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US Anti-Police Protests and Riots Thread III

For discussion and debate about anything. (Not a roleplay related forum; out-of-character commentary only.)

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Paddy O Fernature
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Founded: Sep 30, 2010
Inoffensive Centrist Democracy

Postby Paddy O Fernature » Fri May 28, 2021 5:57 am

Ifreann wrote:
Paddy O Fernature wrote:
It's California, there would be no fighting against said alien invaders as they would just welcome them in with open arms. :)

Californians are a sensible people who would set about discovering if they can fuck the aliens.


Funny way of saying registering them into the political two party system. :p

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The Greater Ohio Valley
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Civil Rights Lovefest

Postby The Greater Ohio Valley » Fri May 28, 2021 6:11 am

Paddy O Fernature wrote:
Borderlands of Rojava wrote:
It's so if the battle of Los Angeles actually happens, they'll be able to fight off the aliens with cool weapons.


It's California, there would be no fighting against said alien invaders as they would just welcome them in with open arms. :)

Better to have the fanatic egalitarian and xenophile ethics than the fanatic xenophobe and authoritarian ethics ;)
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Ifreann
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Iron Fist Socialists

Postby Ifreann » Fri May 28, 2021 6:17 am

Paddy O Fernature wrote:
Ifreann wrote:Californians are a sensible people who would set about discovering if they can fuck the aliens.


Funny way of saying registering them into the political two party system. :p

That's because I was saying "fuck", not whatever you're talking about.
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Postauthoritarian America
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Ex-Nation

Postby Postauthoritarian America » Fri May 28, 2021 10:33 am

"The violence of American law enforcement degrades the lives of countless people, especially poor Black people, through its peculiar appetite for their death." | "There are but two parties now: traitors and patriots. And I want hereafter to be ranked with the latter and, I trust, the stronger party." -- Ulysses S. Grant, 1861 | "You don't get mulligans in insurrection." | "Today's Republican Party is America's and the world's largest white supremacist organization." | "I didn't vote to overturn an election, and I will not be lectured by people who did about partisanship." -- Rep. Gerry Connolly |"Republicans...have transformed...to a fascist party engaged in a takeover of the United States of America."

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Postauthoritarian America
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Founded: Nov 07, 2020
Ex-Nation

Postby Postauthoritarian America » Fri May 28, 2021 10:37 am

Washington Resistance Army wrote:


I wonder if anything else happened in 2020 that could have reduced crime and would skew the numbers

Hmm


Like people shouting all year about how American cities were going to be burned and looted by mobs because cops were finally being held accountable for their actions? Anything like that? Apparently not in Newark, NJ.
Last edited by Postauthoritarian America on Fri May 28, 2021 10:38 am, edited 1 time in total.
"The violence of American law enforcement degrades the lives of countless people, especially poor Black people, through its peculiar appetite for their death." | "There are but two parties now: traitors and patriots. And I want hereafter to be ranked with the latter and, I trust, the stronger party." -- Ulysses S. Grant, 1861 | "You don't get mulligans in insurrection." | "Today's Republican Party is America's and the world's largest white supremacist organization." | "I didn't vote to overturn an election, and I will not be lectured by people who did about partisanship." -- Rep. Gerry Connolly |"Republicans...have transformed...to a fascist party engaged in a takeover of the United States of America."

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Kowani
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Democratic Socialists

Postby Kowani » Fri May 28, 2021 11:13 am

How the Kansas City Police Department ignored and covered up the rape and murder of Black women by one of its officers for 4 decades

The most disrespected person in America is the black woman.
The most unprotected person in America is the black woman.
The most neglected person in America is the black woman.
—El Hajj Malik El Shabazz

Content Warning: The following article contains graphic details of sexual assault.

What you are about to read is a true story.

This is a story about a law enforcement officer in Kansas City, Kan., who elected officials, private citizens, lawmakers and fellow police officers who have publicly accused of corruption, sexual assault and even murder. But this is not a story about a man. This is not a story about a police officer. This is not a story about Kansas City, a rapist, a serial killer, policing or America. This is a story about us. This story is about the fundamental question of who we are as human beings.

This story is not a secret. For years, I have recounted the details of this story in rooms with the most powerful lawmakers in America. I have personally told it to some of the biggest celebrities in the world and the most influential people in the entertainment industry. I have the telling of it down to a science. And at every turn—even the iteration you are reading at this very moment—the response is always the same:

“But what d0es ___ say about it.”

“But…”

For centuries, white America ignored the way law enforcement officers treated Black people. But then they saw cellphone footage of it, and suddenly, police brutality was un-ignorable. A Black woman created the “Me Too” movement, but no one paid attention until white women started saying it. The war on drugs wasn’t a huge problem. But when white people began using meth, heroin and opiates, we needed a new approach.

The “but” is the thing.

And in this case, the “but” is represented by the most disrespected, unprotected, neglected person in America. For more than 40 years—until his retirement in 2010—Roger Golubski was a police officer in the Quindaro Park neighborhood of Kansas City, Kan. Over the last four years, The Root has interviewed dozens of witnesses, reviewed dozens of court cases and pored over thousands of pages, uncovering one of the widest-ranging examples of state-sponsored terror against Black women this country has ever seen. In those four decades, Golubski has never been formally charged with a crime.

Still, this story is not about him.

This story is about Niko Quinn.

Niko Quinn sees things.

On April 15, 1994, 21-year-old Doniel Quinn and 34-year-old Donald Ewing were shot and killed as they sat in a car in the Quindaro Park neighborhood of Kansas City. The killer reportedly fled the scene in a getaway vehicle before authorities arrived. Ruby Mitchell, Stacy Quinn (Niko’s sister) and Niko caught glimpses of the murderers who killed Niko’s cousin Doniel.

Roger Golubski, the lead homicide investigator for the Kansas City Police Department, immediately zeroed in on a suspect. Within hours, he convinced Mitchell to identify 17-year-old Lamonte McIntyre in photo lineups, even though McIntyre was at home at the time of the double homicide.

As we reported in 2018, the district attorney who prosecuted the case, Terra Morehead, was allegedly involved in a secret romantic relationship with Kansas District Judge J. Dexter Burdette, who heard the case. By the time McIntyre went to trial in 1994, Golubski and Morehead had coerced Niko Quinn into testifying against McIntyre as the prosecution’s star witness.

During phone, text and in-person interviews with The Root, Niko described meetings with Golubski and Morehead as a series of traumatic events meant to force her into blaming McIntyre for a murder he didn’t commit.

“Golubski, two detectives and Terra Morehead showed up at my door,” Niko told The Root. “I wasn’t home. But they told my aunt and my cousin who was living with me at the time to tell me that I need to get in touch with her. And if I did not contact her ‘sooner than later,’ she was gonna take my kids from me, and I’ll never see my kids again...That was the first threat she made.

Photo: Darrin Dressler
“So I go up there, and Terra Morehead pulls out all the pictures of the crime scene,” Niko says. “She showed me little Don’s and Donny’s pictures, she was like: ‘Don’t you want somebody to be charged with this?’ Mike, she showed me that picture of my cousin and his whole face was gone. I was there. I saw my cousin get his head blew off. I didn’t need to see that. She made me look at the pictures, and she was asking if I wanted somebody to be accountable for it. She told me, ‘Lamonte this...Lamonte that...We have evidence that he did it.”

Still, Niko wasn’t convinced, even when Golubski reportedly promised financial compensation and to help her find new housing—a detail that was never disclosed in Lamonte’s trial. Aside from Morehead and Golubski, Ruby had already told her that they recognized the shooter as a guy named “Lamonte.” Niko also had no idea that Golubski had specifically chosen photos of McIntyre that made him resemble the guy her sister and neighbor knew as Lamonte. Still, at every turn, according to affidavits and court filings, Niko told the prosecutor and detective that she didn’t think Lamonte McIntyre was the shooter.

Niko says Morehead and Golubski assured her that she had correctly fingered her cousin’s killer. Months later, at Lamonte’s pre-trial hearing, Niko says she sat up in a conference room at the courthouse with Golubski, preparing to testify. Nervous and unsure, she would later describe the first time she began to suspect that the homicide detective might not be on the up-and-up.

“We were all sitting in this waiting room when Golubski said that he wanted to see me dance on a table for him,” Niko recalled. “And he tells me how he could make my life a lot easier. I’m just laughing at him, you know? He keeps saying that he wants me to strip for him. When I told my sister what he said, she tells me, while he’s sitting right there: ‘Don’t mess with him. He’s the Devil.’”


Asked how old she was at the time, Niko paused before remembering her exact age.

“I was 20,” she says.

“When I saw him [McIntyre] at the preliminary hearing, I was like: ‘Nah, that ain’t him; his ears are too big,’” Niko explained.

During a recess, Niko says Morehead confronted her about her hesitancy to finger Lamonte. “This is what she told me. She said: ‘If your Black ass don’t do what I told you to do, I’m going to throw your Black ass in jail right now. You’ll never see your kids again. And I’ll make sure of it.’ That’s what she told me.” (Morehead did not respond to The Root for comment.)

At Lamonte’s trial, Niko again told Morehead that she was not sure Lamonte was the killer. After Morehead gave opening statements, Niko informed Morehead again that Lamonte was taller and had different facial features than the man who killed her cousin. After the recess, Morehead called her first witness to the stand. But instead of directly asking Niko who she saw, she asked Niko about who she identified to Golubski.

The following exchange is directly from Lamonte’s trial transcript.
Morehead: When—when you were in court a couple months ago at the preliminary hearing—do you remember testifying at that preliminary hearing?

Niko: Yes.

Morehead: Did you identify an individual at the preliminary hearing as being the shooter of April 15, 1994

Niko: Yes.

Morehead: And who did you identify in court two months ago, Miss Quinn.

Niko: That’s him right there.

Morehead: Judge, for the record, she’s identified the defendant, Lamonte McIntyre.

After Lamonte’s defense attorney cross-examined Niko, Morehead asked Niko a final question: “Miss Quinn, is there any doubt in your mind that Lamonte McIntyre sitting here is the man you saw shoot into that car on April 15?”

“I sat there and looked at her,” Niko told The Root. “I thought about my kids. I thought about Golubski and what my sister said about him. Lamonte was shaking his head like ‘I didn’t do it! I didn’t do it!’ And I sat there and looked at [Morehead]. She gave me this look like ‘You better say it.’

So Niko said it.

Nikki Richardson, left, and Niko Quinn at a Justice for Wyandotte Vigil in Kansas City, Kan.
Photo: Darrin Dressler
“After I did my testimony, I walked out, and I walked outside in the hallway,” Niko recalled during a phone interview. “My cousin asked me what was wrong. And I told them that Lamonte wasn’t the guy...

“Then I walked home and tried to kill myself.”

Immediately after the failed suicide attempt, days after Lamonte’s conviction, Niko recanted her testimony and vowed to make it right.

She told everyone within earshot that Lamonte wasn’t guilty. She wrote Oprah and Montel. She reached out to Lamonte’s mother, Rose Lee McIntyre, and apologized but Rose didn’t react how Niko expected. Niko eventually discovered why Rose didn’t seem surprised by the revelation. She realized why Golubski might have targeted Lamonte.

This story is about Rose Lee McIntyre.

In the late 1980s, Golubski briefly detained Rose and her boyfriend during a traffic stop, according to a federal civil rights lawsuit obtained by The Root. During the stop, the officer told Rose that he would arrest her and her boyfriend unless she promised sexual favors. Having never been arrested before, Rose agreed to meet Golubski at the precinct later. When she showed up at the Kansas City Police Department the next night, the officers in the police station seemed to know why she was there and ushered her to Roger Golubski’s office, where he sexually assaulted Rose.

“During the ensuing sexual assault, a KCKPD officer opened Golubski’s office door, saw what was happening, and left without saying anything,” reads the federal lawsuit against Golubski, Morehead, the Wyandotte County Unified Government and others filed by Lamonte and Rose McIntyre in October 2018. The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court of Kansas, alleges: “Although Golubski assaulted Rose in a station full of police officers, nobody intervened. After Golubski assaulted Rose, he harassed her for weeks, calling her two or three times a day. He told her that he wanted a long-term relationship and promised to pay her for sex.”

When confronted with the allegations, Golubski invoked his Fifth Amendment rights. The case remains pending and is slated for trial. A trial date has not been set.

Following that night, Rose alleges Golubski harassed her until she had to find a new place to live and change her phone number. Golubski eventually gave up stalking her, she alleges. But Rose’s worries were not behind her.

“By moving, Rose thought that she had permanently escaped Golubski and prevented him from ever harming her or her family again,” the lawsuit continues. “She was wrong. Several years later, Golubski orchestrated the wrongful conviction of her son Lamonte.”

As alleged in the civil rights lawsuit, “defendants’ fabrications and suppression of exculpatory evidence caused Lamonte’s conviction.” Rose further alleges that the jury never heard that the key witnesses were coerced. They never knew that Niko Quinn was living in an apartment provided by the lead investigator. They didn’t know that Morehead had a previous romantic relationship with the judge. They had no idea that the statements from Rose McIntyre were allegedly fabricated. Most of all, the jury never knew that Ruby Mitchell initially fingered an entirely different man named Lamont.

On January 6, 1995, Judge J. Dexter Burdette sentenced Lamonte to two consecutive life sentences for the murders of Doniel Quinn and Donald Ewing.

Morehead left the Wyandotte County District Attorney’s Office and joined the Justice Department as a U.S. attorney for the District of Kansas. Judge Burdette retired in September 2018 after serving more than 30 years on the bench for Kansas’s 29th Judicial Circuit.

In June 2016, a Kansas City drug kingpin named Cecil Brooks signed an affidavit stating that Neil “Monster” Edgar Jr., a drug dealer currently serving a 33-year-prison sentence for drugs and murder, “got paid to do the murder….the guy [Lamonte] who got convicted for these murders had nothing to do with it. None of us had ever heard of him.” In October 2017, Lamonte was released from prison after Wyandotte County District Attorney Mark Dupree labeled the case a “manifest injustice” and dropped all the charges against him. In all, Lamonte spent more than 23 years in prison for two murders he didn’t commit.

But this story is not about Lamonte McIntyre.

“You’re here for that thing about the Golubski Girls?” asked Fred, a stoutly built, gruff 47-year-old who was sipping on a super-sized soda. “Of course I know about it. Everybody knows about the Golubski Girls. Yeah, they’re right down there.”

I had not planned on speaking with Fred or his crew. I happened upon them during my visit to Kansas City, while walking to the last stop for a vigil organized by Justice for Wyandotte, a Black-woman-led group whose goal is to shed light on the injustices in the area.

According to investigators, media reports and court documents, “Golubski’s Girls” was the moniker designated to a loose network of informants, sex workers and people struggling with substance use disorder who were coerced—through threats, blackmail and intimidation—into sexual relationships with Detective Golubski.

Niko offered to take me on a tour of the Quindaro Park neighborhood, but, having covered this story for more than three years, I declined. I had planned on moving to Kansas City to dig deeper into the cesspool before the COVID-19 pandemic put the entire country in solitary confinement. Finally arriving in the area, I wanted to walk the streets that I have been preternaturally obsessed with from afar.

Quindaro Park is not just a neighborhood; it is an actual city park. Obscured from the street by a towering mound and tucked in a quiet community, one would never know the park or the neighborhood was part of the 31st-largest metropolitan area in America. It is almost rural in its Midwestern ordinariness, but not country. As I meandered from block to block on the “Kansas side” of the K.C., no one stopped me to ask questions. A little girl waved from the backseat as her young parents sat in a car chatting. I replied; they didn’t. Everyone seemed to mind their own business. Seeing the suburb on my own helped me understand the story even better.

It was a perfect place to dump dead bodies.

On April 15, Justice for Wyandotte held a vigil and procession to the sites where Quindaro Park and the surrounding area have coughed up the corpses of at least a dozen Black women, including:

Rose Calvin: Calvin was found strangled on July 21, 1996, in a Kansas City vacant lot. Lead Detective Roger Golubski refused to allow the family to view the body.
Pearl Barnes: Barnes’ body was found in a vacant house on Nov. 22, 1996. She was stabbed to death.
Rhonda Tribue: The body of the 34-year-old mother of six was found on a rural road outside of Kansas City in 1998. She was last seen at the Firelight Lounge and the area of 7th Street and Quindaro Blvd.
Monique Allen: Allen, 26, died after she was found stabbed in January 1998.
Sandra Glover: Glover’s body was discovered in an alley near Quindaro Park in March 1997. She was shot several times.
Eliza Michie: On Feb. 3, 2004, 30-year-old Michie was found shot to death in Kansas
Vicki Hollinshed-Dew: In June 2000, the 34-year-old was found outside “a residence known to law enforcement as a drug house” with 50 stab wounds, cuts and incisions. Before her carotid artery was slit, neighbors heard someone yell “stop.”
Iashia King and Stacey Wilson: King, 20, and Wilson, 24, were found unconscious, shot multiple times. Wilson had recently witnessed a double-homicide that Golubski investigated.
The names of most of the women have been forgotten and many only received small blurbs in local newspapers at the time of their deaths. But according to our sources, there may be at least six more. According to the Kansas City Star and 12 sources who spoke to The Root, each of these unsolved murders are connected in some way to the king of the Kansas City Police Department’s detective unit, Roger Golubski.

Golubski and his attorneys have declined to comment on the murders when contacted by The Root. He has made no public comments on the deaths, in part because no one has ever formally charged him with a crime. On Nov. 19, 2020, during a videotaped deposition for the McIntyres’ civil rights lawsuit obtained by The Root. Golubski invoked his Fifth Amendment rights 559 times. He told civil rights attorney Emma Freudenberger that he trained for four years to become a Catholic priest. He acknowledged that he carried a prayer book in his police vehicle but pleaded the fifth when asked if he had ever “forcibly raped a minor in his police vehicle.” He invoked his rights against self-incrimination when asked if he fabricated the positive identification of Lamonte McIntyre. He did it again when asked if “fabricating false witness statements to close cases was routine in the Kansas City, Kansas Police Department in the 1980s and 1990s.”

The questioning continued:

Freudenberger: In the crimes against persons unit you had to work closely with narcotics detectives, given the amount of drug trafficking on the streets of Kansas City, Kansas in the 1990's, correct?.

Golubski: On the advice of my attorney, I invoke my Fifth Amendment Constitutional Rights.

Freudenberger: And you had developed a vast network of people on the streets in Kansas City, Kansas who gave you information, correct?

Golubski: On the advice of my attorney, I invoke my Fifth Amendment Constitutional Rights.

Freudenberger: Many of them were women, correct?

Golubski: On the advice of my attorney, I invoke my Fifth Amendment Constitutional Rights.

Freudenberger: You understand we are accusing you of raping women and coercing women into giving false testimony, some of the grossest acts of corruption a police officer can commit, right? You understand that as you sit here today? This isn’t the first you are hearing of this?

Golubski: On the advice of my attorney, I invoke my Fifth Amendment Constitutional Rights.
It was the first and last time Golubski would make an on-the-record statement about the litany of accusations leveled against him.

However, in numerous interviews over the past two years, former coworkers, alleged victims and other Kansas City residents laid out a pattern of behavior that includes murder, sexual assault and involvement in drugs. And in affidavits obtained by The Root, witnesses not only point to Golubski but the entire Kansas City Police Department, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation and the FBI. In a 2016 affidavit for the McIntyre appeal, a former KCKPD officer said Golubski was “untouchable” and was promoted because of his connections.

In another 2015 affidavit for Lamonte’s appeal, a former FBI agent who investigated numerous Kansas City police officers, including Golubski, said Golubski “used the authority of his position to extort sexual favors from Black females. These women complied with his demands because they knew they would be arrested if they said no. Some of these women were prostitutes, and most were drug-addicted. The women knew that unless they provided what Golubski wanted that he could arrest them and have them held in the jail. The women were powerless, and Golubski exploited them.”

Court documents from the civil rights case and the Lamonte McIntyre appeal accuse Golubski and the KCKPD of “shaking down” drug dealers; “swagging”–or stealing illegal drugs “during the execution of a search warrant”; accepting bribes “from persons involved in criminal activity”; and “taking drugs for personal use or to provide to informants.”

“In addition to sex, Golubski used these women as informants to help him clear cases,” reads a judge’s order describing the complaints against Golubski. “Known by other KCKPD officers as ‘Golubski’s girls,’ the women would provide critical evidence which resulted in convictions in many of Golubski’s investigations – evidence which the officers knew was unreliable because it was the product of coercive relationships. Golubski also worked closely with drug kingpins in Kansas City, Kansas. In exchange for money or drugs, Golubski fixed investigations, including framing innocent people for crimes that the drug gangs had committed. Despite this being common knowledge, the KCKPD never reprimanded him. In fact, before he retired, the KCKPD promoted Golubski to captain.”

“The department never ignored what people said about Golubski,” one former KCKPD officer told The Root. “They encouraged it! They saw it as ‘This man had all the informants and knew everything that was going on in [the Quindaro Park neighborhood]. They didn’t care how he was doing it, but we all knew how he did it. It was like: ‘You need to know what so-and-so was up to; you just asked [Golubski] if he was fucking someone close to so-and-so.”

“Detective Golubski would pull them over, take cash from the man and get sex from the woman,” recalled a different affiant in McIntyre’s appeal. “Golubski’s badge gave him leverage over people to get what he wanted.”

In 2015, Ruby Ellington, whose 25-year career with KCKPD was concurrent with Golubski’s time at the department, said in a sworn statement that Golubski was “obsessed with prostitutes, specifically Black female prostitutes who were typically drug-addicted as well as poor and powerless.”

But one specific witness doesn’t need affidavits or anonymous sources.

Niko Quinn saw it with her own eyes.

“The reason why I got involved with it was because I was the last one to see Rhonda [Tribue] alive and Monique [Allen] alive and Liza [Michie] alive,” Niko recounted in an interview with The Root. “Golubski was the last one I know of that Rhonda and Monique got in the car with. I’m not sure if it was him who Liza left with. But it was a detective car.”

In October 1998, Niko had just loaned Rhonda Tribue a pair of jeans after putting finger waves in Tribue’s hair. According to Niko, the two women were sitting on the porch when they spotted Golubski’s car easing past her home. Seconds after Tribue left to meet a “friend” who was coming to pick her up, Niko received a call from someone asking to speak to Rhonda.

“I ran to catch her, but she was gone,” Niko said. “But when Gobluski’s car came around that bend, she was in the car with him.”

The next day, Tribue’s body was found on a road outside of Edwardsville, Kan., beaten to death from blunt force trauma. Liza Michie left Niko’s house in an unmarked car that Niko had seen Golubski drive—but she can’t say that it was definitely Golubski who picked Michie up. The next day, Michie was found dead. Monique Allen’s last day was eerily similar.

“She walked out of my front door, down the street and he picked her up,” said Niko. “That’s when he drove that blue Crown Vic. And I know it was him because she had his card and called him from my house.”

Because she lived across the street from a popular neighborhood bar, Niko had personal relationships with several of the women who would later end up mysteriously murdered. While sitting in Niko’s living room, many of the women would warn her about the notorious detective. But Niko had a mutual relationship that provided insight into Golubski’s dealings.

Niko’s older sister was also one of Golubski’s Girls.

Before her brutal murder in January 2000, 31-year-old Stacy Quinn was intimately familiar with Golubski, according to Niko. Stacy’s killer was caught and convicted, but according to Niko and the McIntyres’ suit, Golubski nor his fellow officers ever revealed that Golubski was in a “longtime sexual relationship with eyewitness Stacy Quinn.” Niko says she listened to her sister and the other women, despite their struggles with substance use disorder, when they repeatedly warned her about the notorious officer.

“I understood them because of my sister being out there,” Niko explained. “It was just a sickness that they had, and [they] got caught up in the wrong thing. I would sit there and talk to these women. And they were saying that this man is literally the devil. He’s the grim reaper. Don’t trust him.

“And one of the young ladies that I talked to—when we were talking about him—if you could see this woman’s eyes, Mike, it was like, she had just seen death in the face. And she told me that he started stopping her at 16. He would show up at our house and bring her food. She would call him, and he would bring food to her. And some women liked him because he paid good.”

I asked Niko if she was ever concerned for her own safety. She replied she always assumed Golubski harassed her because he wanted sex. “What do you mean?” I asked. “You spoke to Golubski after Lamonte McIntyre went to prison?”


“Oh Mike,” she sighed. “That man stalked me for 10 years.”

Perhaps the most frequent reaction I encounter about the Golubski story is: “But why isn’t he in jail?”

That the most powerful white people simply chose not to care about rape, corruption and dead bodies popping up everywhere is a disconcerting thought for most people. For me, their naive astonishment is the most astonishing part. It is stunning how many people can’t believe a thing like this can happen, even knowing that things like this have always happened. According to one report, police sexually assault at least 100 women every year. The most likely reason Golubski was never arrested is also the most unsettling:

Because his victims were Black women.

To understand how the most powerful people in Kansas City overlooked Roger Golubski’s alleged crimes, one only needs to read one woman’s relationship with the notorious Kansas City detective.

This story is about Jane Doe.

The Root obtained a transcript of a deposition with Jane Doe, who describes, in excruciating detail, multiple sexual assaults after the KCKPD served a search warrant on her home. In a Nov. 2020 deposition from the civil rights case, the woman recounts how Golubski ogled her 14-year old daughter the night of the search warrant. How he forced Jane Doe to have sex. How he returned about “once a week or once every two weeks” to sexually assault her. How she said, she considered biting Golubski’s sexual parts when he forced her to perform oral sex. How he told her that he would shoot her in the head if she did. How she eventually had a heart attack. But the most revealing part of this sworn deposition is how the woman recalls the aura of fear and intimidation.

Freudenberger: Did you let him know that you didn’t want this?

Jane Doe: Yes.

Freudenberger: How did you communicate that?

Jane Doe: I asked him to stop doing it, why are you keeping doing this.

Freudenberger: What did he say?

Jane Doe: He always just said, I can be a good friend of yours, I’m going to help you with your sons. He always said, each time he say he going to talk to the D.A,, [Jerome] Gorman.

Freudenberger: Were you ever fearful of what would happen if you didn’t cooperate?

Jane Doe: Yes. I thought he would do something to me.
Freudenberger: Did you ever complain to anyone?

Jane Doe: No. Who was I going to complain to?

Freudenberger: Did you ever tell Detective Golubski that you were thinking about complaining?

Jane Doe: Yes.

Freudenberger: Do you remember what he said?

Jane Doe: He told me he can have somebody do something to me and that they would never find me.

When asked if she told anyone about the abuse, the woman says she told her then-boyfriend and another KCKPD police officer, who never took steps to help her file a complaint. Twenty years later, while seeking legal help for her still-incarcerated sons, an attorney asked if Golubski had ever come on to her.

“And I said yes,” Jane Doe recounted during the deposition. “I didn’t use the word ‘rape,’ but I said he just took — I said this motherfucker came in my house and just took him some pussy and left.”

As with Rose Lee McIntyre and others, District Attorney Jerome Gorman never formally investigated the numerous allegations against Golubski. Luckily, the woman no longer had to worry about Gorman retaliating. In January 2018, the Topeka Capital-Journal reported that former District Attorney Jerome Gorman had been ousted from his position at the Kansas Department of Revenue. For months, Marc McCune, the Kansas Department of Revenue’s special agent in charge, told his superiors about Gorman’s sexual harassment and outright racism. “McCune shared with superiors in the revenue department both personal observations of Gorman and first-person accounts from other employees,” the Capital-Journal reported. “McCune also sent a memorandum outlining concerns about Gorman to the Department of Administration.”

For his efforts, McCune was fired.

But another curious part of the Jane Doe transcript may elucidate why Golubski was never charged with a crime. Her son’s cases were investigated by Golubski and another detective she only refers to as “Zeigler.”

In March 2019, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation revealed that Kansas City’s chief of police was the target of a criminal corruption probe. Three months later, the chief announced his retirement after 29 years with the KCKPD.

His name is Terry Ziegler.

Everybody Knows the Devil
“For years, there were credible allegations against KCK Police Detective Roger Golubski for extorting sex from black women in the community,” said former Mayor Mark Holland in a Facebook post. “Through his dubious testimony, Wyandotte County sent Lamonte McIntyre, a 17-year-old boy, to prison for 25 years for a crime he did not commit—paid for with taxpayer funds. The Gorman/Bryant DA’s office ignored the allegations, refusing to investigate for seven years. It was not until District Attorney Dupree was in office that the McIntyre case was investigated, and he was exonerated and freed.”

“[Golubski] was seen as this high-level person who could assist the police department,” said current Wyandotte County District Attorney Mark Dupree. “Quite frankly, I think history has shown that that was an absolute misunderstanding or clearly a perverted one.”

By the time Dupree was swept into office on a campaign of reform and change in 2017, Golubski had retired from the KCKPD with a full pension. After looking into McIntyre’s case, Dupree requested that the Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) open an investigation into Golubski. According to the Kansas City Star, the KBI began reviewing 6,000 pages of records and found…Well, no one knows. No report was ever released. It just died and went away.

In 2010, after working for the department for 35 years, Golubski went to work in nearby Edwardsville, where Tribue’s body had been found years earlier. Just before Lamonte was set to be released from prison, Golubski retired from the force, never having been charged with a crime.

“Per the City of Edwardsville Police Department policy, police department employees are not authorized to comment regarding any law enforcement incidents which did not occur within our jurisdiction,” said the Edwardsville Police Department in a statement about the civil rights complaint filed against Golubski. “We recognize the serious nature of these allegations, should they be true. Thus, we want to reassure Edwardsville citizens of our unwavering dedication to protecting the rights of all people and believe all people deserve impartial and effective service from our members. Moreover, we are committed to obedience of the law and demonstrating respect for the human dignity of all people in everything we do.”

But Edwardsville and the Kansas City Police Department have known about some of Golubski’s alleged misdeeds for more than 40 years. In May 1978, witnesses testified that Golubski hit 41-year-old Kenneth Borg with a nightstick during a call about a civil disturbance. Borg died in police custody from what an inquest called a “blow to the abdomen from a blunt object.” Golubski was later cleared when officers testified that Golubski hit Borg in the chest, not the abdomen.

In 1998, capital murder charges were dropped against Gentry Bolton when defense attorneys revealed that Golubski forced an eyewitness to falsely pin a convenience store murder on Bolton. According to a court filing from McIntyre’s attorneys, “Golubski coerced Irene Bradley to name Bolton as the customer’s killer by holding her in custody and refusing to let her leave until she made the false identification. Months later, an eyewitness told Golubski that Bolton was not the shooter, but Golubski suppressed the exculpatory statement from the prosecution and Bolton’s defense attorney. It came out only after the trial court ordered production of complete copies of the police file based on obvious Brady violations.”

“I knew that Roger seemed to like African Americans,” said the second of Golubski’s three wives in a sworn affidavit. “When I asked him one day why he was attracted to Black women, he replied: ‘Because they’re uneducated.’ I was stunned and very angry. I dealt with my hurt feelings by running up some big credit card bills.”

She later testified that Golubski paid someone to break into her house. When she called the authorities, the KCKPD sent its lead detective, Golubski, to investigate. In a sworn statement, she recalled an eerily familiar pattern, explaining:

“He stalked me for 10 years.”

This Neverending Story
This story is about Khadijah Hardaway.

While leading protests in the aftermath of George Floyd’s death, Hardaway began organizing a quest for justice in her own community. After discovering the rampant corruption in Wyandotte County, Hardaway and members of Justice for Wyandotte decided they wanted to go after the biggest fish of all.

“This man is worse than Derek Chauvin,” Hardaway told The Root, referring to Golubski. “And we don’t know how many Lamonte McIntyres are behind bars.”

Hardaway eventually quit her job to pursue this cause full-time. She helped forge a relationship with Broadway Church, a local congregation that wanted to do something substantial in the social justice arena. The Sister Circle and Justice for Wyandotte have reached out to victims of Golubski and other community members whose lives have been ruined by the criminal justice system in Wyandotte County.

In 2020, Hardaway and other activists convinced 27 Kansas legislators and 16 social justice organizations to sign a letter requesting a real KBI investigation. The bureau responded by turning the investigation over to the FBI, stating that it “found no evidence of any violation of Kansas law that is within the statute of limitations. However, during the course of our investigation, information related to possible federal violations was shared with federal authorities for their consideration and possible action.” The Federal Bureau of Investigation has confirmed its investigation.

On March 3, 2020, U.S. District Judge Kathryn Vratil denied the protection of qualified immunity to Golubski, the Wyandotte County Unified Government and Kansas City, paving the way for the Lamonte and Rose McIntyre’s civil rights suit.

But Justice for Wyandotte is not done.

They are currently working to free John Keith Calvin, who is in the 20th year of a life sentence for a murder he says he didn’t commit. Another man has confessed to the killing. “I feel bad,” said Melvin White. “I should be doing the time, not him. I’m the one who pulled the trigger. He didn’t know anything about it.” There are numerous connections to Lamonte McIntyre’s case; he and Calvin were incarcerated together, and McIntyre even cut Calvin’s hair in prison. Calvin’s sister, Rose, was found strangled on July 21, 1996.

She was one of Golubski’s Girls.

Justice for Wyandotte has demanded Calvin’s release, as well as for prosecutors to indict Golubski and review every case in which Golubski or Morehead was involved. Mark Dupree has opened a Conviction Integrity Unit in Wyandotte County but notes that he doesn’t have the manpower or the resources to review every case Golubski handled. Now called the “Community Integrity Unit,” recent charges of racism and discrimination left the commission with no members.

Everyone in Kansas City who could have stopped Golubski has been charged with misconduct. Jerome Gorman, the prosecutor, was ousted for sexual misconduct and racism. When the KBI finished their investigation of Terry Ziegler, Golubski’s former partner who became police chief, they forwarded the results to the Wyandotte County District Attorney’s Office, who has not filed charges...yet. In March, the U.S. Department of Justice removed Morehead from criminal cases after she was accused of multiple instances of prosecutorial misconduct. On May 10, U.S. District Judge Jay Crabtree accused Morehead of misconduct again, saying she hid evidence in a federal drug and counterfeiting case.

But this story is not about Zeigler, Morehead, Golubski or justice or Wyandotte County.

This story is about the most disrespected, unprotected, neglected person in America. But...

It is mostly about us.
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Borderlands of Rojava
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Ex-Nation

Postby Borderlands of Rojava » Fri May 28, 2021 11:20 am

Kowani wrote:How the Kansas City Police Department ignored and covered up the rape and murder of Black women by one of its officers for 4 decades

The most disrespected person in America is the black woman.
The most unprotected person in America is the black woman.
The most neglected person in America is the black woman.
—El Hajj Malik El Shabazz

Content Warning: The following article contains graphic details of sexual assault.

What you are about to read is a true story.

This is a story about a law enforcement officer in Kansas City, Kan., who elected officials, private citizens, lawmakers and fellow police officers who have publicly accused of corruption, sexual assault and even murder. But this is not a story about a man. This is not a story about a police officer. This is not a story about Kansas City, a rapist, a serial killer, policing or America. This is a story about us. This story is about the fundamental question of who we are as human beings.

This story is not a secret. For years, I have recounted the details of this story in rooms with the most powerful lawmakers in America. I have personally told it to some of the biggest celebrities in the world and the most influential people in the entertainment industry. I have the telling of it down to a science. And at every turn—even the iteration you are reading at this very moment—the response is always the same:

“But what d0es ___ say about it.”

“But…”

For centuries, white America ignored the way law enforcement officers treated Black people. But then they saw cellphone footage of it, and suddenly, police brutality was un-ignorable. A Black woman created the “Me Too” movement, but no one paid attention until white women started saying it. The war on drugs wasn’t a huge problem. But when white people began using meth, heroin and opiates, we needed a new approach.

The “but” is the thing.

And in this case, the “but” is represented by the most disrespected, unprotected, neglected person in America. For more than 40 years—until his retirement in 2010—Roger Golubski was a police officer in the Quindaro Park neighborhood of Kansas City, Kan. Over the last four years, The Root has interviewed dozens of witnesses, reviewed dozens of court cases and pored over thousands of pages, uncovering one of the widest-ranging examples of state-sponsored terror against Black women this country has ever seen. In those four decades, Golubski has never been formally charged with a crime.

Still, this story is not about him.

This story is about Niko Quinn.

Niko Quinn sees things.

On April 15, 1994, 21-year-old Doniel Quinn and 34-year-old Donald Ewing were shot and killed as they sat in a car in the Quindaro Park neighborhood of Kansas City. The killer reportedly fled the scene in a getaway vehicle before authorities arrived. Ruby Mitchell, Stacy Quinn (Niko’s sister) and Niko caught glimpses of the murderers who killed Niko’s cousin Doniel.

Roger Golubski, the lead homicide investigator for the Kansas City Police Department, immediately zeroed in on a suspect. Within hours, he convinced Mitchell to identify 17-year-old Lamonte McIntyre in photo lineups, even though McIntyre was at home at the time of the double homicide.

As we reported in 2018, the district attorney who prosecuted the case, Terra Morehead, was allegedly involved in a secret romantic relationship with Kansas District Judge J. Dexter Burdette, who heard the case. By the time McIntyre went to trial in 1994, Golubski and Morehead had coerced Niko Quinn into testifying against McIntyre as the prosecution’s star witness.

During phone, text and in-person interviews with The Root, Niko described meetings with Golubski and Morehead as a series of traumatic events meant to force her into blaming McIntyre for a murder he didn’t commit.

“Golubski, two detectives and Terra Morehead showed up at my door,” Niko told The Root. “I wasn’t home. But they told my aunt and my cousin who was living with me at the time to tell me that I need to get in touch with her. And if I did not contact her ‘sooner than later,’ she was gonna take my kids from me, and I’ll never see my kids again...That was the first threat she made.

Photo: Darrin Dressler
“So I go up there, and Terra Morehead pulls out all the pictures of the crime scene,” Niko says. “She showed me little Don’s and Donny’s pictures, she was like: ‘Don’t you want somebody to be charged with this?’ Mike, she showed me that picture of my cousin and his whole face was gone. I was there. I saw my cousin get his head blew off. I didn’t need to see that. She made me look at the pictures, and she was asking if I wanted somebody to be accountable for it. She told me, ‘Lamonte this...Lamonte that...We have evidence that he did it.”

Still, Niko wasn’t convinced, even when Golubski reportedly promised financial compensation and to help her find new housing—a detail that was never disclosed in Lamonte’s trial. Aside from Morehead and Golubski, Ruby had already told her that they recognized the shooter as a guy named “Lamonte.” Niko also had no idea that Golubski had specifically chosen photos of McIntyre that made him resemble the guy her sister and neighbor knew as Lamonte. Still, at every turn, according to affidavits and court filings, Niko told the prosecutor and detective that she didn’t think Lamonte McIntyre was the shooter.

Niko says Morehead and Golubski assured her that she had correctly fingered her cousin’s killer. Months later, at Lamonte’s pre-trial hearing, Niko says she sat up in a conference room at the courthouse with Golubski, preparing to testify. Nervous and unsure, she would later describe the first time she began to suspect that the homicide detective might not be on the up-and-up.

“We were all sitting in this waiting room when Golubski said that he wanted to see me dance on a table for him,” Niko recalled. “And he tells me how he could make my life a lot easier. I’m just laughing at him, you know? He keeps saying that he wants me to strip for him. When I told my sister what he said, she tells me, while he’s sitting right there: ‘Don’t mess with him. He’s the Devil.’”


Asked how old she was at the time, Niko paused before remembering her exact age.

“I was 20,” she says.

“When I saw him [McIntyre] at the preliminary hearing, I was like: ‘Nah, that ain’t him; his ears are too big,’” Niko explained.

During a recess, Niko says Morehead confronted her about her hesitancy to finger Lamonte. “This is what she told me. She said: ‘If your Black ass don’t do what I told you to do, I’m going to throw your Black ass in jail right now. You’ll never see your kids again. And I’ll make sure of it.’ That’s what she told me.” (Morehead did not respond to The Root for comment.)

At Lamonte’s trial, Niko again told Morehead that she was not sure Lamonte was the killer. After Morehead gave opening statements, Niko informed Morehead again that Lamonte was taller and had different facial features than the man who killed her cousin. After the recess, Morehead called her first witness to the stand. But instead of directly asking Niko who she saw, she asked Niko about who she identified to Golubski.

The following exchange is directly from Lamonte’s trial transcript.
Morehead: When—when you were in court a couple months ago at the preliminary hearing—do you remember testifying at that preliminary hearing?

Niko: Yes.

Morehead: Did you identify an individual at the preliminary hearing as being the shooter of April 15, 1994

Niko: Yes.

Morehead: And who did you identify in court two months ago, Miss Quinn.

Niko: That’s him right there.

Morehead: Judge, for the record, she’s identified the defendant, Lamonte McIntyre.

After Lamonte’s defense attorney cross-examined Niko, Morehead asked Niko a final question: “Miss Quinn, is there any doubt in your mind that Lamonte McIntyre sitting here is the man you saw shoot into that car on April 15?”

“I sat there and looked at her,” Niko told The Root. “I thought about my kids. I thought about Golubski and what my sister said about him. Lamonte was shaking his head like ‘I didn’t do it! I didn’t do it!’ And I sat there and looked at [Morehead]. She gave me this look like ‘You better say it.’

So Niko said it.

Nikki Richardson, left, and Niko Quinn at a Justice for Wyandotte Vigil in Kansas City, Kan.
Photo: Darrin Dressler
“After I did my testimony, I walked out, and I walked outside in the hallway,” Niko recalled during a phone interview. “My cousin asked me what was wrong. And I told them that Lamonte wasn’t the guy...

“Then I walked home and tried to kill myself.”

Immediately after the failed suicide attempt, days after Lamonte’s conviction, Niko recanted her testimony and vowed to make it right.

She told everyone within earshot that Lamonte wasn’t guilty. She wrote Oprah and Montel. She reached out to Lamonte’s mother, Rose Lee McIntyre, and apologized but Rose didn’t react how Niko expected. Niko eventually discovered why Rose didn’t seem surprised by the revelation. She realized why Golubski might have targeted Lamonte.

This story is about Rose Lee McIntyre.

In the late 1980s, Golubski briefly detained Rose and her boyfriend during a traffic stop, according to a federal civil rights lawsuit obtained by The Root. During the stop, the officer told Rose that he would arrest her and her boyfriend unless she promised sexual favors. Having never been arrested before, Rose agreed to meet Golubski at the precinct later. When she showed up at the Kansas City Police Department the next night, the officers in the police station seemed to know why she was there and ushered her to Roger Golubski’s office, where he sexually assaulted Rose.

“During the ensuing sexual assault, a KCKPD officer opened Golubski’s office door, saw what was happening, and left without saying anything,” reads the federal lawsuit against Golubski, Morehead, the Wyandotte County Unified Government and others filed by Lamonte and Rose McIntyre in October 2018. The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court of Kansas, alleges: “Although Golubski assaulted Rose in a station full of police officers, nobody intervened. After Golubski assaulted Rose, he harassed her for weeks, calling her two or three times a day. He told her that he wanted a long-term relationship and promised to pay her for sex.”

When confronted with the allegations, Golubski invoked his Fifth Amendment rights. The case remains pending and is slated for trial. A trial date has not been set.

Following that night, Rose alleges Golubski harassed her until she had to find a new place to live and change her phone number. Golubski eventually gave up stalking her, she alleges. But Rose’s worries were not behind her.

“By moving, Rose thought that she had permanently escaped Golubski and prevented him from ever harming her or her family again,” the lawsuit continues. “She was wrong. Several years later, Golubski orchestrated the wrongful conviction of her son Lamonte.”

As alleged in the civil rights lawsuit, “defendants’ fabrications and suppression of exculpatory evidence caused Lamonte’s conviction.” Rose further alleges that the jury never heard that the key witnesses were coerced. They never knew that Niko Quinn was living in an apartment provided by the lead investigator. They didn’t know that Morehead had a previous romantic relationship with the judge. They had no idea that the statements from Rose McIntyre were allegedly fabricated. Most of all, the jury never knew that Ruby Mitchell initially fingered an entirely different man named Lamont.

On January 6, 1995, Judge J. Dexter Burdette sentenced Lamonte to two consecutive life sentences for the murders of Doniel Quinn and Donald Ewing.

Morehead left the Wyandotte County District Attorney’s Office and joined the Justice Department as a U.S. attorney for the District of Kansas. Judge Burdette retired in September 2018 after serving more than 30 years on the bench for Kansas’s 29th Judicial Circuit.

In June 2016, a Kansas City drug kingpin named Cecil Brooks signed an affidavit stating that Neil “Monster” Edgar Jr., a drug dealer currently serving a 33-year-prison sentence for drugs and murder, “got paid to do the murder….the guy [Lamonte] who got convicted for these murders had nothing to do with it. None of us had ever heard of him.” In October 2017, Lamonte was released from prison after Wyandotte County District Attorney Mark Dupree labeled the case a “manifest injustice” and dropped all the charges against him. In all, Lamonte spent more than 23 years in prison for two murders he didn’t commit.

But this story is not about Lamonte McIntyre.

“You’re here for that thing about the Golubski Girls?” asked Fred, a stoutly built, gruff 47-year-old who was sipping on a super-sized soda. “Of course I know about it. Everybody knows about the Golubski Girls. Yeah, they’re right down there.”

I had not planned on speaking with Fred or his crew. I happened upon them during my visit to Kansas City, while walking to the last stop for a vigil organized by Justice for Wyandotte, a Black-woman-led group whose goal is to shed light on the injustices in the area.

According to investigators, media reports and court documents, “Golubski’s Girls” was the moniker designated to a loose network of informants, sex workers and people struggling with substance use disorder who were coerced—through threats, blackmail and intimidation—into sexual relationships with Detective Golubski.

Niko offered to take me on a tour of the Quindaro Park neighborhood, but, having covered this story for more than three years, I declined. I had planned on moving to Kansas City to dig deeper into the cesspool before the COVID-19 pandemic put the entire country in solitary confinement. Finally arriving in the area, I wanted to walk the streets that I have been preternaturally obsessed with from afar.

Quindaro Park is not just a neighborhood; it is an actual city park. Obscured from the street by a towering mound and tucked in a quiet community, one would never know the park or the neighborhood was part of the 31st-largest metropolitan area in America. It is almost rural in its Midwestern ordinariness, but not country. As I meandered from block to block on the “Kansas side” of the K.C., no one stopped me to ask questions. A little girl waved from the backseat as her young parents sat in a car chatting. I replied; they didn’t. Everyone seemed to mind their own business. Seeing the suburb on my own helped me understand the story even better.

It was a perfect place to dump dead bodies.

On April 15, Justice for Wyandotte held a vigil and procession to the sites where Quindaro Park and the surrounding area have coughed up the corpses of at least a dozen Black women, including:

Rose Calvin: Calvin was found strangled on July 21, 1996, in a Kansas City vacant lot. Lead Detective Roger Golubski refused to allow the family to view the body.
Pearl Barnes: Barnes’ body was found in a vacant house on Nov. 22, 1996. She was stabbed to death.
Rhonda Tribue: The body of the 34-year-old mother of six was found on a rural road outside of Kansas City in 1998. She was last seen at the Firelight Lounge and the area of 7th Street and Quindaro Blvd.
Monique Allen: Allen, 26, died after she was found stabbed in January 1998.
Sandra Glover: Glover’s body was discovered in an alley near Quindaro Park in March 1997. She was shot several times.
Eliza Michie: On Feb. 3, 2004, 30-year-old Michie was found shot to death in Kansas
Vicki Hollinshed-Dew: In June 2000, the 34-year-old was found outside “a residence known to law enforcement as a drug house” with 50 stab wounds, cuts and incisions. Before her carotid artery was slit, neighbors heard someone yell “stop.”
Iashia King and Stacey Wilson: King, 20, and Wilson, 24, were found unconscious, shot multiple times. Wilson had recently witnessed a double-homicide that Golubski investigated.
The names of most of the women have been forgotten and many only received small blurbs in local newspapers at the time of their deaths. But according to our sources, there may be at least six more. According to the Kansas City Star and 12 sources who spoke to The Root, each of these unsolved murders are connected in some way to the king of the Kansas City Police Department’s detective unit, Roger Golubski.

Golubski and his attorneys have declined to comment on the murders when contacted by The Root. He has made no public comments on the deaths, in part because no one has ever formally charged him with a crime. On Nov. 19, 2020, during a videotaped deposition for the McIntyres’ civil rights lawsuit obtained by The Root. Golubski invoked his Fifth Amendment rights 559 times. He told civil rights attorney Emma Freudenberger that he trained for four years to become a Catholic priest. He acknowledged that he carried a prayer book in his police vehicle but pleaded the fifth when asked if he had ever “forcibly raped a minor in his police vehicle.” He invoked his rights against self-incrimination when asked if he fabricated the positive identification of Lamonte McIntyre. He did it again when asked if “fabricating false witness statements to close cases was routine in the Kansas City, Kansas Police Department in the 1980s and 1990s.”

The questioning continued:

Freudenberger: In the crimes against persons unit you had to work closely with narcotics detectives, given the amount of drug trafficking on the streets of Kansas City, Kansas in the 1990's, correct?.

Golubski: On the advice of my attorney, I invoke my Fifth Amendment Constitutional Rights.

Freudenberger: And you had developed a vast network of people on the streets in Kansas City, Kansas who gave you information, correct?

Golubski: On the advice of my attorney, I invoke my Fifth Amendment Constitutional Rights.

Freudenberger: Many of them were women, correct?

Golubski: On the advice of my attorney, I invoke my Fifth Amendment Constitutional Rights.

Freudenberger: You understand we are accusing you of raping women and coercing women into giving false testimony, some of the grossest acts of corruption a police officer can commit, right? You understand that as you sit here today? This isn’t the first you are hearing of this?

Golubski: On the advice of my attorney, I invoke my Fifth Amendment Constitutional Rights.
It was the first and last time Golubski would make an on-the-record statement about the litany of accusations leveled against him.

However, in numerous interviews over the past two years, former coworkers, alleged victims and other Kansas City residents laid out a pattern of behavior that includes murder, sexual assault and involvement in drugs. And in affidavits obtained by The Root, witnesses not only point to Golubski but the entire Kansas City Police Department, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation and the FBI. In a 2016 affidavit for the McIntyre appeal, a former KCKPD officer said Golubski was “untouchable” and was promoted because of his connections.

In another 2015 affidavit for Lamonte’s appeal, a former FBI agent who investigated numerous Kansas City police officers, including Golubski, said Golubski “used the authority of his position to extort sexual favors from Black females. These women complied with his demands because they knew they would be arrested if they said no. Some of these women were prostitutes, and most were drug-addicted. The women knew that unless they provided what Golubski wanted that he could arrest them and have them held in the jail. The women were powerless, and Golubski exploited them.”

Court documents from the civil rights case and the Lamonte McIntyre appeal accuse Golubski and the KCKPD of “shaking down” drug dealers; “swagging”–or stealing illegal drugs “during the execution of a search warrant”; accepting bribes “from persons involved in criminal activity”; and “taking drugs for personal use or to provide to informants.”

“In addition to sex, Golubski used these women as informants to help him clear cases,” reads a judge’s order describing the complaints against Golubski. “Known by other KCKPD officers as ‘Golubski’s girls,’ the women would provide critical evidence which resulted in convictions in many of Golubski’s investigations – evidence which the officers knew was unreliable because it was the product of coercive relationships. Golubski also worked closely with drug kingpins in Kansas City, Kansas. In exchange for money or drugs, Golubski fixed investigations, including framing innocent people for crimes that the drug gangs had committed. Despite this being common knowledge, the KCKPD never reprimanded him. In fact, before he retired, the KCKPD promoted Golubski to captain.”

“The department never ignored what people said about Golubski,” one former KCKPD officer told The Root. “They encouraged it! They saw it as ‘This man had all the informants and knew everything that was going on in [the Quindaro Park neighborhood]. They didn’t care how he was doing it, but we all knew how he did it. It was like: ‘You need to know what so-and-so was up to; you just asked [Golubski] if he was fucking someone close to so-and-so.”

“Detective Golubski would pull them over, take cash from the man and get sex from the woman,” recalled a different affiant in McIntyre’s appeal. “Golubski’s badge gave him leverage over people to get what he wanted.”

In 2015, Ruby Ellington, whose 25-year career with KCKPD was concurrent with Golubski’s time at the department, said in a sworn statement that Golubski was “obsessed with prostitutes, specifically Black female prostitutes who were typically drug-addicted as well as poor and powerless.”

But one specific witness doesn’t need affidavits or anonymous sources.

Niko Quinn saw it with her own eyes.

“The reason why I got involved with it was because I was the last one to see Rhonda [Tribue] alive and Monique [Allen] alive and Liza [Michie] alive,” Niko recounted in an interview with The Root. “Golubski was the last one I know of that Rhonda and Monique got in the car with. I’m not sure if it was him who Liza left with. But it was a detective car.”

In October 1998, Niko had just loaned Rhonda Tribue a pair of jeans after putting finger waves in Tribue’s hair. According to Niko, the two women were sitting on the porch when they spotted Golubski’s car easing past her home. Seconds after Tribue left to meet a “friend” who was coming to pick her up, Niko received a call from someone asking to speak to Rhonda.

“I ran to catch her, but she was gone,” Niko said. “But when Gobluski’s car came around that bend, she was in the car with him.”

The next day, Tribue’s body was found on a road outside of Edwardsville, Kan., beaten to death from blunt force trauma. Liza Michie left Niko’s house in an unmarked car that Niko had seen Golubski drive—but she can’t say that it was definitely Golubski who picked Michie up. The next day, Michie was found dead. Monique Allen’s last day was eerily similar.

“She walked out of my front door, down the street and he picked her up,” said Niko. “That’s when he drove that blue Crown Vic. And I know it was him because she had his card and called him from my house.”

Because she lived across the street from a popular neighborhood bar, Niko had personal relationships with several of the women who would later end up mysteriously murdered. While sitting in Niko’s living room, many of the women would warn her about the notorious detective. But Niko had a mutual relationship that provided insight into Golubski’s dealings.

Niko’s older sister was also one of Golubski’s Girls.

Before her brutal murder in January 2000, 31-year-old Stacy Quinn was intimately familiar with Golubski, according to Niko. Stacy’s killer was caught and convicted, but according to Niko and the McIntyres’ suit, Golubski nor his fellow officers ever revealed that Golubski was in a “longtime sexual relationship with eyewitness Stacy Quinn.” Niko says she listened to her sister and the other women, despite their struggles with substance use disorder, when they repeatedly warned her about the notorious officer.

“I understood them because of my sister being out there,” Niko explained. “It was just a sickness that they had, and [they] got caught up in the wrong thing. I would sit there and talk to these women. And they were saying that this man is literally the devil. He’s the grim reaper. Don’t trust him.

“And one of the young ladies that I talked to—when we were talking about him—if you could see this woman’s eyes, Mike, it was like, she had just seen death in the face. And she told me that he started stopping her at 16. He would show up at our house and bring her food. She would call him, and he would bring food to her. And some women liked him because he paid good.”

I asked Niko if she was ever concerned for her own safety. She replied she always assumed Golubski harassed her because he wanted sex. “What do you mean?” I asked. “You spoke to Golubski after Lamonte McIntyre went to prison?”


“Oh Mike,” she sighed. “That man stalked me for 10 years.”

Perhaps the most frequent reaction I encounter about the Golubski story is: “But why isn’t he in jail?”

That the most powerful white people simply chose not to care about rape, corruption and dead bodies popping up everywhere is a disconcerting thought for most people. For me, their naive astonishment is the most astonishing part. It is stunning how many people can’t believe a thing like this can happen, even knowing that things like this have always happened. According to one report, police sexually assault at least 100 women every year. The most likely reason Golubski was never arrested is also the most unsettling:

Because his victims were Black women.

To understand how the most powerful people in Kansas City overlooked Roger Golubski’s alleged crimes, one only needs to read one woman’s relationship with the notorious Kansas City detective.

This story is about Jane Doe.

The Root obtained a transcript of a deposition with Jane Doe, who describes, in excruciating detail, multiple sexual assaults after the KCKPD served a search warrant on her home. In a Nov. 2020 deposition from the civil rights case, the woman recounts how Golubski ogled her 14-year old daughter the night of the search warrant. How he forced Jane Doe to have sex. How he returned about “once a week or once every two weeks” to sexually assault her. How she said, she considered biting Golubski’s sexual parts when he forced her to perform oral sex. How he told her that he would shoot her in the head if she did. How she eventually had a heart attack. But the most revealing part of this sworn deposition is how the woman recalls the aura of fear and intimidation.

Freudenberger: Did you let him know that you didn’t want this?

Jane Doe: Yes.

Freudenberger: How did you communicate that?

Jane Doe: I asked him to stop doing it, why are you keeping doing this.

Freudenberger: What did he say?

Jane Doe: He always just said, I can be a good friend of yours, I’m going to help you with your sons. He always said, each time he say he going to talk to the D.A,, [Jerome] Gorman.

Freudenberger: Were you ever fearful of what would happen if you didn’t cooperate?

Jane Doe: Yes. I thought he would do something to me.
Freudenberger: Did you ever complain to anyone?

Jane Doe: No. Who was I going to complain to?

Freudenberger: Did you ever tell Detective Golubski that you were thinking about complaining?

Jane Doe: Yes.

Freudenberger: Do you remember what he said?

Jane Doe: He told me he can have somebody do something to me and that they would never find me.

When asked if she told anyone about the abuse, the woman says she told her then-boyfriend and another KCKPD police officer, who never took steps to help her file a complaint. Twenty years later, while seeking legal help for her still-incarcerated sons, an attorney asked if Golubski had ever come on to her.

“And I said yes,” Jane Doe recounted during the deposition. “I didn’t use the word ‘rape,’ but I said he just took — I said this motherfucker came in my house and just took him some pussy and left.”

As with Rose Lee McIntyre and others, District Attorney Jerome Gorman never formally investigated the numerous allegations against Golubski. Luckily, the woman no longer had to worry about Gorman retaliating. In January 2018, the Topeka Capital-Journal reported that former District Attorney Jerome Gorman had been ousted from his position at the Kansas Department of Revenue. For months, Marc McCune, the Kansas Department of Revenue’s special agent in charge, told his superiors about Gorman’s sexual harassment and outright racism. “McCune shared with superiors in the revenue department both personal observations of Gorman and first-person accounts from other employees,” the Capital-Journal reported. “McCune also sent a memorandum outlining concerns about Gorman to the Department of Administration.”

For his efforts, McCune was fired.

But another curious part of the Jane Doe transcript may elucidate why Golubski was never charged with a crime. Her son’s cases were investigated by Golubski and another detective she only refers to as “Zeigler.”

In March 2019, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation revealed that Kansas City’s chief of police was the target of a criminal corruption probe. Three months later, the chief announced his retirement after 29 years with the KCKPD.

His name is Terry Ziegler.

Everybody Knows the Devil
“For years, there were credible allegations against KCK Police Detective Roger Golubski for extorting sex from black women in the community,” said former Mayor Mark Holland in a Facebook post. “Through his dubious testimony, Wyandotte County sent Lamonte McIntyre, a 17-year-old boy, to prison for 25 years for a crime he did not commit—paid for with taxpayer funds. The Gorman/Bryant DA’s office ignored the allegations, refusing to investigate for seven years. It was not until District Attorney Dupree was in office that the McIntyre case was investigated, and he was exonerated and freed.”

“[Golubski] was seen as this high-level person who could assist the police department,” said current Wyandotte County District Attorney Mark Dupree. “Quite frankly, I think history has shown that that was an absolute misunderstanding or clearly a perverted one.”

By the time Dupree was swept into office on a campaign of reform and change in 2017, Golubski had retired from the KCKPD with a full pension. After looking into McIntyre’s case, Dupree requested that the Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) open an investigation into Golubski. According to the Kansas City Star, the KBI began reviewing 6,000 pages of records and found…Well, no one knows. No report was ever released. It just died and went away.

In 2010, after working for the department for 35 years, Golubski went to work in nearby Edwardsville, where Tribue’s body had been found years earlier. Just before Lamonte was set to be released from prison, Golubski retired from the force, never having been charged with a crime.

“Per the City of Edwardsville Police Department policy, police department employees are not authorized to comment regarding any law enforcement incidents which did not occur within our jurisdiction,” said the Edwardsville Police Department in a statement about the civil rights complaint filed against Golubski. “We recognize the serious nature of these allegations, should they be true. Thus, we want to reassure Edwardsville citizens of our unwavering dedication to protecting the rights of all people and believe all people deserve impartial and effective service from our members. Moreover, we are committed to obedience of the law and demonstrating respect for the human dignity of all people in everything we do.”

But Edwardsville and the Kansas City Police Department have known about some of Golubski’s alleged misdeeds for more than 40 years. In May 1978, witnesses testified that Golubski hit 41-year-old Kenneth Borg with a nightstick during a call about a civil disturbance. Borg died in police custody from what an inquest called a “blow to the abdomen from a blunt object.” Golubski was later cleared when officers testified that Golubski hit Borg in the chest, not the abdomen.

In 1998, capital murder charges were dropped against Gentry Bolton when defense attorneys revealed that Golubski forced an eyewitness to falsely pin a convenience store murder on Bolton. According to a court filing from McIntyre’s attorneys, “Golubski coerced Irene Bradley to name Bolton as the customer’s killer by holding her in custody and refusing to let her leave until she made the false identification. Months later, an eyewitness told Golubski that Bolton was not the shooter, but Golubski suppressed the exculpatory statement from the prosecution and Bolton’s defense attorney. It came out only after the trial court ordered production of complete copies of the police file based on obvious Brady violations.”

“I knew that Roger seemed to like African Americans,” said the second of Golubski’s three wives in a sworn affidavit. “When I asked him one day why he was attracted to Black women, he replied: ‘Because they’re uneducated.’ I was stunned and very angry. I dealt with my hurt feelings by running up some big credit card bills.”

She later testified that Golubski paid someone to break into her house. When she called the authorities, the KCKPD sent its lead detective, Golubski, to investigate. In a sworn statement, she recalled an eerily familiar pattern, explaining:

“He stalked me for 10 years.”

This Neverending Story
This story is about Khadijah Hardaway.

While leading protests in the aftermath of George Floyd’s death, Hardaway began organizing a quest for justice in her own community. After discovering the rampant corruption in Wyandotte County, Hardaway and members of Justice for Wyandotte decided they wanted to go after the biggest fish of all.

“This man is worse than Derek Chauvin,” Hardaway told The Root, referring to Golubski. “And we don’t know how many Lamonte McIntyres are behind bars.”

Hardaway eventually quit her job to pursue this cause full-time. She helped forge a relationship with Broadway Church, a local congregation that wanted to do something substantial in the social justice arena. The Sister Circle and Justice for Wyandotte have reached out to victims of Golubski and other community members whose lives have been ruined by the criminal justice system in Wyandotte County.

In 2020, Hardaway and other activists convinced 27 Kansas legislators and 16 social justice organizations to sign a letter requesting a real KBI investigation. The bureau responded by turning the investigation over to the FBI, stating that it “found no evidence of any violation of Kansas law that is within the statute of limitations. However, during the course of our investigation, information related to possible federal violations was shared with federal authorities for their consideration and possible action.” The Federal Bureau of Investigation has confirmed its investigation.

On March 3, 2020, U.S. District Judge Kathryn Vratil denied the protection of qualified immunity to Golubski, the Wyandotte County Unified Government and Kansas City, paving the way for the Lamonte and Rose McIntyre’s civil rights suit.

But Justice for Wyandotte is not done.

They are currently working to free John Keith Calvin, who is in the 20th year of a life sentence for a murder he says he didn’t commit. Another man has confessed to the killing. “I feel bad,” said Melvin White. “I should be doing the time, not him. I’m the one who pulled the trigger. He didn’t know anything about it.” There are numerous connections to Lamonte McIntyre’s case; he and Calvin were incarcerated together, and McIntyre even cut Calvin’s hair in prison. Calvin’s sister, Rose, was found strangled on July 21, 1996.

She was one of Golubski’s Girls.

Justice for Wyandotte has demanded Calvin’s release, as well as for prosecutors to indict Golubski and review every case in which Golubski or Morehead was involved. Mark Dupree has opened a Conviction Integrity Unit in Wyandotte County but notes that he doesn’t have the manpower or the resources to review every case Golubski handled. Now called the “Community Integrity Unit,” recent charges of racism and discrimination left the commission with no members.

Everyone in Kansas City who could have stopped Golubski has been charged with misconduct. Jerome Gorman, the prosecutor, was ousted for sexual misconduct and racism. When the KBI finished their investigation of Terry Ziegler, Golubski’s former partner who became police chief, they forwarded the results to the Wyandotte County District Attorney’s Office, who has not filed charges...yet. In March, the U.S. Department of Justice removed Morehead from criminal cases after she was accused of multiple instances of prosecutorial misconduct. On May 10, U.S. District Judge Jay Crabtree accused Morehead of misconduct again, saying she hid evidence in a federal drug and counterfeiting case.

But this story is not about Zeigler, Morehead, Golubski or justice or Wyandotte County.

This story is about the most disrespected, unprotected, neglected person in America. But...

It is mostly about us.


Where are the good police officers everyone keeps talking about when you need them?
Leftist, commie and Antifa Guy. Democratic Confederalist, Anti-racist

"The devil is out there. Hiding behind every corner and in every nook and cranny. In all of the dives, all over the city. Before you lays an entire world of enemies, and at day's end when the chips are down, we're a society of strangers. You cant walk by someone on the street anymore without crossing the road to get away from their stare. Welcome to the Twilight Zone. The land of plague and shadow. Nothing innocent survives this world. If it can't corrupt you, it'll kill you."

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Postby Greater Miami Shores » Fri May 28, 2021 11:27 am

Borderlands of Rojava wrote:
Kowani wrote:How the Kansas City Police Department ignored and covered up the rape and murder of Black women by one of its officers for 4 decades

The most disrespected person in America is the black woman.
The most unprotected person in America is the black woman.
The most neglected person in America is the black woman.
—El Hajj Malik El Shabazz

Content Warning: The following article contains graphic details of sexual assault.

What you are about to read is a true story.

This is a story about a law enforcement officer in Kansas City, Kan., who elected officials, private citizens, lawmakers and fellow police officers who have publicly accused of corruption, sexual assault and even murder. But this is not a story about a man. This is not a story about a police officer. This is not a story about Kansas City, a rapist, a serial killer, policing or America. This is a story about us. This story is about the fundamental question of who we are as human beings.

This story is not a secret. For years, I have recounted the details of this story in rooms with the most powerful lawmakers in America. I have personally told it to some of the biggest celebrities in the world and the most influential people in the entertainment industry. I have the telling of it down to a science. And at every turn—even the iteration you are reading at this very moment—the response is always the same:

“But what d0es ___ say about it.”

“But…”

For centuries, white America ignored the way law enforcement officers treated Black people. But then they saw cellphone footage of it, and suddenly, police brutality was un-ignorable. A Black woman created the “Me Too” movement, but no one paid attention until white women started saying it. The war on drugs wasn’t a huge problem. But when white people began using meth, heroin and opiates, we needed a new approach.

The “but” is the thing.

And in this case, the “but” is represented by the most disrespected, unprotected, neglected person in America. For more than 40 years—until his retirement in 2010—Roger Golubski was a police officer in the Quindaro Park neighborhood of Kansas City, Kan. Over the last four years, The Root has interviewed dozens of witnesses, reviewed dozens of court cases and pored over thousands of pages, uncovering one of the widest-ranging examples of state-sponsored terror against Black women this country has ever seen. In those four decades, Golubski has never been formally charged with a crime.

Still, this story is not about him.

This story is about Niko Quinn.

Niko Quinn sees things.

On April 15, 1994, 21-year-old Doniel Quinn and 34-year-old Donald Ewing were shot and killed as they sat in a car in the Quindaro Park neighborhood of Kansas City. The killer reportedly fled the scene in a getaway vehicle before authorities arrived. Ruby Mitchell, Stacy Quinn (Niko’s sister) and Niko caught glimpses of the murderers who killed Niko’s cousin Doniel.

Roger Golubski, the lead homicide investigator for the Kansas City Police Department, immediately zeroed in on a suspect. Within hours, he convinced Mitchell to identify 17-year-old Lamonte McIntyre in photo lineups, even though McIntyre was at home at the time of the double homicide.

As we reported in 2018, the district attorney who prosecuted the case, Terra Morehead, was allegedly involved in a secret romantic relationship with Kansas District Judge J. Dexter Burdette, who heard the case. By the time McIntyre went to trial in 1994, Golubski and Morehead had coerced Niko Quinn into testifying against McIntyre as the prosecution’s star witness.

During phone, text and in-person interviews with The Root, Niko described meetings with Golubski and Morehead as a series of traumatic events meant to force her into blaming McIntyre for a murder he didn’t commit.

“Golubski, two detectives and Terra Morehead showed up at my door,” Niko told The Root. “I wasn’t home. But they told my aunt and my cousin who was living with me at the time to tell me that I need to get in touch with her. And if I did not contact her ‘sooner than later,’ she was gonna take my kids from me, and I’ll never see my kids again...That was the first threat she made.

Photo: Darrin Dressler
“So I go up there, and Terra Morehead pulls out all the pictures of the crime scene,” Niko says. “She showed me little Don’s and Donny’s pictures, she was like: ‘Don’t you want somebody to be charged with this?’ Mike, she showed me that picture of my cousin and his whole face was gone. I was there. I saw my cousin get his head blew off. I didn’t need to see that. She made me look at the pictures, and she was asking if I wanted somebody to be accountable for it. She told me, ‘Lamonte this...Lamonte that...We have evidence that he did it.”

Still, Niko wasn’t convinced, even when Golubski reportedly promised financial compensation and to help her find new housing—a detail that was never disclosed in Lamonte’s trial. Aside from Morehead and Golubski, Ruby had already told her that they recognized the shooter as a guy named “Lamonte.” Niko also had no idea that Golubski had specifically chosen photos of McIntyre that made him resemble the guy her sister and neighbor knew as Lamonte. Still, at every turn, according to affidavits and court filings, Niko told the prosecutor and detective that she didn’t think Lamonte McIntyre was the shooter.

Niko says Morehead and Golubski assured her that she had correctly fingered her cousin’s killer. Months later, at Lamonte’s pre-trial hearing, Niko says she sat up in a conference room at the courthouse with Golubski, preparing to testify. Nervous and unsure, she would later describe the first time she began to suspect that the homicide detective might not be on the up-and-up.

“We were all sitting in this waiting room when Golubski said that he wanted to see me dance on a table for him,” Niko recalled. “And he tells me how he could make my life a lot easier. I’m just laughing at him, you know? He keeps saying that he wants me to strip for him. When I told my sister what he said, she tells me, while he’s sitting right there: ‘Don’t mess with him. He’s the Devil.’”


Asked how old she was at the time, Niko paused before remembering her exact age.

“I was 20,” she says.

“When I saw him [McIntyre] at the preliminary hearing, I was like: ‘Nah, that ain’t him; his ears are too big,’” Niko explained.

During a recess, Niko says Morehead confronted her about her hesitancy to finger Lamonte. “This is what she told me. She said: ‘If your Black ass don’t do what I told you to do, I’m going to throw your Black ass in jail right now. You’ll never see your kids again. And I’ll make sure of it.’ That’s what she told me.” (Morehead did not respond to The Root for comment.)

At Lamonte’s trial, Niko again told Morehead that she was not sure Lamonte was the killer. After Morehead gave opening statements, Niko informed Morehead again that Lamonte was taller and had different facial features than the man who killed her cousin. After the recess, Morehead called her first witness to the stand. But instead of directly asking Niko who she saw, she asked Niko about who she identified to Golubski.

The following exchange is directly from Lamonte’s trial transcript.
Morehead: When—when you were in court a couple months ago at the preliminary hearing—do you remember testifying at that preliminary hearing?

Niko: Yes.

Morehead: Did you identify an individual at the preliminary hearing as being the shooter of April 15, 1994

Niko: Yes.

Morehead: And who did you identify in court two months ago, Miss Quinn.

Niko: That’s him right there.

Morehead: Judge, for the record, she’s identified the defendant, Lamonte McIntyre.

After Lamonte’s defense attorney cross-examined Niko, Morehead asked Niko a final question: “Miss Quinn, is there any doubt in your mind that Lamonte McIntyre sitting here is the man you saw shoot into that car on April 15?”

“I sat there and looked at her,” Niko told The Root. “I thought about my kids. I thought about Golubski and what my sister said about him. Lamonte was shaking his head like ‘I didn’t do it! I didn’t do it!’ And I sat there and looked at [Morehead]. She gave me this look like ‘You better say it.’

So Niko said it.

Nikki Richardson, left, and Niko Quinn at a Justice for Wyandotte Vigil in Kansas City, Kan.
Photo: Darrin Dressler
“After I did my testimony, I walked out, and I walked outside in the hallway,” Niko recalled during a phone interview. “My cousin asked me what was wrong. And I told them that Lamonte wasn’t the guy...

“Then I walked home and tried to kill myself.”

Immediately after the failed suicide attempt, days after Lamonte’s conviction, Niko recanted her testimony and vowed to make it right.

She told everyone within earshot that Lamonte wasn’t guilty. She wrote Oprah and Montel. She reached out to Lamonte’s mother, Rose Lee McIntyre, and apologized but Rose didn’t react how Niko expected. Niko eventually discovered why Rose didn’t seem surprised by the revelation. She realized why Golubski might have targeted Lamonte.

This story is about Rose Lee McIntyre.

In the late 1980s, Golubski briefly detained Rose and her boyfriend during a traffic stop, according to a federal civil rights lawsuit obtained by The Root. During the stop, the officer told Rose that he would arrest her and her boyfriend unless she promised sexual favors. Having never been arrested before, Rose agreed to meet Golubski at the precinct later. When she showed up at the Kansas City Police Department the next night, the officers in the police station seemed to know why she was there and ushered her to Roger Golubski’s office, where he sexually assaulted Rose.

“During the ensuing sexual assault, a KCKPD officer opened Golubski’s office door, saw what was happening, and left without saying anything,” reads the federal lawsuit against Golubski, Morehead, the Wyandotte County Unified Government and others filed by Lamonte and Rose McIntyre in October 2018. The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court of Kansas, alleges: “Although Golubski assaulted Rose in a station full of police officers, nobody intervened. After Golubski assaulted Rose, he harassed her for weeks, calling her two or three times a day. He told her that he wanted a long-term relationship and promised to pay her for sex.”

When confronted with the allegations, Golubski invoked his Fifth Amendment rights. The case remains pending and is slated for trial. A trial date has not been set.

Following that night, Rose alleges Golubski harassed her until she had to find a new place to live and change her phone number. Golubski eventually gave up stalking her, she alleges. But Rose’s worries were not behind her.

“By moving, Rose thought that she had permanently escaped Golubski and prevented him from ever harming her or her family again,” the lawsuit continues. “She was wrong. Several years later, Golubski orchestrated the wrongful conviction of her son Lamonte.”

As alleged in the civil rights lawsuit, “defendants’ fabrications and suppression of exculpatory evidence caused Lamonte’s conviction.” Rose further alleges that the jury never heard that the key witnesses were coerced. They never knew that Niko Quinn was living in an apartment provided by the lead investigator. They didn’t know that Morehead had a previous romantic relationship with the judge. They had no idea that the statements from Rose McIntyre were allegedly fabricated. Most of all, the jury never knew that Ruby Mitchell initially fingered an entirely different man named Lamont.

On January 6, 1995, Judge J. Dexter Burdette sentenced Lamonte to two consecutive life sentences for the murders of Doniel Quinn and Donald Ewing.

Morehead left the Wyandotte County District Attorney’s Office and joined the Justice Department as a U.S. attorney for the District of Kansas. Judge Burdette retired in September 2018 after serving more than 30 years on the bench for Kansas’s 29th Judicial Circuit.

In June 2016, a Kansas City drug kingpin named Cecil Brooks signed an affidavit stating that Neil “Monster” Edgar Jr., a drug dealer currently serving a 33-year-prison sentence for drugs and murder, “got paid to do the murder….the guy [Lamonte] who got convicted for these murders had nothing to do with it. None of us had ever heard of him.” In October 2017, Lamonte was released from prison after Wyandotte County District Attorney Mark Dupree labeled the case a “manifest injustice” and dropped all the charges against him. In all, Lamonte spent more than 23 years in prison for two murders he didn’t commit.

But this story is not about Lamonte McIntyre.

“You’re here for that thing about the Golubski Girls?” asked Fred, a stoutly built, gruff 47-year-old who was sipping on a super-sized soda. “Of course I know about it. Everybody knows about the Golubski Girls. Yeah, they’re right down there.”

I had not planned on speaking with Fred or his crew. I happened upon them during my visit to Kansas City, while walking to the last stop for a vigil organized by Justice for Wyandotte, a Black-woman-led group whose goal is to shed light on the injustices in the area.

According to investigators, media reports and court documents, “Golubski’s Girls” was the moniker designated to a loose network of informants, sex workers and people struggling with substance use disorder who were coerced—through threats, blackmail and intimidation—into sexual relationships with Detective Golubski.

Niko offered to take me on a tour of the Quindaro Park neighborhood, but, having covered this story for more than three years, I declined. I had planned on moving to Kansas City to dig deeper into the cesspool before the COVID-19 pandemic put the entire country in solitary confinement. Finally arriving in the area, I wanted to walk the streets that I have been preternaturally obsessed with from afar.

Quindaro Park is not just a neighborhood; it is an actual city park. Obscured from the street by a towering mound and tucked in a quiet community, one would never know the park or the neighborhood was part of the 31st-largest metropolitan area in America. It is almost rural in its Midwestern ordinariness, but not country. As I meandered from block to block on the “Kansas side” of the K.C., no one stopped me to ask questions. A little girl waved from the backseat as her young parents sat in a car chatting. I replied; they didn’t. Everyone seemed to mind their own business. Seeing the suburb on my own helped me understand the story even better.

It was a perfect place to dump dead bodies.

On April 15, Justice for Wyandotte held a vigil and procession to the sites where Quindaro Park and the surrounding area have coughed up the corpses of at least a dozen Black women, including:

Rose Calvin: Calvin was found strangled on July 21, 1996, in a Kansas City vacant lot. Lead Detective Roger Golubski refused to allow the family to view the body.
Pearl Barnes: Barnes’ body was found in a vacant house on Nov. 22, 1996. She was stabbed to death.
Rhonda Tribue: The body of the 34-year-old mother of six was found on a rural road outside of Kansas City in 1998. She was last seen at the Firelight Lounge and the area of 7th Street and Quindaro Blvd.
Monique Allen: Allen, 26, died after she was found stabbed in January 1998.
Sandra Glover: Glover’s body was discovered in an alley near Quindaro Park in March 1997. She was shot several times.
Eliza Michie: On Feb. 3, 2004, 30-year-old Michie was found shot to death in Kansas
Vicki Hollinshed-Dew: In June 2000, the 34-year-old was found outside “a residence known to law enforcement as a drug house” with 50 stab wounds, cuts and incisions. Before her carotid artery was slit, neighbors heard someone yell “stop.”
Iashia King and Stacey Wilson: King, 20, and Wilson, 24, were found unconscious, shot multiple times. Wilson had recently witnessed a double-homicide that Golubski investigated.
The names of most of the women have been forgotten and many only received small blurbs in local newspapers at the time of their deaths. But according to our sources, there may be at least six more. According to the Kansas City Star and 12 sources who spoke to The Root, each of these unsolved murders are connected in some way to the king of the Kansas City Police Department’s detective unit, Roger Golubski.

Golubski and his attorneys have declined to comment on the murders when contacted by The Root. He has made no public comments on the deaths, in part because no one has ever formally charged him with a crime. On Nov. 19, 2020, during a videotaped deposition for the McIntyres’ civil rights lawsuit obtained by The Root. Golubski invoked his Fifth Amendment rights 559 times. He told civil rights attorney Emma Freudenberger that he trained for four years to become a Catholic priest. He acknowledged that he carried a prayer book in his police vehicle but pleaded the fifth when asked if he had ever “forcibly raped a minor in his police vehicle.” He invoked his rights against self-incrimination when asked if he fabricated the positive identification of Lamonte McIntyre. He did it again when asked if “fabricating false witness statements to close cases was routine in the Kansas City, Kansas Police Department in the 1980s and 1990s.”

The questioning continued:

Freudenberger: In the crimes against persons unit you had to work closely with narcotics detectives, given the amount of drug trafficking on the streets of Kansas City, Kansas in the 1990's, correct?.

Golubski: On the advice of my attorney, I invoke my Fifth Amendment Constitutional Rights.

Freudenberger: And you had developed a vast network of people on the streets in Kansas City, Kansas who gave you information, correct?

Golubski: On the advice of my attorney, I invoke my Fifth Amendment Constitutional Rights.

Freudenberger: Many of them were women, correct?

Golubski: On the advice of my attorney, I invoke my Fifth Amendment Constitutional Rights.

Freudenberger: You understand we are accusing you of raping women and coercing women into giving false testimony, some of the grossest acts of corruption a police officer can commit, right? You understand that as you sit here today? This isn’t the first you are hearing of this?

Golubski: On the advice of my attorney, I invoke my Fifth Amendment Constitutional Rights.
It was the first and last time Golubski would make an on-the-record statement about the litany of accusations leveled against him.

However, in numerous interviews over the past two years, former coworkers, alleged victims and other Kansas City residents laid out a pattern of behavior that includes murder, sexual assault and involvement in drugs. And in affidavits obtained by The Root, witnesses not only point to Golubski but the entire Kansas City Police Department, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation and the FBI. In a 2016 affidavit for the McIntyre appeal, a former KCKPD officer said Golubski was “untouchable” and was promoted because of his connections.

In another 2015 affidavit for Lamonte’s appeal, a former FBI agent who investigated numerous Kansas City police officers, including Golubski, said Golubski “used the authority of his position to extort sexual favors from Black females. These women complied with his demands because they knew they would be arrested if they said no. Some of these women were prostitutes, and most were drug-addicted. The women knew that unless they provided what Golubski wanted that he could arrest them and have them held in the jail. The women were powerless, and Golubski exploited them.”

Court documents from the civil rights case and the Lamonte McIntyre appeal accuse Golubski and the KCKPD of “shaking down” drug dealers; “swagging”–or stealing illegal drugs “during the execution of a search warrant”; accepting bribes “from persons involved in criminal activity”; and “taking drugs for personal use or to provide to informants.”

“In addition to sex, Golubski used these women as informants to help him clear cases,” reads a judge’s order describing the complaints against Golubski. “Known by other KCKPD officers as ‘Golubski’s girls,’ the women would provide critical evidence which resulted in convictions in many of Golubski’s investigations – evidence which the officers knew was unreliable because it was the product of coercive relationships. Golubski also worked closely with drug kingpins in Kansas City, Kansas. In exchange for money or drugs, Golubski fixed investigations, including framing innocent people for crimes that the drug gangs had committed. Despite this being common knowledge, the KCKPD never reprimanded him. In fact, before he retired, the KCKPD promoted Golubski to captain.”

“The department never ignored what people said about Golubski,” one former KCKPD officer told The Root. “They encouraged it! They saw it as ‘This man had all the informants and knew everything that was going on in [the Quindaro Park neighborhood]. They didn’t care how he was doing it, but we all knew how he did it. It was like: ‘You need to know what so-and-so was up to; you just asked [Golubski] if he was fucking someone close to so-and-so.”

“Detective Golubski would pull them over, take cash from the man and get sex from the woman,” recalled a different affiant in McIntyre’s appeal. “Golubski’s badge gave him leverage over people to get what he wanted.”

In 2015, Ruby Ellington, whose 25-year career with KCKPD was concurrent with Golubski’s time at the department, said in a sworn statement that Golubski was “obsessed with prostitutes, specifically Black female prostitutes who were typically drug-addicted as well as poor and powerless.”

But one specific witness doesn’t need affidavits or anonymous sources.

Niko Quinn saw it with her own eyes.

“The reason why I got involved with it was because I was the last one to see Rhonda [Tribue] alive and Monique [Allen] alive and Liza [Michie] alive,” Niko recounted in an interview with The Root. “Golubski was the last one I know of that Rhonda and Monique got in the car with. I’m not sure if it was him who Liza left with. But it was a detective car.”

In October 1998, Niko had just loaned Rhonda Tribue a pair of jeans after putting finger waves in Tribue’s hair. According to Niko, the two women were sitting on the porch when they spotted Golubski’s car easing past her home. Seconds after Tribue left to meet a “friend” who was coming to pick her up, Niko received a call from someone asking to speak to Rhonda.

“I ran to catch her, but she was gone,” Niko said. “But when Gobluski’s car came around that bend, she was in the car with him.”

The next day, Tribue’s body was found on a road outside of Edwardsville, Kan., beaten to death from blunt force trauma. Liza Michie left Niko’s house in an unmarked car that Niko had seen Golubski drive—but she can’t say that it was definitely Golubski who picked Michie up. The next day, Michie was found dead. Monique Allen’s last day was eerily similar.

“She walked out of my front door, down the street and he picked her up,” said Niko. “That’s when he drove that blue Crown Vic. And I know it was him because she had his card and called him from my house.”

Because she lived across the street from a popular neighborhood bar, Niko had personal relationships with several of the women who would later end up mysteriously murdered. While sitting in Niko’s living room, many of the women would warn her about the notorious detective. But Niko had a mutual relationship that provided insight into Golubski’s dealings.

Niko’s older sister was also one of Golubski’s Girls.

Before her brutal murder in January 2000, 31-year-old Stacy Quinn was intimately familiar with Golubski, according to Niko. Stacy’s killer was caught and convicted, but according to Niko and the McIntyres’ suit, Golubski nor his fellow officers ever revealed that Golubski was in a “longtime sexual relationship with eyewitness Stacy Quinn.” Niko says she listened to her sister and the other women, despite their struggles with substance use disorder, when they repeatedly warned her about the notorious officer.

“I understood them because of my sister being out there,” Niko explained. “It was just a sickness that they had, and [they] got caught up in the wrong thing. I would sit there and talk to these women. And they were saying that this man is literally the devil. He’s the grim reaper. Don’t trust him.

“And one of the young ladies that I talked to—when we were talking about him—if you could see this woman’s eyes, Mike, it was like, she had just seen death in the face. And she told me that he started stopping her at 16. He would show up at our house and bring her food. She would call him, and he would bring food to her. And some women liked him because he paid good.”

I asked Niko if she was ever concerned for her own safety. She replied she always assumed Golubski harassed her because he wanted sex. “What do you mean?” I asked. “You spoke to Golubski after Lamonte McIntyre went to prison?”


“Oh Mike,” she sighed. “That man stalked me for 10 years.”

Perhaps the most frequent reaction I encounter about the Golubski story is: “But why isn’t he in jail?”

That the most powerful white people simply chose not to care about rape, corruption and dead bodies popping up everywhere is a disconcerting thought for most people. For me, their naive astonishment is the most astonishing part. It is stunning how many people can’t believe a thing like this can happen, even knowing that things like this have always happened. According to one report, police sexually assault at least 100 women every year. The most likely reason Golubski was never arrested is also the most unsettling:

Because his victims were Black women.

To understand how the most powerful people in Kansas City overlooked Roger Golubski’s alleged crimes, one only needs to read one woman’s relationship with the notorious Kansas City detective.

This story is about Jane Doe.

The Root obtained a transcript of a deposition with Jane Doe, who describes, in excruciating detail, multiple sexual assaults after the KCKPD served a search warrant on her home. In a Nov. 2020 deposition from the civil rights case, the woman recounts how Golubski ogled her 14-year old daughter the night of the search warrant. How he forced Jane Doe to have sex. How he returned about “once a week or once every two weeks” to sexually assault her. How she said, she considered biting Golubski’s sexual parts when he forced her to perform oral sex. How he told her that he would shoot her in the head if she did. How she eventually had a heart attack. But the most revealing part of this sworn deposition is how the woman recalls the aura of fear and intimidation.

Freudenberger: Did you let him know that you didn’t want this?

Jane Doe: Yes.

Freudenberger: How did you communicate that?

Jane Doe: I asked him to stop doing it, why are you keeping doing this.

Freudenberger: What did he say?

Jane Doe: He always just said, I can be a good friend of yours, I’m going to help you with your sons. He always said, each time he say he going to talk to the D.A,, [Jerome] Gorman.

Freudenberger: Were you ever fearful of what would happen if you didn’t cooperate?

Jane Doe: Yes. I thought he would do something to me.
Freudenberger: Did you ever complain to anyone?

Jane Doe: No. Who was I going to complain to?

Freudenberger: Did you ever tell Detective Golubski that you were thinking about complaining?

Jane Doe: Yes.

Freudenberger: Do you remember what he said?

Jane Doe: He told me he can have somebody do something to me and that they would never find me.

When asked if she told anyone about the abuse, the woman says she told her then-boyfriend and another KCKPD police officer, who never took steps to help her file a complaint. Twenty years later, while seeking legal help for her still-incarcerated sons, an attorney asked if Golubski had ever come on to her.

“And I said yes,” Jane Doe recounted during the deposition. “I didn’t use the word ‘rape,’ but I said he just took — I said this motherfucker came in my house and just took him some pussy and left.”

As with Rose Lee McIntyre and others, District Attorney Jerome Gorman never formally investigated the numerous allegations against Golubski. Luckily, the woman no longer had to worry about Gorman retaliating. In January 2018, the Topeka Capital-Journal reported that former District Attorney Jerome Gorman had been ousted from his position at the Kansas Department of Revenue. For months, Marc McCune, the Kansas Department of Revenue’s special agent in charge, told his superiors about Gorman’s sexual harassment and outright racism. “McCune shared with superiors in the revenue department both personal observations of Gorman and first-person accounts from other employees,” the Capital-Journal reported. “McCune also sent a memorandum outlining concerns about Gorman to the Department of Administration.”

For his efforts, McCune was fired.

But another curious part of the Jane Doe transcript may elucidate why Golubski was never charged with a crime. Her son’s cases were investigated by Golubski and another detective she only refers to as “Zeigler.”

In March 2019, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation revealed that Kansas City’s chief of police was the target of a criminal corruption probe. Three months later, the chief announced his retirement after 29 years with the KCKPD.

His name is Terry Ziegler.

Everybody Knows the Devil
“For years, there were credible allegations against KCK Police Detective Roger Golubski for extorting sex from black women in the community,” said former Mayor Mark Holland in a Facebook post. “Through his dubious testimony, Wyandotte County sent Lamonte McIntyre, a 17-year-old boy, to prison for 25 years for a crime he did not commit—paid for with taxpayer funds. The Gorman/Bryant DA’s office ignored the allegations, refusing to investigate for seven years. It was not until District Attorney Dupree was in office that the McIntyre case was investigated, and he was exonerated and freed.”

“[Golubski] was seen as this high-level person who could assist the police department,” said current Wyandotte County District Attorney Mark Dupree. “Quite frankly, I think history has shown that that was an absolute misunderstanding or clearly a perverted one.”

By the time Dupree was swept into office on a campaign of reform and change in 2017, Golubski had retired from the KCKPD with a full pension. After looking into McIntyre’s case, Dupree requested that the Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) open an investigation into Golubski. According to the Kansas City Star, the KBI began reviewing 6,000 pages of records and found…Well, no one knows. No report was ever released. It just died and went away.

In 2010, after working for the department for 35 years, Golubski went to work in nearby Edwardsville, where Tribue’s body had been found years earlier. Just before Lamonte was set to be released from prison, Golubski retired from the force, never having been charged with a crime.

“Per the City of Edwardsville Police Department policy, police department employees are not authorized to comment regarding any law enforcement incidents which did not occur within our jurisdiction,” said the Edwardsville Police Department in a statement about the civil rights complaint filed against Golubski. “We recognize the serious nature of these allegations, should they be true. Thus, we want to reassure Edwardsville citizens of our unwavering dedication to protecting the rights of all people and believe all people deserve impartial and effective service from our members. Moreover, we are committed to obedience of the law and demonstrating respect for the human dignity of all people in everything we do.”

But Edwardsville and the Kansas City Police Department have known about some of Golubski’s alleged misdeeds for more than 40 years. In May 1978, witnesses testified that Golubski hit 41-year-old Kenneth Borg with a nightstick during a call about a civil disturbance. Borg died in police custody from what an inquest called a “blow to the abdomen from a blunt object.” Golubski was later cleared when officers testified that Golubski hit Borg in the chest, not the abdomen.

In 1998, capital murder charges were dropped against Gentry Bolton when defense attorneys revealed that Golubski forced an eyewitness to falsely pin a convenience store murder on Bolton. According to a court filing from McIntyre’s attorneys, “Golubski coerced Irene Bradley to name Bolton as the customer’s killer by holding her in custody and refusing to let her leave until she made the false identification. Months later, an eyewitness told Golubski that Bolton was not the shooter, but Golubski suppressed the exculpatory statement from the prosecution and Bolton’s defense attorney. It came out only after the trial court ordered production of complete copies of the police file based on obvious Brady violations.”

“I knew that Roger seemed to like African Americans,” said the second of Golubski’s three wives in a sworn affidavit. “When I asked him one day why he was attracted to Black women, he replied: ‘Because they’re uneducated.’ I was stunned and very angry. I dealt with my hurt feelings by running up some big credit card bills.”

She later testified that Golubski paid someone to break into her house. When she called the authorities, the KCKPD sent its lead detective, Golubski, to investigate. In a sworn statement, she recalled an eerily familiar pattern, explaining:

“He stalked me for 10 years.”

This Neverending Story
This story is about Khadijah Hardaway.

While leading protests in the aftermath of George Floyd’s death, Hardaway began organizing a quest for justice in her own community. After discovering the rampant corruption in Wyandotte County, Hardaway and members of Justice for Wyandotte decided they wanted to go after the biggest fish of all.

“This man is worse than Derek Chauvin,” Hardaway told The Root, referring to Golubski. “And we don’t know how many Lamonte McIntyres are behind bars.”

Hardaway eventually quit her job to pursue this cause full-time. She helped forge a relationship with Broadway Church, a local congregation that wanted to do something substantial in the social justice arena. The Sister Circle and Justice for Wyandotte have reached out to victims of Golubski and other community members whose lives have been ruined by the criminal justice system in Wyandotte County.

In 2020, Hardaway and other activists convinced 27 Kansas legislators and 16 social justice organizations to sign a letter requesting a real KBI investigation. The bureau responded by turning the investigation over to the FBI, stating that it “found no evidence of any violation of Kansas law that is within the statute of limitations. However, during the course of our investigation, information related to possible federal violations was shared with federal authorities for their consideration and possible action.” The Federal Bureau of Investigation has confirmed its investigation.

On March 3, 2020, U.S. District Judge Kathryn Vratil denied the protection of qualified immunity to Golubski, the Wyandotte County Unified Government and Kansas City, paving the way for the Lamonte and Rose McIntyre’s civil rights suit.

But Justice for Wyandotte is not done.

They are currently working to free John Keith Calvin, who is in the 20th year of a life sentence for a murder he says he didn’t commit. Another man has confessed to the killing. “I feel bad,” said Melvin White. “I should be doing the time, not him. I’m the one who pulled the trigger. He didn’t know anything about it.” There are numerous connections to Lamonte McIntyre’s case; he and Calvin were incarcerated together, and McIntyre even cut Calvin’s hair in prison. Calvin’s sister, Rose, was found strangled on July 21, 1996.

She was one of Golubski’s Girls.

Justice for Wyandotte has demanded Calvin’s release, as well as for prosecutors to indict Golubski and review every case in which Golubski or Morehead was involved. Mark Dupree has opened a Conviction Integrity Unit in Wyandotte County but notes that he doesn’t have the manpower or the resources to review every case Golubski handled. Now called the “Community Integrity Unit,” recent charges of racism and discrimination left the commission with no members.

Everyone in Kansas City who could have stopped Golubski has been charged with misconduct. Jerome Gorman, the prosecutor, was ousted for sexual misconduct and racism. When the KBI finished their investigation of Terry Ziegler, Golubski’s former partner who became police chief, they forwarded the results to the Wyandotte County District Attorney’s Office, who has not filed charges...yet. In March, the U.S. Department of Justice removed Morehead from criminal cases after she was accused of multiple instances of prosecutorial misconduct. On May 10, U.S. District Judge Jay Crabtree accused Morehead of misconduct again, saying she hid evidence in a federal drug and counterfeiting case.

But this story is not about Zeigler, Morehead, Golubski or justice or Wyandotte County.

This story is about the most disrespected, unprotected, neglected person in America. But...

It is mostly about us.


Where are the good police officers everyone keeps talking about when you need them?

My Cuban Cousin is a good Police Officer Cop, I have Posted about him a few times.
I once tried to K Me. Posted It and Reported. Locked by Mods. I am Autistic accounts for Repetitive Nature. I am Very Civil and Respectful to all on NS and off NS. My Opinions Are Not Bad Opinions No Ones Opinions Are Bad Opinons. We are on NS, to share, discuss, argue, disagree, on Trump, elections, Republicans, Democrats, Socialists, Libertarians and whatevers, with respect. This Respect Is Given It Is Not Earned, This Respect Is Called Freedom of Expression and Democracy. This Man Always Says What He Means, I Am The Real Thing. I Make Ted Cruz look like a Leftist. I have been on NS For over 10 Years with a Perfect Record of No Baiting, Trolling, Flaming, or Using Foul Language. I Am Very Proud of It and Wish To Keep My Record Clean. But I Am Not The Only One On NS. GMS. I'm Based.

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Atheris
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Postby Atheris » Fri May 28, 2021 11:57 am

Greater Miami Shores wrote:
Borderlands of Rojava wrote:
Where are the good police officers everyone keeps talking about when you need them?

My Cuban Cousin is a good Police Officer Cop, I have Posted about him a few times.

Cool. He's one in a system of... *checks papers*

Almost 700,000.

Yeah, gonna have to try harder than that.
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Vassenor
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Postby Vassenor » Fri May 28, 2021 12:01 pm

Greater Miami Shores wrote:
Borderlands of Rojava wrote:
Where are the good police officers everyone keeps talking about when you need them?

My Cuban Cousin is a good Police Officer Cop, I have Posted about him a few times.


And what has he done to report on and correct the behaviour of the Bad Cops?
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Salus Maior
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Postby Salus Maior » Fri May 28, 2021 12:02 pm

Vassenor wrote:
Greater Miami Shores wrote:My Cuban Cousin is a good Police Officer Cop, I have Posted about him a few times.


And what has he done to report on and correct the behaviour of the Bad Cops?


There's no reason to dunk on GMS's cousin, even if you're not a fan of GMS.

Also, I doubt he'd know the answer to that question.
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"In any case we clearly see....That some opportune remedy must be found quickly for the misery and wretchedness pressing so unjustly on the majority of the working class...it has come to pass that working men have been surrendered, isolated and helpless, to the hardheartedness of employers and the greed of unchecked competition." -Pope Leo XIII, Rerum Novarum

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Greater Miami Shores
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Postby Greater Miami Shores » Fri May 28, 2021 12:14 pm

Salus Maior wrote:
Vassenor wrote:
And what has he done to report on and correct the behaviour of the Bad Cops?


There's no reason to dunk on GMS's cousin, even if you're not a fan of GMS.

Also, I doubt he'd know the answer to that question.

Thank You My Friend for defending me and my Good Cuban Cousin Police Officer Cop. I will add you to my GMS Friends list, I have 17 and now 18 so far, I know it is a shock especially too me. But of course I know about good Cops like my Cuban Cousin Cop, I have over 18 thousand so far on my GMS enemies list, I am not shocked.
Last edited by Greater Miami Shores on Fri May 28, 2021 12:16 pm, edited 2 times in total.
I once tried to K Me. Posted It and Reported. Locked by Mods. I am Autistic accounts for Repetitive Nature. I am Very Civil and Respectful to all on NS and off NS. My Opinions Are Not Bad Opinions No Ones Opinions Are Bad Opinons. We are on NS, to share, discuss, argue, disagree, on Trump, elections, Republicans, Democrats, Socialists, Libertarians and whatevers, with respect. This Respect Is Given It Is Not Earned, This Respect Is Called Freedom of Expression and Democracy. This Man Always Says What He Means, I Am The Real Thing. I Make Ted Cruz look like a Leftist. I have been on NS For over 10 Years with a Perfect Record of No Baiting, Trolling, Flaming, or Using Foul Language. I Am Very Proud of It and Wish To Keep My Record Clean. But I Am Not The Only One On NS. GMS. I'm Based.

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Vassenor
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Postby Vassenor » Fri May 28, 2021 12:15 pm

Salus Maior wrote:
Vassenor wrote:
And what has he done to report on and correct the behaviour of the Bad Cops?


There's no reason to dunk on GMS's cousin, even if you're not a fan of GMS.

Also, I doubt he'd know the answer to that question.


Just saying. Complicit is not "good".
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Greater Miami Shores
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Postby Greater Miami Shores » Fri May 28, 2021 12:20 pm

Vassenor wrote:
Salus Maior wrote:
There's no reason to dunk on GMS's cousin, even if you're not a fan of GMS.

Also, I doubt he'd know the answer to that question.


Just saying. Complicit is not "good".

I GMS and My Good Cuban Cousin Police Officer Cop, are not complicit in anything. All My Family and Friends even the White Euro Americans in the Family are, Proud Republican Trump Cultists, Proud Republican Trump Supporters, Pro USA, USA, USA, American Nationalist Patriot Citizens of the USA, America First, USA, USA, USA, with Pride and Honor, for one of the 3 Greatest American Presidents ever of the USA, with Pride and Honor. I Rest My Case, I Rest Our Case.
Last edited by Greater Miami Shores on Fri May 28, 2021 12:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I once tried to K Me. Posted It and Reported. Locked by Mods. I am Autistic accounts for Repetitive Nature. I am Very Civil and Respectful to all on NS and off NS. My Opinions Are Not Bad Opinions No Ones Opinions Are Bad Opinons. We are on NS, to share, discuss, argue, disagree, on Trump, elections, Republicans, Democrats, Socialists, Libertarians and whatevers, with respect. This Respect Is Given It Is Not Earned, This Respect Is Called Freedom of Expression and Democracy. This Man Always Says What He Means, I Am The Real Thing. I Make Ted Cruz look like a Leftist. I have been on NS For over 10 Years with a Perfect Record of No Baiting, Trolling, Flaming, or Using Foul Language. I Am Very Proud of It and Wish To Keep My Record Clean. But I Am Not The Only One On NS. GMS. I'm Based.

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The Lone Alliance
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Postby The Lone Alliance » Fri May 28, 2021 4:54 pm

Kowani wrote:SNIP[/spoiler]

I don't see how this article takes the story about a man creating a criminal empire from within the police force for his own personal gain and power to being a story about "State sponsored Terrorism". The article is kind of confusing to read.

Still pretty sad that all that happened.

Borderlands of Rojava wrote:
Where are the good police officers everyone keeps talking about when you need them?

Seeing how this guy had a network, it's pretty easy to see why they wouldn't. They'll find themselves arrested and charged because SOMEHOW, several Kilos of Cocaine ended up in their police locker. And then who would believe the words of "Officer Drug Dealer"?
Last edited by The Lone Alliance on Fri May 28, 2021 5:56 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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--------------
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Saiwania
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Postby Saiwania » Fri May 28, 2021 5:43 pm

Vassenor wrote:And what has he done to report on and correct the behaviour of the Bad Cops?


Its not their problem or obligation, if they don't work for internal affairs or a superior agency that's allowed to investigate the conduct of a police department.
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Atheris
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Postby Atheris » Fri May 28, 2021 5:45 pm

Saiwania wrote:
Vassenor wrote:And what has he done to report on and correct the behaviour of the Bad Cops?


Its not their problem or obligation, if they don't work for internal affairs or a superior agency that's allowed to investigate the conduct of a police department.

"It's not the obligation of members of an institution being infested with white supremacy, racism, and civil oppression to help fight back against said white supremacy, racism and civil oppression"
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Saiwania
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Postby Saiwania » Fri May 28, 2021 5:50 pm

Atheris wrote:"It's not the obligation of members of an institution being infested with white supremacy, racism, and civil oppression to help fight back against said white supremacy, racism and civil oppression"


No, it really isn't. It is perhaps best left to the politicians or activists.

What a police department cares about is if an officer of theirs can continue to write tickets or participate in any enforcement actions that're more lucrative such as seizing illegal drugs. What the common citizen cares about is if the officer can be there to respond to incidents that happen that'd effect them such as recovering stolen goods or finding whoever did what.
Last edited by Saiwania on Fri May 28, 2021 5:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Atheris
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Postby Atheris » Fri May 28, 2021 5:57 pm

Saiwania wrote:
Atheris wrote:"It's not the obligation of members of an institution being infested with white supremacy, racism, and civil oppression to help fight back against said white supremacy, racism and civil oppression"


No, it really isn't. It is perhaps best left to the politicians or activists.

What a police department cares about is if an officer of theirs can continue to write tickets or participate in any enforcement actions that're more lucrative such as seizing illegal drugs. What the common citizen cares about is if the officer can be there to respond to incidents that happen that'd effect them such as recovering stolen goods or finding whoever did what.

"It wasn't the obligation of the Weimar Government to fight against Hitler!"
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Conservative Republic Of Huang
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Ex-Nation

Postby Conservative Republic Of Huang » Fri May 28, 2021 6:03 pm

Atheris wrote:
Saiwania wrote:
No, it really isn't. It is perhaps best left to the politicians or activists.

What a police department cares about is if an officer of theirs can continue to write tickets or participate in any enforcement actions that're more lucrative such as seizing illegal drugs. What the common citizen cares about is if the officer can be there to respond to incidents that happen that'd effect them such as recovering stolen goods or finding whoever did what.

"It wasn't the obligation of the Weimar Government to fight against Hitler!"

If I may answer for him:
Saiwania wrote:I know the NSDAP did a ton of bad stuff, but their system and what they accomplished for Germany when WW2 went well for them still impresses me greatly. I focus on what a grand state they had Germany in from 1933 until 1940 or so, instead of putting forth my attentions on the people boo-hooing about how they didn't benefit from that regime or had to flee or whatever else happened back then.
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Atheris
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Postby Atheris » Fri May 28, 2021 6:05 pm

Conservative Republic Of Huang wrote:
Atheris wrote:"It wasn't the obligation of the Weimar Government to fight against Hitler!"

If I may answer for him:
Saiwania wrote:I know the NSDAP did a ton of bad stuff, but their system and what they accomplished for Germany when WW2 went well for them still impresses me greatly. I focus on what a grand state they had Germany in from 1933 until 1940 or so, instead of putting forth my attentions on the people boo-hooing about how they didn't benefit from that regime or had to flee or whatever else happened back then.

Oh right, I forgot he knows absolutely nothing about the Nazi regime.
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Saiwania
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Founded: Jun 30, 2008
Ex-Nation

Postby Saiwania » Fri May 28, 2021 6:41 pm

Atheris wrote:"It wasn't the obligation of the Weimar Government to fight against Hitler!"


It technically was, but not until after Hitler and his political movement was an illegal threat to the Weimar government's hold on power.

Most of the people who complain about police, probably can't do any better job at it were they given the role. Its just a government job at the end of the day. The rank and file aren't to solve the entire community's problems and so forth. Their role is supposed to be narrowly enough defined whilst encompassing doing what they need to.
Last edited by Saiwania on Fri May 28, 2021 6:44 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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Kowani
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Democratic Socialists

Postby Kowani » Fri May 28, 2021 11:38 pm

Florida police sergeant German Bosque fired after conspiring to cover for a colleague who failed to secure a crime scene— the seventh time he's been fired for misconduct and criminal behavior

A Florida police sergeant has been fired after allegedly conspiring to cover for a colleague who failed to secure an October crime scene—marking the seventh time the lawman has been terminated for misconduct and criminal behavior, officials said Friday.

The City of Opa-Locka terminated the employment of Sgt. German Bosque this week after an internal review found he “engaged a subordinate officer to create a false police report and failed to secure a firearm at a crime scene” last October, City Manager John Pate told The Daily Beast. After the officer discovered the gun was missing—and replaced it with a phony plastic version—Bosque was caught on a body camera yelling at his subordinate, who appeared to have failed to secure the scene, before coaching him on how to conceal the truth. "A Florida police sergeant has been fired after allegedly conspiring to cover for a colleague who failed to secure an October crime scene—marking the seventh time the lawman has been terminated for misconduct and criminal behavior, officials said Friday.

The City of Opa-Locka terminated the employment of Sgt. German Bosque this week after an internal review found he “engaged a subordinate officer to create a false police report and failed to secure a firearm at a crime scene” last October, City Manager John Pate told The Daily Beast. After the officer discovered the gun was missing—and replaced it with a phony plastic version—Bosque was caught on a body camera yelling at his subordinate, who appeared to have failed to secure the scene, before coaching him on how to conceal the truth. The firing marks the seventh time Bosque, once dubbed “Florida’s Worst Cop,” has been fired during his 28-year career at the Opa-Locka Police Department—with alleged violations ranging from excessive force, stealing from suspects, and misuse of police firearms. He has also been arrested and cleared three times.

The countless misconduct claims have earned Bosque state-wide attention, including a 2011 exposé by the Sarasota Herald-Tribune that stated his personnel file was more like “a rap sheet than a résumé.” The bombshell report detailed more than 40 internal affairs complaints against the sergeant—noting that 16 were for excessive force or battery. Most recently, Bosque was found guilty of false imprisonment and witness-tampering in 2014 after he allegedly illegally handcuffed a man trying to file a complaint against him. While he was sentenced to 364 days in jail, he did not serve any time.

In 2016, a Miami-Dade appeals court overturned the witness-tampering conviction after a judge ruled prosecutors failed to turn over police records to Bosque’s defense during his June 2014 trial. A State Attorney’s Office declined to re-try Bosque and an arbitrator eventually awarded his job back in 2018.

Bosque declined The Daily Beast’s request for comment.

Pate said the decision to terminate Bosque again stems from an Oct. 15, 2020, incident in which officers were dispatched to a home after reports of an abandoned firearm. The night before, the Miami-Dade Police Department tried to apprehend an armed felon—and the gun was believed to be a part of that incident.

“Upon arriving on the scene, the primary officer located the firearm and notified dispatch and his supervisor, Sgt. Bosque,” Pate said in a statement. “During the course of the investigation, the officer left the firearm unattended and contacted Sgt. Bosque, who had left the scene.”

When Bosque realized that the gun had been stolen, Pate says he “immediately began coaching the primary officer with a false narrative clearly intended to cover up the truth.”

According to body-camera footage obtained by the Miami Herald, Bosque can be heard going through the cover-up story they planned to tell their colleagues, asking “What do we tell them you went to get in the car?”

“I went to check the call log and see if we could pull a case number,” the officer said, according to the outlet.

“No, something else. Anything else? You thought it was going to rain and you came to get a tarp...You were going to cover it with a tarp or something; you didn’t want it to get wet,” Bosque responded.

Bosque is then shown telling another cop about the incident, stating that the officer called him “five minutes ago” about the gun being “switched out” and replaced with a “fucking pellet gun or something.” “I’ve been here over 25 years, it’s fucking embarrassing of course,” Bosque is heard saying in the video.

The city says that by creating this false narrative, “Bosque failed in his supervisory duties by not effectively addressing the mistake of the primary officer’s failure to secure the firearm when he originally located it” and engaged in “corrupt acts.” Bosque and the officer also didn’t attempt to find the missing gun—thus putting the community and his colleagues in danger.

Axelrad told The Daily Beast he believes his client wasn’t trying to cover up anything, but simply “astounded that something so foolish could have occurred when the only job of the officer assigned was to babysit a gun until the detectives from another agency arrived.”

“Bosque did present potential reasons why the officer may have gone to his car, abandoning his assigned post. In no way was this intended to cover up the incident, but to try to determine if there were an acceptable reason for the officer to have abandoned his post,” Axelrad said Friday, noting that when the officer made it clear he had abandoned his post, all reports about the incident were factual. “There was never a direct or even implied order to do anything but tell the truth. Bosque was just trying to determine what the truth was when he first got to the scene, which is routine in police work.”

The lawyer also said that the officer who was responsible for losing the gun was only given a reprimand while his client has been terminated—a fact he believes is the result of the city not upholding basic due process.

“As to this being his seventh termination, each case needs to be looked at individually. The number is certainly high, but that is only because each case was so weak that a termination could not possibly have been sustained,” Axelrad said. “This does not mean an officer can’t have a stellar career and does something so egregious that they are terminated for a first offense. That certainly happens, and good cops, which are 99 percent do not want to work with bad.”

He added that while an officer like Bosque “can appear to be problematic,” it is the “police administration’s conducting improper investigations” and its “lack of integrity” that drives that conclusion.

“With Bosque, it gets progressively worse, where at this point he would be terminated for the most minor of allegations, even if the underlying minor violation can’t be proven,” Axelrad added.

Pate, however, notes that any “reasonable person would believe that this record of criminal and official misconduct would be sufficient to prevent any individual from ever being a police officer having the power to adversely impact the lives of citizens in our community much as we have seen in the news lately.”

“Unfortunately, the powerful police unions and employment arbitrators who sit in judgment of these cases have put Sgt. Bosque back to work as a police officer every time,” he said, adding that this power denies the city’s ability to punish “to correct and punish a bad cop who tarnishes the badge.”

The city manager insisted that Bosque was given proper due process during the internal investigation and that officials heard his side of the story before making their termination recommendation.

Axelrad, however, believes Bosque will wear his Oka-Locka police uniform again.

“I fully anticipate that an independent arbitrator will reinstate him to police sergeant,” he said.
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Borderlands of Rojava
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Founded: Jul 27, 2020
Ex-Nation

Postby Borderlands of Rojava » Sat May 29, 2021 5:39 am

Saiwania wrote:
Atheris wrote:"It wasn't the obligation of the Weimar Government to fight against Hitler!"


It technically was, but not until after Hitler and his political movement was an illegal threat to the Weimar government's hold on power.

Most of the people who complain about police, probably can't do any better job at it were they given the role. Its just a government job at the end of the day. The rank and file aren't to solve the entire community's problems and so forth. Their role is supposed to be narrowly enough defined whilst encompassing doing what they need to.


I'm fairly certain i could do the job without shooting an unarmed 9 year old or someone's dog.
Leftist, commie and Antifa Guy. Democratic Confederalist, Anti-racist

"The devil is out there. Hiding behind every corner and in every nook and cranny. In all of the dives, all over the city. Before you lays an entire world of enemies, and at day's end when the chips are down, we're a society of strangers. You cant walk by someone on the street anymore without crossing the road to get away from their stare. Welcome to the Twilight Zone. The land of plague and shadow. Nothing innocent survives this world. If it can't corrupt you, it'll kill you."

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Borderlands of Rojava
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Founded: Jul 27, 2020
Ex-Nation

Postby Borderlands of Rojava » Sat May 29, 2021 5:42 am

Greater Miami Shores wrote:
Vassenor wrote:
Just saying. Complicit is not "good".

I GMS and My Good Cuban Cousin Police Officer Cop, are not complicit in anything. All My Family and Friends even the White Euro Americans in the Family are, Proud Republican Trump Cultists, Proud Republican Trump Supporters, Pro USA, USA, USA, American Nationalist Patriot Citizens of the USA, America First, USA, USA, USA, with Pride and Honor, for one of the 3 Greatest American Presidents ever of the USA, with Pride and Honor. I Rest My Case, I Rest Our Case.


First off trump was the worst US president and second off, if your cousin works in the Miami, Miami Gardens, Orlando, Jacksonville, or Fort Lauderdale police or the Broward County Sheriffs Department, he's probably working alongside some bad dudes GMS.
Leftist, commie and Antifa Guy. Democratic Confederalist, Anti-racist

"The devil is out there. Hiding behind every corner and in every nook and cranny. In all of the dives, all over the city. Before you lays an entire world of enemies, and at day's end when the chips are down, we're a society of strangers. You cant walk by someone on the street anymore without crossing the road to get away from their stare. Welcome to the Twilight Zone. The land of plague and shadow. Nothing innocent survives this world. If it can't corrupt you, it'll kill you."

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