A judge on June 25 officially closed the case against Point Loma murderer Henry Lisowski after the man committed suicide in jail before he could be sentenced for killing his wife, Rosa Lisowski. A death certificate was formally provided to the court to bring the case to an end. Henry Lisowski, 69, took an overdose of two antidepressants, according to coroner’s officials. His body was discovered around 4 a.m. on March 25 in his cell at the Vista Detention Facility. He was pronounced dead about 45 minutes later, according to the certificate presented to San Diego Superior Court Judge John Einhorn. A jury found Henry Lisowski guilty March 2 of first-degree murder with a special circumstance of murder for financial gain. The body of Rosa Lisowski, 50, of Ocean Beach, was never found, but she was believed to have died on March 24, 2008. She was last seen walking her young son to Barnard Elementary School that day. Henry Lisowski never testified in court but he wrote a letter to several people before his arrest, saying his wife died accidentally when she slipped and hit her head on his porch. Henry Lisowski said he put Rosa’s body in a dumpster because he didn’t think anyone would believe Rosa’s death was an accident. That letter was used as evidence against him in the trial. His suicide came about a week before he was to have been sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Prior to the murder, Rosa and Henry Lisowski were estranged and engaged in a bitter custody battle. The couple’s two sons are now living with relatives.