CHICAGO, United States 鈥 A US pastor committed suicide six days after his name was exposed by hackers of the Ashley Madison adultery website, his wife told CNN Wednesday.
Canadian police have said that at least two suicides were linked to the leak of 32 million customer profiles from the Canada-based site last month. It鈥檚 not clear if John Gibson鈥檚 death was one of them as police released no details.
Christi Gibson discovered her husband鈥檚 body 鈥 and a suicide note which chronicled his demons and his shame at being exposed 鈥 in their New Orleans home on August 24.
鈥淗e talked about depression. He talked about having his name on there, and he said he was just very, very sorry,鈥 Gibson said as their adult son and daughter sat next to her in a New Orleans studio.
鈥淣othing is worth the loss of a father and a husband and a friend. It just didn鈥檛 merit it. It didn鈥檛 merit it at all.鈥
In addition to his work as a pastor, Gibson, 56, taught at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.
Gibson said her husband, who had struggled with depression and addiction in the past, was worried that he would lose his job.
鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 so bad that we wouldn鈥檛 have forgiven it, and so many people have said that to us, but for John, it carried such a shame,鈥 she told CNN.
鈥淲hat we know about him is that he poured his life into other people, and he offered grace and mercy and forgiveness to everyone else, but somehow he couldn鈥檛 extend that to himself.鈥
鈥楬ave an affair鈥
Ashley Madison, launched in 2001, is known for its slogan: 鈥淟ife is short. Have an affair.鈥 It helps connect people seeking to have extramarital relationships and is owned by Avid Life Media.
According to authorities, the company became aware of the hack on July 12 when staff were greeted in the morning with a message on their computers threatening to leak client information unless the Ashley Madison website was 鈥渟hut down immediately, permanently.鈥
The message was accompanied by rockers AC/DC鈥檚 song 鈥淭hunderstruck.鈥
Ashley Madison ran into more trouble when tech news site Gizmodo looked at the leaked data and concluded that it showed little if any activity from the site鈥檚 purported female members, suggesting many accounts were in fact fake.
Avid Life Media rejected the analysis and said the site has registered hundreds of thousands of new members 鈥 including real women 鈥 in the wake of the hack, which has garnered massive media attention.
Tributes to Gibson poured in from students and faculty who remembered him as a kind, generous man who would repair student鈥檚 vehicles in his spare time.
鈥淛ohn was a popular member of our Leavell College faculty,鈥 seminary president Chuck Kelley said in an obituary posted on the school鈥檚 blog.
鈥淗e was particularly known for his acts of kindness to the seminary family. John was the quintessential good neighbor.鈥
His son alluded to Gibson鈥檚 troubles at an August 28 memorial service.
鈥淢y dad was a great man. He was a great man with struggles. Everyone has struggles. Everyone is broken,鈥 Trey Gibson said in a video of the service posted online.
Students and former classmates took to the seminary鈥檚 Facebook page to mourn his loss.
鈥淎mazing man and teacher. I do not hold anything against you, Dr. Gibson. We all have shortcomings,鈥 wrote Robbie Combs.
鈥淗oping the very grace and mercy and forgiveness he taught of with such vigor will comfort his family and all who knew him,鈥 wrote Dore Atwill Kesterson.
Gibson, whose wife Christi is also a minister, comes from a long line of Baptist ministers.
He was pastor of First Southern Baptist Church in Pearlington, Mississippi 鈥 about a 45 minute drive from his home on the seminary grounds.
He obtained a doctorate of theology from the seminary and was elected to the faculty in 1998, the obituary said. CB