A 8-year-old child, Jackson Sparks, has become the sixth person to have died after an SUV plowed through a Christmas parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin, over the weekend.
The other victims were identified Monday as Wilhelm Hospel, 81, Virginia Sorenson, 79; LeAnna Owen, 71; Tamara Durand, 52 and Jane Kulich, 52.
Darrell Brooks Jr., 39, was charged Tuesday with five counts of first-degree intentional homicide, a charge that carries a mandatory life sentence if convicted. His bail was set at $5 million, and a preliminary hearing was scheduled for Jan. 14. Additional charges related to the Sparks' death and the more than 60 people injured will be coming later this week or next, said Waukesha County District Attorney Susan Opper.
Here are those who lost their lives at the Waukesha Christmas parade attack:
Jackson Sparks
Sparks, 8, was the first of many injured children to have died. He was walking in the parade with his 12-year-old brother Tucker.
"This afternoon, our dear Jackson has sadly succumbed to his injuries and passed away," read a post Tuesday on his GoFundMe page.
The boys – among three sets of siblings hospitalized after being struck by the SUV -- were marching with their baseball team when they were hit.
Tucker has head injuries but is recovering and will be sent home, according to Alyssa Albro, the niece of the boys’ parents, Aaron and Sheri Sparks.
Jackson had suffered a more serious brain injury.
Virginia Sorenson
Sorenson, 79, was the longtime choreographer of the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies group – several members of which are among the deaths.
David Sorenson, her husband of nearly 60 years, told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel about how she loved working with the Grannies.
"What did she like about it? Everything," David Sorenson said. "She liked the instructing. She liked the dancing and the camaraderie of the women. She liked to perform."
The newspaper also reports that the Sorensons had three children and six grandchildren.
Virginia – a registered nurse – also cared for two horses, chickens, dogs and cats at her home in Muskego, it added.
Tamara Durand
Durand, 52, was a mother of three with one grandchild. She babysat her grandson so her daughter could finish nursing school and volunteered at hospitals and hospices.
She was doing her first show with the Grannies on Sunday, her husband, Dave Durand, told the Associated Press.
"She basically danced her way through life," he said of his wife of eight years, a hospice chaplain and former high school and college cheerleader who was "super excited" for her first performance. "She was totally energetic and was her happiest when she was dancing."
Durand spent more than 17 years working as an elementary school teacher at the Beaver Dam Unified School District, northwest of Waukesha, according to the Journal Sentinel.
Jane Kulich
Kulich, 52, worked at Citizens Bank as a teller since last November, according to a LinkedIn profile purportedly belonging to her.
Following the parade attack, Citizens Bank issued a statement to Fox News Digital saying it is "one of many groups directly impacted by the tragedy that unfolded in Waukesha."
"One of our team members who was walking with our parade float was struck and passed away as a result of her injuries," the statement said. "Our condolences go out to her family and friends for this inconceivable loss. Please lift up our team and the entire community as we all grieve."
Her LinkedIn page also states she worked as a caregiver and at a dry cleaning business and restaurant.
Wilhelm Hospel
Hospel, 81, helped the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies with their performances, according to the Associated Press.
His wife, Lola, was another member of the group, the Journal Sentinel reports.
LeAnna Owen
Owen, a 71-year-old resident of Cudahy, was also a member of the Dancing Grannies.
Outside of her participation in the group, the grandmother managed an apartment complex and leaves behind two sons, the Journal Sentinel reports.
"She didn’t have a mean bone in her body. She was the nicest lady," Dave Schmidt, who owns a pair of 32-unit buildings Owen took care of, told the newspaper.
Fox News' Paul Best and The Associated Press contributed to this report.