Dante Salinas, 39, of Gurnee, (inset) was charged in connection with the fatal shooting of Marcellis Stinnette, 19, of Waukegan, who was in the passenger seat of a vehicle that was fleeing police in Waukegan on October 20, 2020. | Screengrab

A former Waukegan police officer has been released from jail on a $350,000 bond after he was charged with the murder of Marcellis Stinnette and attacking a second man in an unrelated incident.

Dante Salinas, 39, of Gurnee, was charged by a grand jury with three counts of second-degree murder, involuntary manslaughter, aggravated battery causing great bodily harm and two counts of official misconduct.

The three counts of second-degree murder and one count of involuntary manslaughter stem from the Stinnette shooting.

The two counts of official misconduct and one count of aggravated battery causing bodily harm stem from a separate case where Salinas allegedly battered Angel Salgado on August 31, 2019.

Prosecutors said in court Thursday that Salinas was on-duty and on patrol when he came across Salgado, who called out to him.

Salinas got out of his squad car and a verbal argument ensued.

Prosecutors said Salinas pointed his firearm and taser at Salgado at separate moments.

Salgado began walking back to his fenced yard when Salinas tackled him and punched him four to five times, prosecutors said. Salgado suffered a broken eye socket.

Salinas was not fired from the Waukegan Police Department until after the Stinnette shooting, which occurred in October 2020. He had been an officer with the department for five years.

Then-Waukegan Police Chief Wayne Walles said Salinas had been fired for “multiple policy and procedure violations.”

Then-Waukegan Mayor Sam Cunningham said that Salinas did not activate his bodycam to properly archive the Stinnette shooting.

Prosecutors briefly detailed the Stinnette shooting during the Thursday court hearing but did not provide any details that had not already been known.

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Editor’s Note: The below video could be considered shocking or disturbing to the viewer. Viewer discretion is advised.

Waukegan resident Tafara Williams, who was 20 at the time, and Stinnette, 19, who also lived in Waukegan, were sitting in a car near Liberty Street and Oak Street in Waukegan in front of Williams’ home around 11:55 p.m. on October 20, 2020.

Bodycam footage showed Waukegan Police Officer James Keating drive up in his squad car next to their vehicle.

“Aren’t you the dude who got into an accident? You got into an accident right? What’s your name?” Keating asked.

Stinnette told the officer his name was “King” and Keating replied, “I thought you were Stinnette?”

The officer walked around to the passenger seat of the car where Stinnette was seated and told him he was under arrest because of a warrant.

Williams, who was seated in the driver’s seat, put the car into gear and sped off, nearly running Keating over, the video showed.

A short time later, a second Waukegan police officer, identified as Salinas, spotted the vehicle as it pulled out of a driveway and drove around the first officer’s car, which had its emergency lights activated.

A brief police pursuit ensued and Williams’ car slid off the road near Helmholz Avenue and Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue.

Salinas jumped out of his car and yelled, “Get out of the fu—– car” as Williams’ car reversed, dashcam video showed.

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Salinas fired approximately six shots into the vehicle, striking both Williams and Stinnette, as it reversed before coming to a stop when it crashed into a building.

Prosecutors said Salinas was standing next to the vehicle before it reversed but was “clear of its path.”

Stinnette was transported by ambulance to Vista Medical Center East in Waukegan where he was pronounced dead.

Marcellis Stinnette, 19, of Waukegan. | Family provided photo

Williams was transported by ambulance to Advocate Condell Medical Center in Libertyville in serious condition.

“These charges come after months of investigation by my team. The Illinois State Police completed the bulk of their work by February 2021. Our office retained a trajectory expert to analyze the Illinois State Police’s investigation and to fully explain the timeline of the incident, the location of Salinas, and the trajectory of his bullets,” Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart said.

Rinehart said a forensic expert traveled to the area after Illinois State Police completed their investigation.

The expert “painstakingly studied the car, the intersection, the video footage, and the bullets themselves,” Rinehart said.

“His work was even more important because Officer Salinas did not turn on his body camera. We received the final report from our expert in July 2022. We presented that matter to the Grand Jury yesterday,” Rinehart said.

Court records show warrants were recently issued for Salinas in Lake County Circuit Court. The warrants carried a bond of $500,000, records show.

Salinas surrendered himself to the Lake County Jail Thursday morning.

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Salinas appeared in court Thursday afternoon before Lake County Judge George Strickland.

Strickland ordered Salinas held on a $350,000 bond. He was released from the Lake County Jail around 6:15 p.m. Thursday after posting $35,000 cash.

Tafara Williams, 22, of Waukegan, was charged this week with fleeing from police on October 20, 2022, in an incident that left her boyfriend fatally shot by an officer.

Salinas pleaded not guilty to all charges in both of his cases.

Williams was charged Wednesday with aggravated fleeing to elude in the October 20, 2020, incident. She appeared in court after Salinas and was given a $50,000 recognizance bond.

Waukegan Mayor Ann Taylor said in a statement that she is pleased the investigation has progressed so the “family can begin the healing process.”

“I want to thank the family and our concerned residents for their patience, cooperation, and understanding throughout this process. Although Mr. Stinnette was killed before I became Mayor, I consider it my responsibility to ensure that all citizens of Waukegan feel safe and protected in their homes, neighborhoods, and the City,” Taylor said.

“That requires creating and cultivating a sense of trust between the residents and the City’s police department. Police Chief Keith Zupec, whom I appointed this past summer to serve as Chief of Police, and I share this goal. Together we are working daily to ensure that incidents like the killing of Marcellis Stinnette are not repeated in the City of Waukegan. Our residents expect that much, and they deserve no less,” she said.

Salinas is scheduled to appear in court again on November 15 for a case management hearing.