Gilgo Beach murders: Suspect pleads guilty in Long Island serial killings

MoeW

OG

A New York City architect has been arrested in connection with the Gilgo Beach murders, a series of killings of mostly young women that confounded investigators on Long Island for more than a decade, police said Friday.

Rex Heuermann, 59, was arrested Thursday evening at his Manhattan office and was expected to be arraigned Friday afternoon on three counts of first-degree murder and three counts of second-degree murder, according to a bail application obtained by NBC News.

“We anticipate an indictment later on this afternoon,” said Suffolk County Police Commissioner Rodney K. Harrison. His agency and the Suffolk County district attorney are leading the investigation.

Heuermann, who lives in Massapequa in neighboring Nassau County, had recently searched online "for sadistic materials, child pornography, images of the victims and their relatives," the application stated.

The suspect had also tracked down articles on the special task force made up of federal, state and local investigators that was searching for the person responsible for the unsolved murders, the application stated.

The sister of Shannan Gilbert, whose missing case set off the search that led to the victims' remains, said she was "relieved that they finally caught him."

"It’s been a long time coming & I never gave up hope that one day justice would be served," Sherre Gilbert said in an email to NBC News. "I’m just happy it happened sooner rather than later. The suspect (Rex) deserves to rot in prison for the rest of his life. He destroyed many lives so while it won’t bring our loved ones back, it does help that one less monster is off the streets and he can’t ever hurt anyone else!”

11 bodies found across one stretch of highway​

Eleven sets of human remains were found on a stretch of highway in Suffolk County after police began searching along Ocean Parkway for Gilbert, a 24-year-old sex worker from New Jersey who vanished in 2010 after leaving a client’s house in Oak Beach.

During the search, the remains of Melissa Barthelemy, 24, were found on Dec. 11, 2010. Two days later, three more bodies were discovered — Megan Waterman, 22, Amber Lynn Costello, 27, and Maureen Brainard-Barnes, 25.

In March 2011, Suffolk police found the partial remains of Jessica Taylor along Ocean Parkway. Eight years earlier, remains also belonging to Taylor were found in Manorville, police said in 2020.

In April 2011, police uncovered three additional sets of remains. They were of Valerie Mack, 24, a female toddler and a man.

The shocking discoveries continued when two additional bodies were found in Nassau County.

Mack was not identified until 2020.

Gilbert’s remains were eventually discovered by police on Oak Beach in December 2011. According to NBC New York, Gilbert was not the only victim who was a sex worker.



 
When the news first broke on ABC News, I remember them saying the local cops felt like idiots or something like that.
Like damn he was right up under their noses too.
 



Trove of new evidence released in Long Island serial killer case as new murder charge added​

A slew of new evidence was released by prosecutors on Tuesday in the case of alleged Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex Heuermann, including travel records showing Heuermann's family leaving town during the alleged murders, the suspect's illicit online searches and investigators' attempts to secure DNA evidence from his daughter.

The release of evidence comes as Heuermann, 60, was charged with murdering 25-year-old Maureen Brainard-Barnes, who disappeared in 2007 while working as an escort, with prosecutors linking him to her death through DNA and other evidence. Defense attorney Michael Brown entered a not guilty plea on Heuermann's behalf to the second-degree murder charge in Suffolk County Court on Tuesday.

The former Long Island architect had already been charged in July with murdering three other escorts on New York's Long Island. Like those victims -- Megan Waterman, Amber Costello and Melissa Barthelemy -- the remains of Brainard-Barnes were found in a desolate spot along the ocean near Gilgo Beach in December 2010, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors in a new court filing said Heuermann's now-estranged wife, Asa Ellerup, and his children were out of town when Brainard-Barnes disappeared and was killed, fitting an alleged pattern of Heuermann being home alone when the other three killed.

"As set forth in Exhibit A, travel and cellular telephone billing records had previously established that Defendant Heuermann's wife and children were out of the state during the disappearances and murders of three of the four victims, specifically, Melissa Barthelemy, Megan Waterman, and Amber Costello," prosecutors said, citing documents they obtained during a search of a storage unit leased by Heuermann.

The documents include a credit card statement that shows his wife checked into an Atlantic City hotel July 6, 2007, and stayed through July 20.

"Based on the foregoing, the murders of all four victims occurred at times when Defendant Heuermann's wife and children were traveling out of state, which allowed Defendant Heuermann unfettered time to execute his plans for each victim without any fear that his family would uncover or learn of his involvement in these crimes," prosecutors said.

The new filing also revealed that prosecutors seized two phones from Heuermann at the time of his arrest that they said were held by him "in fictitious names and used for illicit activities." Prosecutors said Heuermann "utilized these phones in furtherance of hundreds of contacts with sex-workers between 2020 and 2023."

Prosecutors additionally revealed Tuesday they seized hundreds of electronic devices from Heuermann's Massapequa Park home and Manhattan office following his arrest.

Heuermann used the devices to search for the deceased victims and their family members; the status of the investigation; for software that would assist in wiping or erasing data from computers and other similar digital devices and to purchase digital masking and forensic wiping tools, prosecutors said.

"Defendant's devices also contained the following: A collection of violent, bondage, and torture pornography preceding, during, and subsequent to the disappearances and murders of the aforementioned victims between 2007 and 2010; and prostitution-related searches preceding, during, and subsequent to the disappearances and murders of the aforementioned victims between 2007 and 2010," the filing says.

The new court filing also outlines the lengths prosecutors went to obtain DNA from Heuermann's family, including tracking his adult daughter, Victoria, on a Long Island Railroad train drinking from a gold-colored energy drink can.

Investigators saw her toss the can into the trash. They recovered it and took it for analysis, prosecutors said.

Heuermann was once again remanded to Suffolk County jail after his court hearing Tuesday, and the judge set the next court date for Feb. 6.

He previously pleaded not guilty to killing Waterman, Barthelemy and Costello, all of whom were found dead in December 2010.

The deaths of six other victims found near Gilgo Beach between 1996 and 2011 remain unsolved.
 

Gilgo Beach murders: Rex Heuermann admits to killing 8 women​


Accused Gilgo Beach, New York, serial killer Rex Heuermann admitted to the murders of eight women in court on Wednesday as he changed his plea to guilty.

Heuermann, a New York City architect, was arrested in 2023 and initially pleaded not guilty to killing seven women. Over 17 years, he targeted sex workers and dumped their bodies near Long Island's Gilgo Beach, prosecutors said. His trial had been set for September.

"Do you feel it’s in your best interest to plead guilty rather than go to trial?" Judge Timothy Mazzei asked.

"Yes, your honor," Heuermann replied.

Heuermann, 62, agreed to serve three consecutive life sentences followed by four consecutive sentences of 25 years-to-life, Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney said. He will face no other prosecution in connection with the eight victims but must cooperate with the FBI going forward.

His sentencing is set for June 17.

Standing in a dark suit with his hands shackled behind his back, Heuermann admitted he murdered Melissa Barthelemy, Megan Waterman and Amber Costello, whose bodies were found along Ocean Parkway near Gilgo Beach.

“You killed each victim in the same manner, namely strangulation?” he was asked.

“Yes,” Heuermann answered in clinical fashion.

Heuermann also pleaded guilty to strangling to death Sandra Costilla, Valerie Mack, Jessica Taylor and Maureen Brainard-Barnes.

Heuermann also admitted to an eighth killing: 34-year-old Karen Vergata. He was not formally charged with Vergata’s death, but admitted to it as part of the plea agreement.

Authorities believe Vergata was working as an escort when she went missing in February 1996, prosecutors said. Some of her remains were found in April 1996 on Long Island's Fire Island, prosecutors said, and additional remains were recovered in April 2011 on Long Island's Tobay Beach.

Several of the victims’ relatives sobbed quietly and were seen wiping tears as Heuermann admitted to the killings.

Heuermann’s ex-wife, Asa Ellerup, and his daughter attended the hearing.

Ellerup leaned forward in her seat, gripping the back of the chair in front of her. Ellerup and her daughter sat in the back row of the courtroom packed with relatives of victims and investigators who have labored over the case for decades.

"My thoughts and prayers are with the victims and their families," Ellerup said after court. "Their loss is immeasurable."

“She never wanted to believe the man she was married to for 27 years, the father of Victoria, was capable of these heinous acts,” Ellerup’s attorney, Bob Macedonio, said.

Defense attorney Michael Brown said the decision to plead guilty and cooperate with the FBI belonged solely to Heuermann.

“There came a point in this defense when Rex said, ‘I want to plead guilty,’” Brown said, adding that admitting his guilt brought Heuermann “a huge sense of relief.”

Brown said Heuermann would likely have more to say at sentencing in June.

Heuermann “walked among us, play acting as a normal, suburban dad, when in reality, all along, he was obsessively targeting innocent women for death,” DA Tierney said at a news conference after court.

Suffolk County Police Commissioner Kevin Catalina called Heuermann a “sadistic, soulless, murderous monster.”

“To the families: No one can ever replace the lives that were taken,” Catalina said. “… But we hope that this brings some measure of solace.”

The Gilgo Beach killings went unsolved for two decades until the Suffolk County District Attorney’s office, New York State Police and the FBI first identified Heuermann as a suspect in 2022 through his Chevrolet Avalanche, a distinctive pickup truck sparsely purchased on Long Island.

From there, prosecutors said they compiled DNA from a hair lifted from burlap used to wrap some of the victims and from pizza crust in the trash outside Heuermann’s Manhattan office.

Heuermann used an alias to communicate with dozens of sex workers and to amass an extensive collection of torture pornography. Prosecutors said he kept a "blueprint" of his killings that included a list of supplies, locations of "dump sites" and reminders to "consider a hit to the neck next time."

Heuermann's victims date back to 1993, when Costilla was killed. The final woman, 27-year-old Costello, went missing in September 2010, according to police.

 
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