Saturday, October 4, 2025

Gunman Sentenced to 60 Years

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Gunman who killed Northwestern grad student Shane Colombo gets 60 years

Judge Hands Down Sentence in Tragic Shooting

A judge Tuesday handed a 60-year prison sentence to the gunman who fired a stray bullet that killed a Northwestern University graduate student who had moved to Chicago only a few hours earlier.

A Life Cut Short

In September 2018, California native Shane Colombo had been set to begin a doctoral program in psychology at the Evanston campus, where he intended to pursue studies that would help with mental health treatment for minorities, the poor and others who suffered negative social stigma, his father, Ariel Colombo, said during a sentencing hearing in front of Judge Thomas Byrne.

A Fateful Trip

Not long after he arrived at O’Hare Airport, Shane Colombo made a trip to buy some odds and ends for the new apartment that he and his fiancée had purchased, anticipating a lengthy doctoral program and perhaps a long future in Chicago. Instead, Shane Colombo, 25, was struck by a bullet fired by Diante Speed, who fired multiple shots as he ran across a busy section of Rogers Park, chasing a man who he said brandished a weapon at him. A jury last month convicted Speed of first-degree murder.

A Family’s Loss

“His life and legacy is greater than my loss. And the loss is greater than any sentence that can be given to [Speed] and bigger than the city of Chicago,” Ariel Colombo said, after summarizing some of his son’s research publications. “My son took the bullet from perhaps the same [person] he was going to save.”

A Complex Case

Speed’s lawyer reminded the judge of an evaluation that noted Speed’s troubled youth as the child of a disabled mother and an abusive father, and who had seen his best friend gunned down while in grade school. Speed was 19 when the Shane Colombo shooting occurred. When asked to speak, Speed stood and faced the Colombo family in the gallery. “Shane Colombo was an incredible person from everything I heard about him,” Speed said. “I would never try to go out and hurt somebody with these kinds of capabilities, that had a family that loves them, that has ties to colleges or community activist groups.”

The Chase

Speed had been walking with two friends in the 7500 block of North Clark Street, just a few blocks from Chicago’s border with Evanston and Shane Colombo’s new apartment. A third man approached Speed and, Speed said, flashed a gun. Speed drew his own gun and chased the man, firing several times; one of the bullets struck Shane Colombo. Surveillance video showed parts of the chase, and Shane Colombo crumpling to the ground, but not Speed actually firing the weapon.

A Legacy Lives On

Surveillance video showed parts of the chase, and Shane Colombo crumpling to the ground, but not Speed actually firing the weapon. The case seized headlines in 2018, but no arrest was made for nearly a year. As the investigation dragged on, Shane Colombo’s mother, Tonya, helped raise a $12,000 reward for tips. Tonya Colombo and her son’s fiancé, Vincent Colores-Chalmers, who both live on the West Coast, attended nearly every significant hearing in the case and have become anti-violence advocates. “Shane dedicated his life to understanding how trauma affects communities,” Colores-Chalmers told the judge, wearing his engagement ring on a chain around his neck. “And this tragedy exemplifies the ripple effects he studied.”

Conclusion

The sentencing of Diante Speed marks the end of a long and difficult journey for the Colombo family. While no sentence can bring back Shane Colombo, the 60-year prison term serves as a reminder of the devastating consequences of senseless violence.

FAQs

* Who was Shane Colombo?
+ Shane Colombo was a 25-year-old graduate student at Northwestern University who was killed in a shooting in 2018.
* Who was Diante Speed?
+ Diante Speed was the gunman who fired the bullet that killed Shane Colombo. He was 19 years old at the time of the shooting.
* What was the sentence handed down to Diante Speed?
+ Diante Speed was sentenced to 60 years in prison for the murder of Shane Colombo.
* What was Shane Colombo’s research focus?
+ Shane Colombo was pursuing a doctoral program in psychology at Northwestern University, with a focus on mental health treatment for minorities, the poor, and others who suffered negative social stigma.

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