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SGT Unit Supply Specialist
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
"During his decades as a police detective in Kansas City, Kansas, Roger Golubski earned a reputation for clearing cases quickly thanks to his network of “confidential informants.”

Many of these informants were Black women. And some of their bodies were later found around the woods, in a part of town then known as the “the Ruins.”

Several of these women were sex workers, ones Golubski was accused of abusing. Their murders were never solved by Golubski’s fellow officers in the Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department during the time he worked there — and still haven’t been.

Questions about Golubski’s connections to these women weren’t just whispered among people who knew the victims. Questions were also raised by attorneys for Lamonte McIntyre, who spent 23 years in prison for a double murder he didn’t commit. McIntyre was convicted on false testimony by two eyewitnesses who said Golubski had threatened them if they didn’t lie.

The litany of murdered women was first raised by Niko Quinn, who knew many of them."...
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