Suspect in fatal Roscoe Village shooting released without charges: police

The 30-year-old security guard was released Monday evening after a fatal encounter on Sunday in the 2300 block of West School Street.

SHARE Suspect in fatal Roscoe Village shooting released without charges: police
A suspect was taken into custody after two teenage boys were fatally shot in South Chicago, officials announced June 24, 2020.

The suspect in a fatal Roscoe Village shooting was released from custody Nov. 4, 2019.

Sun-Times file photo

A security guard has been released without charges after he allegedly told investigators he fired the shots that killed a Wisconsin man over the weekend in Roscoe Village, police say.

The 30-year-old guard was released Monday evening after he turned himself in after a fatal encounter on Sunday in the 2300 block of West School Street, according to Chicago police.

Two men were in fighting at 3:20 a.m. when one of them fired a handgun and struck the other in the abdomen and arm, police said at the time.

The victim, 29-year-old Mario Dingillo, was taken to Illinois Masonic Medical Center and pronounced dead, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office. He lived in Trevor, Wisconsin.

Following the shooting, police said the 30-year-old was taken into custody and that charges were pending.

A autopsy found Dingillo died of multiple gunshot wounds, and his death was ruled a a homicide, the medical examiner’s office said.

A police spokesperson on Tuesday said the investigation is ongoing.

Read more on crime, and track the city’s homicides.

The Latest
Like no superhero movie before it, subversive coming-of-age story reinvents the villain’s origins with a mélange of visual styles and a barrage of gags.
A 66-year-old woman was dragged into the street in the 600 block of North Fairbanks Avenue by two armed robbers who fired shots, police said.
The Sun-Times’ experts pick whom they think the team will take with the No. 9 pick in Thursday night’s draft:
They have abandoned their mom and say relationship won’t resume until she stops ‘taking the money’ from her alcoholic ex.
Twenty-five years later, the gun industry’s greed and elected leaders’ cowardice continue to prevail, the head of the National Urban League writes.