The Kansas Bureau of Investigation has determined that former Kansas City, Kansas, police detective Roger Golubski's death was a suicide.
Investigators discovered five suicide notes at the Edwardsville home where Golubski had been under house arrest, according to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation.
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter The Kansas Bureau of Investigation has confirmed suicide as the cause of death for a former Kansas City, Kansas police detective who was facing federal charges for sexual assault.
The Kansas Bureau of Investigation released an update Tuesday on the investigation into the death of former Kansas City, Kansas police detective Roger Golubski.
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (KCTV) - Alleged victims of disgraced detective Roger Golubski want more answers after his death investigation closed. The Kansas Bureau of Investigations confirmed Tuesday that Roger Golupski died by suicide on Dec. 2. The day he was supposed to go to federal trial in Topeka.
The Kansas Bureau of Investigation officially concluded suicide was the former detective's cause of death, although it could not say how he obtained a gun. Golubski died the hour his federal trial was set to begin on charges of violating the civil rights of multiple women.
WYANDOTTE COUNTY – The Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) updated details on the investigation into the death of Roger Golubski, 71, of Edwardsville.
The Kansas Bureau of Investigation is looking into an officer-involved shooting that left a suspect with non-life-threatening injuries Friday night.
The Kansas Bureau of Investigation is investigating an incident where a man fired shots at officers during a hostage situation that started Friday evening and ended early Saturday morning in Atchison.
Investigators say a former detective in Kansas left five suicide letters before fatally shooting himself ahead of a trial in which he was accused of sexually assaulting women for decades.
The death of disgraced former, Kansas, Detective Roger Golubski has been ruled a suicide, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation announced Tuesday.
State health officials said that dozens of people in the Kansas City, Kan., area have the disease, which has drawn a federal response.