Rex Heuermann Gilgo Beach Serial Killer

Rex Heuermann gilgo beach serial killer

Rex Heuermann was arrested and taken into custody in New York in the belief that he is the Gilgo Beach Serial Killer

According to police reports Rex Heuermann has been charged with the murders of Melissa Barthelemy in 2009, and Megan Waterman and Amber Costello in 2010. Heuermann is also suspected in the murder of Maureen Brainard-Barnes in 2007. All of the murdered women had worked as escorts in Long Island New York

Rex Heuermann who was employed as an architect and is a married father has denied that he is the Gilgo Beach Serial Killer

Melissa Barthelemy, Maureen Brainard-Barnes, Amber Lynn Costello and Megan Waterman

Rex Heuermann More News

Rex Heuermann left his office near the Empire State Building and strolled down a still-bustling Fifth Avenue as the sun set on a hot Thursday evening in Manhattan.

The 59-year-old architect, whose customers included Catholic Charities, American Airlines and other tenants at John F. Kennedy International Airport, is seen in video obtained by CNN affiliate WABC walking calmly at the end of a work day. A bag was slung over his shoulder, his left hand in his pocket, when he’s approached by several men in dark suits and ties.

Tall and heavyset, Heuermann towered over the law enforcement officers who now surrounded him. As passersby strolled leisurely along the avenue, he was taken into custody without incident in connection with a 13-year homicide investigation involving young female victims on the South Shore of Long Island.

“Yes, the day has finally come when someone so … depraved of heart who would kill individuals, innocent individuals in the prime of their lives, their young lives, is finally brought to justice,” New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said Friday. “We are hoping that this will bring justice to this individual but also peace to the families.”

That day came – finally – years after a bestselling nonfiction book, a Netflix drama, and a podcast about a long-running murder mystery that made national headlines and become known as the Gilgo Beach killings.

Heuermann is charged with three counts of first-degree murder for the killings of Melissa Barthelemy in 2009, and Megan Waterman and Amber Costello the following year, according to the Suffolk County District Attorney.

The alleged killer had been living a double life in a Long Island village a short drive from where their remains were found, prosecutors said.

Heuermann, who told his attorney he’s not the killer, is also the prime suspect in the 2007 disappearance and death of a fourth woman, Maureen Brainard-Barnes, according to a bail application from Suffolk County prosecutors. He has yet to be charged in the case.

The victims, who worked as escorts, became known as the “Gilgo Four.”

On Friday, Heuermann was ordered held without bail after pleading not guilty during a first court appearance.

Heuermann was in tears following his arrest.

“I did not do this,” his court appointed attorney, Michael Brown, said his client told him.

A crucial break in the case came in January when investigators took a swab from leftover pizza crust Heuermann discarded in the trash outside his Manhattan office, according to the bail application.

DNA evidence linked him to a hair found on the burlap sack where Waterman’s remains were found.

The son of an aerospace engineer, Heuermann lived with his spouse and children in the homey village of Massapequa Park, across the bay from where the remains were found, on the southeastern edge of Nassau County.

In a video interview posted online last year, as police in Suffolk County formed a multiagency task force to investigate the long-dormant cases, Heuermann said he was born and raised on Long Island. He had been working as an architectural consultant in Manhattan since 1987.

“I do troubleshooting, architectural troubleshooting, and negotiations with the building department,” Heuermann said.

“When a job that should have been routine suddenly becomes not routine, I get the phone call,” he added.

His father had built satellites for a living, Heuermann told the interviewer. His dad also built furniture in a workshop in the house Heuermann grew up in and still lived with his family.

Asked what his job taught him about himself, Heuermann said: “I think it’s taught me more about how to understand people. Dealing with the technical aspects is something a person can learn … But it’s the people, how they’re all so different and how you deal with the people, I think, is one of the more interesting aspects that has come out of this.”

RH Consultants & Associates was founded by Heuermann and incorporated in 1994, according to the company website.

At the end of his online video, Heuermann put on a pair of sunglasses and posed for a selfie with his interviewer.

“Can you smile?” Heuermann was asked.

“That is,” he replied, indicating he was smiling.

It took investigators nearly 15 years to track down Heuermann.

They first connected him to the killings last year while conducting a review of evidence under a newly formed task force, which included the Suffolk County Police Department, the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office, the New York State Police and the FBI.

In March 2022, investigators found that a first-generation Chevrolet Avalanche – the same type of truck a witness believed to have been driven by Costello’s killer – registered to Heuermann at the time of the murders, according to the bail application.

Armed with more than 300 subpoenas and search warrants, investigators began to close in on Heuermann.

Evidence revealed the killer had used burner phones to contact victims. Investigators found calls to the victims originated from locations connected to Heuermann.

Investigators said they narrowed cell tower records from thousands of possible individuals down to hundreds and then to a handful of people. They focused on residents who matched a physical description provided by a witness who had seen the killer.

Task force members also learned Heuermann lived close to one Long Island cell site and worked near New York City cell sites where other calls originated.

A series of “taunting” calls in which a male caller admitted killing and sexually assaulting Barthelemy were made from her phone to her family members from the vicinity of Heuermann’s midtown Manhattan office during the summer of 2009, according to the bail application.

Heuermann also used burner phones to contact sex workers or massage parlors, the bail application said. And he created false names for an email account used to search for “sex workers, sadistic, torture-related pornography and child pornography,” the bail application said.

One fictitious email account was used to send selfies “to solicit and arrange for sexual activity.” Another was used to search for podcasts and documentaries about the investigation, as well as “images depicting the murdered victims and members of their immediate families,” according to the bail application.

Between March 2022 and June 23, Heuermann used the same account to conduct more than 200 searches about serial killers and articles about the task force investigating the Gilgo Beach killings, the bail application said.

A key break in the case came when investigators recovered Heuermann’s DNA from pizza crust in a crumpled box he discarded in a Manhattan trash can in January.

The initial examination of Waterman’s skeletal remains turned up a male hair from the “bottom of the burlap” the killer used to wrap her body, according to prosecutors. Analysis of DNA found on the victim and the pizza showed the samples matched.

Additionally, hair believed to be from Heuermann’s wife was found on or near three of the murder victims, according to the bail application. The DNA was collected from bottles inside a garbage can outside the Heuermann home.

The hairs were found in 2010 and had degraded. DNA testing at the time yielded no results but recent mitochondrial DNA testing allowed investigators to make the connection, according to Tierney.

Heuermann’s wife and children were out of the state when the three women are believed to have been killed, Tierney said. Investigators said his wife’s hair may have been transferred to the victims from his clothing.

Authorities, fearing the Heuermann might be tipped off they were closing in, moved to arrest him Thursday night.

“We were playing before a party of one,” Tierney told reporters. “We knew the person responsible for these murders would be looking at us.”

The case started with the search for a missing woman in 2010, leading to the discovery of multiple sets of human remains at Gilgo Beach.

By the time the remains of the missing woman, Shannan Gilbert, were found one year later, at least 10 sets of human remains had been recovered across two Long Island counties.

Tierney said Saturday the work of the task force is not over.

“There are a lot of other victims, you know, in that area,” he told CNN. “There are a lot of victim’s families that want closure. So that’s what you work towards.”

Authorities believe the death of Gilbert, whose disappearance sparked discovery of the other victims, may have been accidental and not related to the other killings.

The remains of the Gilgo Four were found in bushes along a quarter-mile stretch of Ocean Parkway in Oak Beach over a two-day period in 2010.

The skeletal remains of Barthelemy were discovered near Gilgo Beach on December 11. Barthelemy, who was a sex worker, was last seen July 12, 2009, at her apartment when she told a friend she was going to see a man, according to a Suffolk County website about the killings.

The remains of three other women were found on December 13, 2010: Brainard-Barnes, who advertised escort services on Craigslist and was last seen in early June 2007 in New York City; Amber Lynn Costello, who also advertised escort services and was last seen leaving her North Babylon home in early September 2010; and Waterman, who also advertised as an escort and was last seen in early June 2010 at a Holiday Inn Express in Hauppauge.

Heuermann was surprised when he was surrounded by officers and taken into custody near his office on Thursday night, according to Tierney.

Speaking of the arrest, Suffolk County Police Commissioner Rodney Harrison said Friday: “Rex Heuermann is a demon that walks among us. A predator that ruined families. If not for the members of this task force, he would still be on the streets today.”

https://www.cnn.com/2023/07/16/us/rex-heuermann-gilgo-beach-murders-capture/index.html

Serial Killer Ramon Escobar Murders Cellmate

Ramon Escobar

Ramon Escobar is a convicted serial killer from California who is now been charged with killing his cellmate. According to police reports Ramon Escobar (upper photo left) cellmate Juan Villanueva was found unresponsive in his cell yesterday and after life saving techniques were tried he would be pronounced dead shortly after. Now Ramon Escobar has been charged with the murder of Juan Villanueva.

Juan Villanueva was serving a life sentenced with the possibility of parole for the sexual assault of a child under the age of 14. He was transferred into the California Department of Corrections earlier this month.

Ramon Escobar is serving multiple life sentences for seven murders that were committed in Texas and California. Ramon Escobar would murder his aunt and uncle in Texas before coming to California where he would fatally beat five people with a baseball bat and injured several others. Ramon Escobar who is originally from El Salvador was deported several times before the murders.

Ramon Escobar More News

A Los Angeles serial killer who bludgeoned his victims with a baseball bat is suspected of killing his cellmate on Friday at North Kern State Prison in Delano.

Ramon Escobar, 51, shared a cell with Juan Villanueva, who was serving a life sentence for aggravated sexual assault of a child under 14, according to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

Villanueva, 53, was found unresponsive in his cell at 8:49 a.m. and pronounced dead a short time later, according to a CDCR release. Prison officials have restricted movement in the area where the attack occurred so the investigation can proceed. The coroner’s office will release Villanueva’s cause of death.

Escobar is serving life without parole. He admitted to killing his uncle and aunt in Texas before fleeing to California, where in 2018 he bludgeoned five people to death and injured several others, many of them homeless, in attacks that occurred in Los Angeles and Santa Monica.

Escobar, originally from El Salvador, was deported six times before the killings, officials said.

LA serial killer suspected of killing child sexual abuser at Delano prison (kron4.com)

Ramon Escobar Other News

North Kern State Prison (NKSP) officials are investigating the death of Juan Villanueva as a homicide after he was found unresponsive in his cell on Friday, Feb. 24, 2023.

At 8:49 a.m., an officer conducting a security/welfare check of the housing unit approached a cell occupied by Villanueva and incarcerated person Ramon Escobar.  The officer observed Villanueva unresponsive in the cell and immediately summoned for medical response.  Responding staff initiated lifesaving measures, summoned an ambulance and transported Villanueva to the prison’s triage and treatment area.   He was pronounced deceased at 9:03 a.m.

Officials have limited movement on the housing unit where the attack occurred to facilitate the investigation being conducted by NKSP’s Investigative Services Unit, the Kern County District Attorney’s Office and the Kern County Coroner. The Office of the Inspector General was notified and the Kern County Coroner will determine Villanueva’s official cause of death.

Villanueva, 53, was sentenced to CDCR on Oct. 25, 2022 from Los Angeles County to serve a life with parole sentence for aggravated sexual assault of a child under 14 years old. He was transported to CDCR custody on Feb. 2, 2023.

Escobar, 51, was sentenced to CDCR on May 6, 2022 from Los Angeles County to serve a life without the possibility of parole sentence for two counts of first-degree murder. He was also sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole for three counts of first-degree murder and seven counts of attempted second-degree murder. He was transferred to CDCR custody on Dec. 5, 2022

North Kern State Prison Officials Investigating the Death of an Incarcerated Person as a Homicide – News Releases

Juan David Ortiz Convicted Of 4 Murders

Juan David Ortiz Serial Killer

Juan David Ortiz a former Border Patrol agent has been convicted of four murders in Texas. According to court documents Juan David Ortiz in September 2018 would murder Guiselda Alicia Hernandez, 35, Claudine Anne Luera, 42, Melissa Ramirez, 29, and Janelle Ortiz (aka Nikki Enriquez), 28. Juan David Ortiz who would tell others that he was attempting to clean up the streets would initially confess to the murders however his lawyer claimed it was a false confession due to PTSD and taking pills. The jury did not buy it and convicted Juan David Ortiz of four murders. This serial killer who attempted to murder a fifth victim was sentenced to life without parole.

Juan David Ortiz More News

A former Border Patrol agent who confessed to killing four sex workers in 2018 was convicted Wednesday of capital murder, after jurors heard recordings of him telling investigators he was trying to “clean up the streets” of his South Texas hometown.

Juan David Ortiz, 39, receives an automatic sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole because prosecutors decided not to seek the death penalty.

Ortiz, a Border Patrol intel supervisor at the time of his arrest, was accused of killing Melissa Ramirez, 29, Claudine Anne Luera, 42, Guiselda Alicia Cantu, 35, and Janelle Ortiz, 28. Their bodies were found along roads on the outskirts of Laredo in September 2018.

During the trial that began last week, jurors heard Ortiz’s confession during a lengthy taped interview with investigators.

Ortiz told investigators he had been a customer of most of the women, but he also expressed disdain for sex workers, referring to them as “trash” and “so dirty” and insisting he wanted to “clean up the streets.”

He said “the monster would come out” as he drove along a stretch of street in Laredo frequented by the women.

Following the verdict, family members of the victims faced Ortiz to give their statements. Ramirez’s sister-in-law, Gracie Perez, said she was “a loving, kind and funny person.” She told Ortiz that the hearts of Ramirez’s children are now broken

“Do you know how much pain you have caused this family?” Perez said. “My heart is torn apart knowing that I won’t be able to see her but to visit her in the cemetery,” she said.

Defense attorneys said Ortiz was improperly induced to make the confession and that it should not be considered. Defense attorney Joel Perez argued that Ortiz, a Navy veteran who had been deployed to Iraq, was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, had been suffering from insomnia, nightmares and headaches, and was medicated and had been drinking that night.

Prosecutors told jurors it was a legal confession provided by an educated senior law enforcement official who was not having a mental breakdown.

Erika Pena testified that Ortiz picked her up on the evening of Sept. 14, 2018, and that she got a bad feeling when he told her he was the “next to last person” to have sex with Ramirez, whose body had been found a week earlier. She testified that he told her he was worried investigators would find his DNA on the body.

“It made me think that he was the one who might have been murdering,” Pena, 31, told the jury.

Pena escaped from his truck at a gas station after he pointed a gun at her, and she ran straight to a state trooper who was refueling his vehicle. Ortiz fled.

Authorities tracked Ortiz to a hotel parking garage in the early hours of Sept. 15, 2018, and he was arrested.

Capt. Federico Calderon of the Webb County Sheriff’s Department testified that officers who arrested Ortiz knew about the slayings of Ramirez and Luera, and while chasing him after Pena’s escape learned that a third body — later identified as Cantu’s — had been found. But Calderon said it wasn’t until Ortiz’s confession that they learned Janelle Ortiz had been slain.

Webb County Medical Examiner Corinne Stern testified that Ramirez, Luera and Janelle Ortiz were fatally shot while Cantu, who was shot in the neck, died of blunt force trauma to the head.

The bullets collected from the crime scenes came from the same gun, and matched the weapon found in Juan David Ortiz’s pickup, a ballistics expert testified.

Ortiz served in the U.S. Navy for nearly eight years, until 2009, holding a variety of medical posts and served a three-year detachment with the Marines

https://apnews.com/article/laredo-2cdf4f583beafec7d550ceb8abddd7b8

Serial Killer Richard Cottingham To Plead Guilty To 5 More Murders

Richard Cottingham

Convicted serial killer Richard Cottingham who is already serving life without parole for 11 murders committed from 1967 to 1980 in New York and New Jersey is set to plead guilty to five more murders. According to police reports Richard Cottingham who has been called the Torso Killer is responsible for a sexual assault and murder in 1968 and four more murders. Richard Cottingham who towards the end of his killing spree would target prostitutes who he would sexually assault and murder before dismembering their bodies. RIchard Cottingham who is now 76 years old is expected to receive five more life sentences.

Richard Cottingham More News

A decades-old murder case could finally be solved in a Nassau County courtroom Monday.

Serial killer Richard Cottingham is due to face a judge for a murder charge that dates all the way back to 1968 in Nassau County. He is reportedly expected to plead guilty in this and four other cases.

Cottingham, also known as the “Times Square Torso Killer” has been found guilty in more than 10 gruesome murders across the tristate area.

Months ago, Nassau police matched DNA evidence connected to Cottingham to the killing of 23-year-old New Hyde Park mom Diane Cusick, who had gone shopping for shoes and never returned home.

Police say Cusick was brutally beaten, murdered and raped in her car. Her father later found Cusick’s body in the backseat of the vehicle in February 1968 at the Green Acres Mall in Valley Stream.

Cottingham’s court appearance will be virtual because he is already behind bars in New Jersey. 

Cusick’s daughter told News 12 that she would be flying in from Florida for the court proceedings.

Cottingham was featured in the Netflix true crime docuseries “Crime Scene: The Times Square Killer” just last year.

https://bronx.news12.com/serial-killer-expected-to-plead-guilty-in-gruesome-1968-valley-stream-murder

Deangelo Martin Detroit Serial Killer Sentenced

Deangelo Martin serial killer

Deangelo Martin the Detroit serial killer who was responsible for four murders and two sexual assaults learned his fate today. According to court documents Deangelo Martin would murder four women, Annetta Nelson, 57; Nancy Harrison, 52; Trevesene Ellis, 55; and Tamara Jones, 55, whose bodies were found in vacant homes in the Detroit area.. Deangelo Martin was scheduled to start trial in September however at the last moment he would plead guilty to the four murders and two sexual assaults. Deangelo Martin would be sentenced to 45 to 70 years in prison meaning he must serve at least 45 years before he is eligible for parole.

Deangelo Martin 2022 Information

deangelo martin 2022

MDOC Number:

493207

SID Number:

2416020W

Name:

DEANGELO KENNETH MARTIN

Racial Identification:

Black

Gender:

Male

Hair:

Black

Eyes:

Brown

Height:

5′ 10″

Weight:

195 lbs.

Date of Birth:

05/30/1985  (37)

Deangelo Martin More News

On Thursday, DeAngelo Martin, who terrorized Detroit’s east side in 2019 and killed four different women, will spend at least 45 years in prison after pleading guilty last month to second-degree murder charges.

Martin pleaded guilty in early September to the murders of four women and the rape and sexual assault of 10 others. As part of his plea agreement, he will be sentenced to between 45 and 70 years in prison for each count, which will be served concurrently. 

The 37-year-old was bound over for trial for the four murders on August 20, 2020, and was expected to go before a jury in September this year. Instead, a plea deal was reached and was sentenced Thursday afternoon in Wayne County.

During the sentencing, family members spoke about how their lives have changed. Among the family members was Gary Harrison, the father of Nancy Harrison.

“We miss Nancy. Nancy had a little problem, but she owned her own home, paid all of her bills, and every once in a while she’d go over to Detroit. That’s where her mistake was,” Gary said.

He said his daughter will never know his grandkids, both of whom were born after her murder and ended his remarks like this:

“Whatever happens here today, I hope the best. I hope Bubba’ll get ya,” he said.

Martin was arrested after police were notified to a decomposing body found inside a vacant Detroit home on June 5, 2019, on Mack Avenue. However, he’s also been linked to murders on Winthrop Street in February 2018, two killings in March 2019 on Coventry Street and Linnhurst Street.

When Martin was bound over for trial, he was charged with killing Annetta Nelson, 57, Nancy Harrison, 52, Trevesene Ellis, 55, and Tamara Jones, 55 – all from Detroit.

Harrison’s brother, Timothy, spoke next and said that he was bitter about what Martin did.

“It’s been a rough 3.5 years. Every day, we think about Nancy. This gentleman here knows my sister. He knew my sister. He knew Nancy had a heart. Shame on him,” Timothy said. “I’m going to say a prayer for this gentleman. I’m bitter. Very much so.”

Harrison’s daughter, Lisa Hohnstreiter, was the last of her family to speak and talked for the longest. She said the state should have the death penalty.

“I’ve waited three years for this day. The day that you rot in hell, DeAngelo Martin – exactly where you belong. You’re the perfect example of why Michigan should have the death penalty,” she said.

In the three years since her mom’s murder, Hohnstreiter said she’s had two daughters but Martin made it so that they will never meet her mother.

“What you did to my mom isn’t fair,” she said. “My mom is with me today and I know that. The plea deal gives you hope that you may get out of hell one day. You don’t deserve to see daylight for another day in your life. You should be getting life; giving you no hope to ever get out of hell. I hope you rot in hell for eternity.”

The daughter of another victim, Travesene Ellis, spoke next and told the court that she has prayed for mercy for Martin.

“I was afraid to live, but I said a prayer for myself and for my family. I also said a prayer for Mr. Martin. I pray that God has mercy on your soul,” Latrease Ellis said. “We all have things we’re not proud of but I want to be forgiven one day, too.”

The last family member to speak was Anita Nelson Reed, the twin sister of Anetta Nelson. Anita said her sister was intelligent but had an illness and a ‘demon called crack’. 

She said her sister may have struggled but was not homeless.

“She survived. She had family members who loved her and looked after her,” Anita said. “I’m grateful for the man who found her in the house – black and blue, bloody in her face pants pulled down, raped, strangled, and murdered in that vacant and abandoned house.”

Anita finished her statement by asking the judge to throw away the key.

The last person to speak in court was Martin, himself. Who, in a very brief and barely audible statement, said that it was ‘not his wrong-doing’.

But the judge reminded him of his plea deal and the evidence against him before sentencing him to 45 to 70 years in prison

Martin had been connected to two other murders – Deborah Reynolds and Yvonne Cobern – but he was never charged in the homicides.

Martin’s alleged crimes detailed in hearings and filings shocked the victim’s family when he appeared in court in 2019. Family of Harrison said at the time they believed it took authorities too long to arrest and charge Martin.

https://www.fox2detroit.com/news/detroit-serial-killer-deangelo-martin-sentenced-thursday-for-murders-of-6-women