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Fugitive ex-cop arrested 4 months after skipping Tampa trial in fatal DUI

Fugitive ex-cop arrested 4 months after skipping Tampa trial in fatal DUI

Yahooa day ago
TAMPA — Joshua Roelofs, the former cop who skipped town last spring rather than face trial on charges that he caused a fatal drunk-driving crash on the Courtney Campbell Causeway, is back in jail.
Roelofs, 36, was arrested Tuesday after living four months as a fugitive. He was booked a little before midnight in Hillsborough County's Orient Road Jail.
Details about when and where Roelofs was located could not immediately be confirmed. The U.S. Marshals Service and the Tampa Police Department did not immediately respond to inquiries late Tuesday about the case.
Jail booking records list Roelofs' arrest location as a terminal at Miami International Airport, an indication that he may have been taken into custody overseas before being brought back to the U.S.
Roelofs is charged with two counts of DUI manslaughter related to the April 2022 deaths of Ricky Gongora and Kris Koroly. The pair were friends who'd worked together at the Salt Cracker Fish Camp on Clearwater Beach.
'We've just been crying happy tears,' Gongora's sister, Victoria Negrete, said late Tuesday. 'It's been a three-plus-year nightmare for our families.'
Prosecutors say Roelofs was the driver of a Nissan GT-R sports car that slammed into the back of a Kia Sorrento SUV early the morning of April 12, 2022, while heading east along the Causeway. The car was determined to have been moving at more than 100 mph.
Koroly and Gongora were both thrown to the pavement as the SUV overturned. The other driver, William Camacho, was severely injured and remains permanently disabled. His girlfriend, Jessica Perez Ruiz, was also injured but recovered.
A medical test pegged Roelofs' blood alcohol content at .069 about five hours after the collision, according to court records. Investigators concluded he was likely well-above the .08 limit at which state law presumes impairment when the crash occurred.
Receipts presented as evidence in court showed he'd paid for several vodka-based drinks in the hours before the crash at Yard of Ale and Park & Rec in downtown St. Petersburg.
Roelofs worked for about five years as a Polk County sheriff's deputy. He was fired in 2015 after his superiors accused him of filing inaccurate time records to receive extra pay. In the years thereafter, he worked in several businesses, including a solar energy company.
He quickly posted bonds after his 2022 arrest and got out of jail. He'd attended all court hearings as he tried to fight the charges against him.
In April, after legal efforts to suppress some of the evidence in his case failed, it was anticipated that Roelofs would plead guilty and let a judge decide a sentence. But then he disappeared.
Now that he's back in jail, it is unclear whether Roelofs is still poised for a guilty plea or if he will try to contest the case in a trial. Whatever the outcome, his jaunt away virtually ensures he will remain incarcerated until the case concludes.
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Ex-cop skips DUI manslaughter trial and is caught at Colombian hotel, FL cops say
Ex-cop skips DUI manslaughter trial and is caught at Colombian hotel, FL cops say

Miami Herald

time17 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Ex-cop skips DUI manslaughter trial and is caught at Colombian hotel, FL cops say

A former deputy accused of killing two people in a crash fled the country as his trial was set to begin and went on the run for four months, authorities in Florida said. Law enforcement tracked 36-year-old Joshua Roelofs to a hotel in Colombia, where local authorities arrested him, and now he's back in custody in Florida, the Tampa Police Department announced Aug. 20. Roelofs, a former deputy with the Polk County Sheriff's Office, was expected to stand trial just over three years after he was accused of crashing into an SUV while under the influence, killing Kristopher Koroly and Ricky Gongora, according to court records and news outlets. According to the Tampa Police Department, Roelofs was driving approximately 100 mph on the Courtney Campbell Causeway on April 13, 2022, when he rear-ended a Kia Sorento, WTSP reported. Police said the Kia rolled, and the four occupants were thrown from the car, according to WFTS. None of them were wearing seatbelts, the outlet reported. Roelofs was charged with two counts each of DUI manslaughter and DUI with serious bodily injury, and he bonded out after his arrest. Records show his trial was scheduled to begin April 21, but he didn't show. Law enforcement said they began looking for him immediately and figured out he fled to Colombia. 'On August 11, the U.S. Marshals Task Force provided crucial intelligence to Colombian authorities, pinpointing Roelofs' location at the Finca Rivendell Paradise Girardota hotel in Antioquia, Colombia,' Tampa police said. 'Acting swiftly, Colombian officials responded to the location and took Roelofs into custody without incident.' Colombian authorities escorted Roelofs on a flight to Miami International Airport, where officers with TPD's Fugitive Apprehension Unit took him into custody on Aug. 19, according to law enforcement. Roelofs worked at the Polk County Sheriff's Office from 2010 until he was fired in 2015, the agency confirmed. He's being held without bond in Hillsborough County jail.

Fugitive ex-cop arrested 4 months after skipping Tampa trial in fatal DUI
Fugitive ex-cop arrested 4 months after skipping Tampa trial in fatal DUI

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Fugitive ex-cop arrested 4 months after skipping Tampa trial in fatal DUI

TAMPA — Joshua Roelofs, the former cop who skipped town last spring rather than face trial on charges that he caused a fatal drunk-driving crash on the Courtney Campbell Causeway, is back in jail. Roelofs, 36, was arrested Tuesday after living four months as a fugitive. He was booked a little before midnight in Hillsborough County's Orient Road Jail. Details about when and where Roelofs was located could not immediately be confirmed. The U.S. Marshals Service and the Tampa Police Department did not immediately respond to inquiries late Tuesday about the case. Jail booking records list Roelofs' arrest location as a terminal at Miami International Airport, an indication that he may have been taken into custody overseas before being brought back to the U.S. Roelofs is charged with two counts of DUI manslaughter related to the April 2022 deaths of Ricky Gongora and Kris Koroly. The pair were friends who'd worked together at the Salt Cracker Fish Camp on Clearwater Beach. 'We've just been crying happy tears,' Gongora's sister, Victoria Negrete, said late Tuesday. 'It's been a three-plus-year nightmare for our families.' Prosecutors say Roelofs was the driver of a Nissan GT-R sports car that slammed into the back of a Kia Sorrento SUV early the morning of April 12, 2022, while heading east along the Causeway. The car was determined to have been moving at more than 100 mph. Koroly and Gongora were both thrown to the pavement as the SUV overturned. The other driver, William Camacho, was severely injured and remains permanently disabled. His girlfriend, Jessica Perez Ruiz, was also injured but recovered. A medical test pegged Roelofs' blood alcohol content at .069 about five hours after the collision, according to court records. Investigators concluded he was likely well-above the .08 limit at which state law presumes impairment when the crash occurred. Receipts presented as evidence in court showed he'd paid for several vodka-based drinks in the hours before the crash at Yard of Ale and Park & Rec in downtown St. Petersburg. Roelofs worked for about five years as a Polk County sheriff's deputy. He was fired in 2015 after his superiors accused him of filing inaccurate time records to receive extra pay. In the years thereafter, he worked in several businesses, including a solar energy company. He quickly posted bonds after his 2022 arrest and got out of jail. He'd attended all court hearings as he tried to fight the charges against him. In April, after legal efforts to suppress some of the evidence in his case failed, it was anticipated that Roelofs would plead guilty and let a judge decide a sentence. But then he disappeared. Now that he's back in jail, it is unclear whether Roelofs is still poised for a guilty plea or if he will try to contest the case in a trial. Whatever the outcome, his jaunt away virtually ensures he will remain incarcerated until the case concludes.

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