dangerous West Side neighborhood of Washington Park'.
He described himself as 'the best underground artist in his city'. Those social media profiles have now been taken down.
On Saturday, he posted that he was 'not surprised' by the Kyle Rittenhouse verdict but authorities have not yet indicated whether the teen's acquittal has anything to do with the incident on Sunday.
Brooks has a lengthy criminal history stretching back to the 1990s when he was convicted of battery. At the time of the car rampage, he had two open felony cases against him - one from July 2020 and another from November this year.
Waukesha Police Chief Daniel Thompson said no motive has yet been established, but officers are not discounting terrorism.
Officers are also looking into the possibility that he was fleeing an earlier incident involving a knife when he reached the parade, NBC said.
Detectives will not yet confirm if they believe the attack was a deliberate act of terror, or if Brooks lost control of the vehicle while fleeing an earlier crime. They have also refused to comment on whether the incident has anything to do with the Kyle Rittenhouse verdict in Kenosha, 50 miles away. A press conference has been scheduled for 2pm EST.
Chief Thompson said one officer fired at the vehicle in an unsuccessful bid to stop it, with witnesses saying it sped along the parade route and did not slow down even as it hit a schoolgirls' dance troupe and elderly members of the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies, along with families sitting by the side of the road.
Dozens of pieces of footage - intended to capture joyous scenes from the annual event - ended up capturing the carnage instead, revealing the car traveled at least three blocks down the parade route before breaking through barriers and speeding away.
A picture captured later at an unknown location showed what appeared to be the vehicle involved backed on to a driveway with the hood badly dented and bent up. It is unclear how the vehicle came to be there.
Corey Montiho, a Waukesha school district board member, told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that his daughter's dance team - made up of girls aged between nine and 15 - was hit by the SUV.
Milwaukee County DA John Chisolm is soft on bail policies and advocated for lighter requirements in this 2018 tweet
'They were pom-poms and shoes and spilled hot chocolate everywhere.
'I had to go from one crumpled body to the other to find my daughter. My wife and two daughters were almost hit.
'I saw bodies flying. I ran down the parade route to find my girls.
'Addison, my daughter, heard someone yell 'car' and ran away. The girls right next to her were hit.
'I was there. It was little kids and families... evil is real, fight it every chance you get.'
He told The Washington Post that Brooks was 'calm and composed' as he plowed through the crowd.
Others described how a moment of silence as people stood in shock gave way to screams of terror and scenes of chaos as people ran to tend to the wounded.
The incident comes just two days after Kyle Rittenhouse, the accused Kenosha shooter, was acquitted of murder charges in the deaths of two men during the unrest that erupted last year in the wake of a police shooting of a black man. Kenosha is located about 55 miles south of Waukesha.
The aftermath of the attack on Monday morning. There are still items of clothing and blankets in the street in Wekausha, along with circled pieces of debris
Discarded candy on the side of the parade route on Monday morning. Twelve children were among the 40 people who were injured
A family's chairs lie discarded on the side of the parade route on Monday morning
A person walks past a police car blocking Main Street the morning after a car ploughed through a holiday parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin, U.S., November 22, 2021
The aftermath of the rampage on Monday morning. There are still chairs on the sidewalk where families had been watching the parade
Police officers document marked evidence on Main Street the morning after a car plowed through a holiday parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin, U.S., November 22, 2021
Girls waving pompoms and marching in the parade along with people collecting donations are seen on Main Street in Waukesha moment before the car plowed through (left), and again moments afterwards (right)
People tend to victims left lying in the streets of Waukesha in footage filmed by a witness who described seeing mothers and fathers calling for their children in the aftermath of the chaos
Jordan Woynilko, who filmed the video above, described walking out of a pub along the parade route into a scene of despair and desperation as people tried to help those wounded by the speeding driver
Children and the elderly were among those mowed down as the speeding SUV hit crowds of people in Waukesha, Wisconsin
Witnesses said that the paradegoers initially thought that the red SUV was part of the procession. It was only after the vehicle was running over people did they realize that something was wrong
Video posted to social media shows the red Ford SUV speeding by just a few feet away from a young girl who was dancing in the street during the parade in Waukesha on Sunday
Among those killed were members of the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies, who are shown at the parade in December 2019. It's unclear what the condition is of those who are injured
The dancing grannies posted this on Facebook that some members of their group had died
Members of the Waukesha Xtreme Dance Tea were also injured in the incident but it's unclear if any of them died
Reports indicate that the driver plowed through barricades and slammed into a holiday parade, injuring some 20 people, among them elderly women. The driver is also alleged to have fired gunshots
The Rittenhouse acquittal, which stoked division along political and racial lines, prompted local and national authorities to place security forces on high alert.
The head of the fire department said that 11 adults, including a priest, and 12 children were rushed to six different hospitals in the area. They include several elderly women who were part of a 'Dancing Grannies' float and members of a schoolgirls' dance team, according to reports.
The Milwaukee Dancing Grannies posted on its Facebook page that 'members of the group and volunteers were impacted and we are waiting for word on their conditions'.
The group's profile describes them as a 'group of grannies that meet once a week to practise routines for summer and winter parades'.
Chris Germain, co-owner of the Aspire Dance Centre studio, had about 70 people in the parade ranging from the ages of two to 18.
Children's Wisconsin, a pediatric hospital in Milwaukee, said it was treating 15 patients. Aurora Medical Center-Summit, a hospital in Waukesha County, told CNN that it is treating 13 patients.
Three are listed in critical condition, four in serious condition and six in fair condition.
Jordan Woynilko, a Milwaukee man who shared video of the incident's aftermath, said he was stepping out of a pub along the parade route when he walked into a scene of desperation and despair.
'There were moms and dads yelling for their kids, people running around,' he said. 'When I rewatched the video, I could hear people talking, and they were like, 'There's eight people injured down there. We need an ambulance over here.' There's one lady kneeling on the ground crying.'
Brayden Kowalski, a 19-year-old man who grew up in Waukesha, said that he was at the parade with his family when he saw an SUV accelerate through the crowd.
'He's just blowing through people, kind of just dinging a lot of people, bodies flying everywhere,' Kowalski said. 'These people didn't get run over, they got f***ing thrown through the air. Like a lot of people got tossed up into the air.'
Another video shows the speeding SUV narrowly miss a young girl who was dancing in the street as the out-of-control vehicle drove by just feet away. Several witnesses reported seeing small children laying on the ground after they were hit by the runaway SUV.
The White House on Sunday said it was monitoring the situation. President Joe Biden was briefed by aides on the incident, according to a White House official.
'The White House is closely monitoring the situation in Waukesha and our hearts go out to everyone who has been impacted by this terrible incident,' a White House official said.
'We have reached out to state and local officials to offer any support and assistance as needed.'
At around 7:15pm local time, the Waukesha Police Department sent a push alert to cell phones of residents in the area asking them to shelter in place 'within a half-mile radius of the 5 points downtown.'
'We have a person of interest that we are looking into at this time,' Waukesha Police Chief Dan Thompson told reporters. Thompson said that the SUV rammed into the crowd at 4:39pm local time - 39 minutes after the parade started.
The images above show victims lying on the ground after the red Ford SUV plowed through a holiday parade in Waukesha on Sunday
Locals tend to an injured paradegoer in Waukesha, Wisconsin on Sunday night after the horrific incident
A stroller lays abandoned on the street after a vehicle plowed through the annual holiday parade in Waukesha on Sunday
A broken children's stroller lays on W. Main St. in downtown Waukesha after the tragedy on Sunday
Debris and candy canes left from crowds attending a holiday parade lies scattered along the route
Spectators' chairs and children's scooters are seen above at the crime scene in Waukesha on Sunday
A baby carriage and backpack was left completely deserted as people fled the area
The image above shows abandoned spectators' chairs near the scene of the parade
Police and emergency vehicles arrive at the scene where an SUV plowed into a holiday parade in Waukesha on Sunday
Debris litters the street at a crime scene in Waukesha, Wisconsin on Sunday
Law enforcement agencies are seen above near the area where paradegoers were rammed into by a speeding SUV
Police cordon off a roadway as emergency vehicles and crews arrive in Waukesha, Wisconsin on Sunday
A Salvation Army truck is seen above in Waukesha as investigators gathered clues at the scene
'The Waukesha Christmas parade was taking place when a red SUV drove through the barricades westbound heading down Main Street...An officer did discharge his weapon at the suspect vehicle to try to stop the vehicle,' Thompson said.
'No bystanders were injured as a result of the weapon discharge. The officer involved has been with the department for six-and-a-half years.'
The shelter in place order remained in place as police investigated and cleared the scene.
'What took place in Waukesha today is sickening, and I have every confidence that those responsible will be brought to justice,' tweeted the state's top law enforcement officer, Attorney General Josh Kaul.
Witnesses said that the paradegoers initially thought that the red SUV was part of the procession. It was only after the vehicle sped up and began running over people, did they realize that something was wrong.
One entry in the parade, the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies, posted on its Facebook page that 'members of the group and volunteers were impacted and we are waiting for word on their conditions.'
The post asked people to keep the Grannies and anyone else injured in their prayers.
The group's profile describes them as a 'group of grannies that meet once a week to practice routines for summer and winter parades.'
Chris Germain, co-owner of the Aspire Dance Center studio, had about 70 girls in the parade ranging from as young as two being pulled in wagons to age 18.
Germain, whose own three-year-old daughter was in the parade, said he was driving at the head of their entry when he saw a maroon SUV that 'just blazed right past us.'
A police officer came by on foot chasing after, he said. Germain said he jumped out of his own SUV and gathered the girls who were with him.
'There were small children laying all over the road, there were police officers and EMTs doing CPR on multiple members of the parade,' he said.
Pink circles have been sprayed throughout the street and surrounding a baby carriage while the main street is taped off in Waukesha
The image above shows the intersection of Barstow and Main streets in Waukesha on Sunday
A large police presence was seen along the parade route after the tragedy in Waukesha on Sunday night
Locals show their identifications so they can walk to their homes as police cordon off the area while they investigate
Investigators gather evidence at the scene of the horrific tragedy in downtown Waukesha, Wisconsin on Sunday
Authorities place barricades blocking the road while investigators search for clues in Waukesha on Sunday
Local law enforcement officials set up a command post near the crime scene in downtown Waukesha on Sunday
The local police department was receiving assistance from state and federal law enforcement agencies
The Archdiocese of Milwaukee released a statement confirming that parishioners, including children, were among those injured.
The children attend Waukesha Catholic School. The archdiocese said that one of its priests was also among the injured.
'Our prayers are with the people who have been injured and killed during the tragic incident in Waukesha,' Sandra Peterson, communication director for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, said in a statement.
'Among the injured are one of our Catholic priests, as well as multiple parishioners and Waukesha Catholic school children.
'Please join us in prayer for all those involved, their families, and those who are traumatized from witnessing the horrible scene.'
The School District of Waukesha has canceled all schools tomorrow November 22nd, and will make a decision later to potentially close November 23rd.
'As a result of this situation, school will be canceled on Monday, November 22, 2021, for all students in grades 4K - 12,' the school district said in an email Sunday night.
'Additionally, the District will have additional counselors available during the school day at all buildings for all students that may be in need of support services.'
The district added in its statement: 'A decision on school for Tuesday will be determined during the day on Monday.
'Our thoughts are with everyone impacted, with all who witnessed the event, and with our entire community.'
Mayor Shawn Reilly told WITI in Milwaukee that he does not believe there is any current danger to the public.
One video shows the SUV striking what appears to be members of a marching band and several others along the parade route before driving on.
The sound of the marching band heard before the SUV approaches is replaced by screams.
Video circulating on social media shows the red SUV driving at unusually high speed through the downtown Waukesha area.
Chairs are left abandoned after a car plowed through a holiday parade in Waukesha
The street is cordoned off after the horrific incident left several people dead and at least 23 injured on Sunday
Holiday decorations frame a police officer in downtown Waukesha on Sunday
Police officers walk beside debris found along the parade route in Waukesha, Wisconsin on Sunday
A lounge chair and other debris are seen above along the parade route in Waukesha on Sunday
A massive police presence was seen in downtown Waukesha just moments after the horrific incident on Sunday evening
The vehicle sped through the holiday parade even as people participating in the procession waved flags. Dozens of people were injured near the intersection of Main and Barstow streets in downtown Waukesha, according to reports.
Moments after the SUV drives by, screams can be heard in the background. A law enforcement official is then seen giving chase after the SUV.
Angelito Tenorio, a West Allis alderman who is running for Wisconsin state treasurer, told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that he was watching the parade with his family when they saw the SUV come speeding into the area.
'Then we heard a loud bang, and just deafening cries and screams from people who are struck by the vehicle,' Tenorio said.
'And then, and then we saw people running away or stopping crying, and there, there are people on the ground who looked like they'd been hit by the vehicle.'
Tenorio said he saw about 10 people, children and adults, on the ground who appeared to have been hit by the vehicle.
'It just happened so fast,' he said. 'It was pretty horrifying.'
Law enforcement officials are urging locals to avoid the downtown Waukesha area as the investigation is ongoing. Police have also set up a family reunification location at Metro Transit Center near Bank Street.
Video posted on social media shows dozens of emergency vehicles responding to the scene in downtown Waukesha on Sunday night.
'There were lots of families, lots of small children there. A red SUV came running down the street, hitting a lot of people in the parade,' Kaylee Staral, an eyewitness who was at the parade with her mother and stepfather, told CNN.
Staral told The New York Times that she and her family were standing at the curb outside a store when the red SUV sped through in the middle of the parade.
Staral, an intern for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel newspaper, said the SUV plowed into the paradegoers between 20 and 30 minutes after the festivities began.
'There were a lot of screams,' Staral said. 'We thought maybe it was Santa, but it was a red SUV and it hit a lot of people.'
Moments later, Staral said that there were 'multiple people on the ground.' She later clarified that there were some 20 people on the ground.
Staral also said police reported that gunshots were fired, but 'I cannot confirm that for you.'
She said that it wasn't clear if the driver was heard saying anything since he was 'going very fast' and that there was 'a lot of screaming.'
Staral said that while it is unclear if the driver was intentionally trying to mow down people, the car 'was going very fast and it was in the middle of the parade.'
'It's not like they somehow missed that there was a parade happening,' she said.
Staral said that the annual holiday parade was held for the first time in two years. Last year's parade was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Another witness tweeted: 'Right in front of my family, this man drives through the parade hitting as many people as possible while shooting out the window.
'He ran over several elderly women who were dancing in the parade and many others please pray for everyone in Waukesha.'
The witness added: 'Waukesha has some of the nicest families and people in this country.
'This parade is one of the most heartwarming events of the year, this is not the America my little cousins, parents, aunts, uncles, ANYBODY deserves.
'WHAT THE F***.'
Angela O'Boyle lives on the fifth floor of an apartment building that overlooks the parade route.
She told CNN that she was on her balcony watching the procession.
'The next thing I heard were screams and turned my head and saw the car come and plow into the band that was just pass my balcony at that point,' she said.
She added: 'It hit at least two people right away and rolled over them.
'And then continued down the road to People's Park, which is at the end of the block – and then kept going, it didn't stop.'
According to Boyle, people screamed and parents yelled out their children's names.
'It was not something that I wanted to see.'
A television news reporter for Fox6 TV tweeted photos from the scene.
The reporter, Sam Kraemer, tweeted: 'The Waukesha County Sheriff's Office incident command post is on site.
'There are bag chairs and handfuls of candy stranded all along Main Street. Another man told us he heard a handful of shots and ran for cover.
'He was almost hit by the SUV as it pulled through.'
Several people who attended the parade are seen in the aftermath of the incident in Waukesha on Sunday
The official social media account of the City of Waukesha indicates that the parade started at 4pm local time.
The parade route began at the intersection of Main Street and Pleasant Street. It starts westward down Main Street and ends at Wisconsin Avenue.
The parade was livestreamed on the city's Facebook page.
'Kathy and I are praying for Waukesha tonight and all the kids, families, and community members affected by this senseless act,' Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers wrote on Twitter.
'I'm grateful for the first responders and folks who acted quickly to help, and we are in contact with local partners as we await more information.'
The most senior public official in Waukesha County released a statement saying that he was at the event with his wife.
'This is an unspeakable tragedy, affecting us all as we work to overcome an extremely challenging two years and resume our cherished holiday traditions,' Waukesha County Executive Paul Farrow said.
'Keep the families affected in your thoughts as we work to offer whatever support we can.
'I have been in contact with Mayor Reilly and offered any resources the county could provide.
'I have also spoken with the Governor who offers his prayers and assistance. Right now, we are still learning about what happened.
'This is an active investigation, and all updates tonight will come from our law enforcement partners.
'I had just finished participating in the parade with my wife when I noticed police sirens.
'Shortly afterward, I learned that a vehicle drove through the parade route injuring many people.
'Please pray for our community tonight after the horrific events at the Waukesha Christmas Parade.'
Senator Tammy Baldwin, who represents Wisconsin, tweeted: 'The horrific violence at the Waukesha Christmas Parade is just heartbreaking. Please keep the victims in your prayers tonight.'
Police and emergency personnel work on a crime scene in Waukesha, Wisconsin on Sunday
At least one person was killed, according to local reports coming out of Wisconsin on Sunday
Police investigate at the scene of a crash involving multiple people and injuries at a holiday parade
A police officer examines debris near the scene of the incident at the holiday parade in Waukesha on Sunday
The image above shows what appear to be two folding chairs and thermos bottles used by spectators at the parade
Police and emergency personnel work on a crime scene in Waukesha, Wisconsin on Sunday
Investigators gather evidence at the scene of Sunday's horrific incident in Waukesha, Wisconsin
A police officer cordons off a crime scene near the area where a red SUV plowed into a crowd of paradegoers
Police and emergency personnel work on a crime scene in Waukesha, Wisconsin on Sunday
Police officers are seen above near the area where holiday paradegoers were injured when a red SUV rammed into them in Waukesha on Sunday
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