Captain Michael Gorhum, who served for 25 years with the San Antonio Police Department in Texas, was named as one of the suicide victims.
And at a press conference on Monday,
Canadian police confirmed a second suicide of a person also believed to
have been using the extramarital affairs website.
Police are investigating if the deaths are as a direct result of the leak of Ashley Madison users.
The website has now offered a $500,000 bounty to anyone who names the hackers and helps police secure a conviction against them.
The death of Capt Gorhum in San
Antonio, Texas, came just days after his official email address was
linked to an Ashley Madison account.
One of his colleagues posted a moving tribute on Facebook, saying:
Rest in Peace Captain Mike Gorhum. You truly are one of the guys I've most respected in my Law Enforcement Career, no task too big, no goal too loafty.
'Never met a stranger, never backed down, always had your partner's back or, when you were in charge, your Officer's back. Whatever it was, I wish one of us could have reached you, could have told you, "regardless, it will be OK".
'Love you Mike. This is a hard day. God bless you, and your Family and the Department.'
The San Antonio Police Department
announced Cpt Gorhum's death on Thursday afternoon, stating that he
oversaw the San Antonio Regional Intelligence Center (SARIC) Unit.
His was one of three San Antonio
city official email addresses which were leaked as part of the Ashley
Madison, San Antonio Express news reports.
Two of the email accounts are
reportedly linked to members of the SAPD - the late Capt. Gorhum, and a
detective - but Ashley Madison does not verify email addresses, so it is
possible to use the site with someone else's email.
San Antonio city officials say that
as a result of this, they 'cannot confirm whether these (two) addresses
were legitimately used to access the site', adding that Ashley Madison
is blocked on City officials' computers.
Hackers released a cache of data
about 37million Ashley Madison members, some of whom were using email
addresses of U.S. government officials, UK civil servants, and European
and North American corporations.
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