Who is the LONG ISLAND SERIAL KILLER? *ARREST JULY 2023*

long island.jpg


Who is the Long Island serial killer? This is a general discussion thread about this terrifying case.


MEMBER'S ONLY DISCUSSION/DOCUMENTS:
https://www.crimewatchers.net/threa...other-sensitive-information.3498/#post-226869
 
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Nowadays it isn't but back then I'd beg to differ, that was almost considered past childbearing years or more risky. I was born around his time (ugh) but my mom was 20 years younger than my dad. Of course in particular Catholics some kept going and yes over the years it was though risky past 30 even somewhat and Down's Syndrome and other things definitely and so forth. The pill came about as an option to sterilization formerly about the only thing other than abstinence. In comparison until maybe the last decade it was thought not wise to go past 30. I have a sister that took that to total heart and I've seen others do the same.

I'm not saying even that it means anything and of course it isn't unheard of BUT he could have been a tagalong as I've said. One child they had and years behind that he comes along unexpectedly. There are only two here from what I've heard. Or the parents didn't marry until in their 30s or have kids until mid 30s or some such. It isn't unheard of no doubt but we only have a two child family here and his dad died when he was 11? And what was he? Some aerospace engineer per Crybaby? We could have parents who were just focused more on careers and married and had kids later in life. I don't know but am curious.

He goes for awhile in life too and one marriage before he has one child.

To put it simply he seems to hate women.

I suspect there is some root to this all. Not an EXCUSE but a root. Some resentment here somewhere, some abuse, some lack of something. Again not an EXCUSE but some reason he could go this far... At its most simple I guess he could have also been a spoiled rotten brat and prostitutes were beneath him but why the need to kill.

I don't know and much we don't know yet but I just suspect these things are going to come into play at least with psych experts etc.

We don't even know about his dad's death. Why is that? It shouldn't take long for people out there to dig that up. Was it natural causes? Expected? Not expected? For some one with the career his dad had it had to be known about and an obit and articles published one would think...
My mother was 35 when she had me and 40 when she had my younger brother, her 4th and 5th child. And that was common in the 1950's in the UK. My eldest sibling was 10 years older than me and was born in 1944 when my mother was 25.

You have made me curious about his father. So he died 48 years ago - which would be 1975.
 

The Polygon and the Avalanche: How the Gilgo Beach Suspect Was Found​

As investigators spent years looking for a suspect, a key clue was buried in their files. Could they have solved the case years earlier?


William K. RashbaumJoseph GoldsteinJohnny Milano
By William K. Rashbaum and Joseph Goldstein
Photographs and Video by Johnny Milano
  • July 20, 2023
They called it the polygon.
Using phone records and a sophisticated system that maps the reach of cell towers, a team of investigators had drawn the irregular shape across a map of tree-lined streets in the Long Island suburb of Massapequa Park. By 2021, the investigators had been able to shrink the polygon so that it covered only several hundred homes.
In one of those homes, the investigators believed, lived a serial killer.
A decade before, 11 bodies had been found in the underbrush around Gilgo Beach, a remote stretch of sand five miles away on the South Shore. Four women had been bound with tape or belts or wrapped in shrouds of camouflage-patterned burlap, the sort that hunters use for blinds. They had worked as escorts and had gone missing after going to meet a client.
Each, shortly before she disappeared, had been in contact with a different disposable cellphone. Investigators eventually determined that during the workday, some of the phones had been in a small area of Midtown Manhattan near Penn Station, and at night they pinged in the polygon, mirroring the tidal movements of the 150,000 Long Island residents who head into Manhattan each day.
Last Friday, Suffolk County authorities announced that they had arrested a man who they believed had killed the four women: Rex Heuermann, a 59-year-old architect who had an office near Penn Station and lived on a quiet street right where they had expected to find him. He was charged with three of the murders, to which he has pleaded not guilty, and was named as the prime suspect in the fourth.

The arrest ended years of anguish for some of the victims’ families. But the investigation also raised an unsettling question: Could the authorities have solved the case years earlier?
The following account is drawn from a 32-page bail application and interviews with current and former investigators and Suffolk County’s top law enforcement officials.

Image
A quartet of women in closeup.

The victims were, clockwise from top left, Melissa Barthelemy, Amber Costello, Maureen Brainard-Barnes and Megan Waterman.Credit...Suffolk County Police Department, via Associated Press

A quartet of women in closeup.

The case had unfolded fitfully over more than a decade. But it took a new police commissioner and his task force just six weeks to uncover a crucial clue in the sprawling case file.
Working under Commissioner Rodney K. Harrison, the core group of about 10 investigators was drawn from his department, the sheriff’s office, F.B.I. and State Police and worked closely with District Attorney Ray Tierney of Suffolk County and his prosecutors.

They worked in a beige office, its walls covered with maps, photos and a giant timeline, scouring their suspect’s digital and daily life — email addresses, social media accounts, search history.
All the while, Mr. Heuermann was searching, too, asking Google the same question that so many of his neighbors had been asking each other for more than a decade: “why hasn’t the long island serial killer been caught?”

Grim Discoveries​

Picking up the trail of a serial killer is an exceptional challenge. The killer often has no personal connection to the victims. If the victims lived on society’s margins, months or years can go by before their disappearances are treated as serious matters — or even recognized as the work of a single murderer.
The realization that a serial killer was hunting on Long Island’s South Shore came in December 2010, when a Suffolk County police officer, John Mallia, and his canine partner, a German shepherd named Blue, were searching for a 24-year-old woman named Shannan Gilbert, who had gone missing in the area.

Instead, over several days they found four other bodies near Gilgo Beach. They had been placed roughly 10 yards from Ocean Parkway, the main east-west thoroughfare that traverses a barrier island off the South Shore. After they discovered the bodies, investigators searched for evidence nearby with meticulous care — “sifting the sand like gold miners around each body,” one investigator recalled.

Image
A man and a dog in a thicket under a cloudy sky.

A search for one missing woman on a South Shore beach yielded the remains of four others.Credit...Robert Stolarik for The New York Times

A man and a dog in a thicket under a cloudy sky.

Ms. Gilbert’s corpse and other remains, including those that the authorities described as a man wearing women’s clothing and a toddler, would be found along the same roadway over the following year. The grisly discoveries riveted the region as the police speculated that the killings might be the work of more than one person.
But the first four bodies — all petite women in their 20s who had gone missing in the previous four years — seemed linked. Investigators surmised they had been killed by the same man, in part because of the way the bodies were wrapped and their proximity. And there was reason to believe that a witness might have gotten a look at the man.

The Gilgo Beach Serial Killings​

After a decade-long investigation into multiple murders believed to have been carried out by a serial killer on Long Island, a suspect has been arrested.​

The last of the four to disappear had been Amber Costello, a 27-year-old with a “Kaos” tattoo on her neck who advertised on Backpage and Craigslist. Shortly before she was last seen in September 2010, a would-be client contacted her from a disposable cellphone and visited her at the West Babylon house she shared with three roommates, parking in her driveway, according to court papers filed after Mr. Heuermann’s arrest. He drove a vehicle with a distinctive look: SUV in the front, pickup in the back.
Sign up for the New York Today Newsletter Each morning, get the latest on New York businesses, arts, sports, dining, style and more. Get it sent to your inbox.
The driver was just as distinctive: hulking, in his 40s, with bushy dark hair and 1970s-style eyeglasses. A witness described him as an ogre.

But as soon as the would-be client paid Ms. Costello, a chaotic scene unfolded. A man “pretending to be the outraged boyfriend” rushed in, part of a ruse to steal the money, according to the court papers.
Startled, the hulking man rushed out of the house.
He did not disappear for long, though. He texted Ms. Costello asking for “credit for next time” and arranged another meeting, according to the court papers. Ms. Costello was last seen alive the next night walking out of her home, apparently to meet the man.

Not long after, a witness reported seeing a dark truck drive by.
The description of the vehicle in the driveway, a dark, first-generation Chevrolet Avalanche, ended up tucked away in the case file, the authorities said.

Sifting the Signals​

Video
00gilgoVideoPromo-videoSixteenByNine1050.jpg

The women were each found about 10 yards off Ocean Parkway, the main route along the barrier island.CreditCredit...
The fact apparently lay buried for years among hundreds of thousands of pages of interviews; telephone, travel and credit records; and endless tips as the Suffolk County police department and district attorney’s office endured years of turmoil.

James Burke, the swaggering police chief who had been running the department since 2012, was arrested in 2015 and later convicted on federal civil rights and obstruction of justice charges. He had beaten a suspect who had been arrested after stealing cigars and a bag containing pornography and sex toys from Mr. Burke’s sport utility vehicle. The subsequent cover-up ensnared the district attorney at the time, Thomas J. Spota, who also landed in prison.
The federal investigation into Suffolk County’s top lawmen spanned years during the Gilgo Beach case, a period during which both Mr. Burke and Mr. Spota had spurned help from the F.B.I.
After Mr. Burke’s arrest, the new head of the Suffolk County police, Tim Sini, redoubled the department’s efforts. Mr. Sini, a former Manhattan federal prosecutor, focused on tracking the disposable cellphones, hoping there were more clues to be gleaned.

Image
Tim Sini stands outside, looking off to the side with hands folded, amid state troopers.

Police Commissioner Tim Sini invested in technology that helped investigators narrow their search.

Tim Sini stands outside, looking off to the side with hands folded, amid state troopers.

F.B.I. agents in 2012 had already identified the area where coverage from four cell towers overlapped in Massapequa Park. By mid-2016, Mr. Sini had secured a court order for “tower dumps” — information on every phone that connected to particular towers in a given window of time.

Technology and software had advanced. And Mr. Sini had invested in a system that allowed investigators to “take the relevant areas,” as he told Newsday, and “shrink them to extremely manageable spaces.”
They whittled down the area to what they came to call the polygon, which left them with several hundred homes around First Avenue in Massapequa Park, law enforcement officials said.
A pattern emerged from the disposable phones used to contact the victims: In the evening, nighttime and predawn hours, some were in a small area of Massapequa Park, a person with knowledge of the investigation said. That’s also where the phone of one victim, Megan Waterman, was last logged at 3:11 a.m. on June 6, 2010, shortly before she disappeared, according to court papers.
During the day, the phones were used in Midtown Manhattan.
Among other communications that investigators scrutinized were sadistic, taunting calls someone made from the cellphone of one victim, Melissa Barthelemy, to her teenage sister shortly after she had disappeared in 2009. “Do you think you’ll ever speak to her again?” the person had asked in a bland, calm voice.
Those calls were also linked to cell towers near Penn Station, the court papers said.
For years, investigators looked for suspects who worked in Manhattan and had lived in the polygon. The going was slow, and though investigators expressed optimism they would find their man, they had little to show.

Suddenly, a Suspect​

The big break came in March 2022.
Just weeks after the formation of the task force, an investigator found the witness’s description of the Chevrolet Avalanche in the case file, authorities said. Using a database that can search for vehicles by make and model without license-plate numbers, the investigator found an Avalanche linked to Mr. Heuermann in 2010, the year Ms. Costello went missing.
His name had never come up in the investigation as a suspect, officials said. His physical description matched that of the ogreish man who had rushed out of her house shortly before she disappeared: He was 6-foot-4 and heavyset. His office was in the patch of Manhattan identified by the sophisticated cellphone mapping.
And he lived in what investigators believed was their serial killer sweet spot: the part of Massapequa Park where they had begun drawing their polygon.
The Avalanche lead, said Mr. Tierney, the district attorney, had been “known pretty much from the beginning.” Mr. Tierney, who took office in 2022, said he did not know why investigators had not pursued it. He suggested that perhaps the detail hadn’t been deemed credible or had sunk in significance amid what seemed like more promising leads.
“There are piles of evidence,” he said. “What is credible, what’s not, what seems likely, what’s not — so it’s not as simple as it seems.”


Image
Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond Tierney speaks at a lectern.

District Attorney Ray Tierney said the crucial clue had been in investigators’ possession almost from the start.

Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond Tierney speaks at a lectern.

But crimes are often solved by tracking down a vehicle, and cases often start with a car description. David Berkowitz, known as Son of Sam and perhaps the state’s most notorious serial killer, was arrested in the 1970s after the police found that he owned an illegally parked Ford Galaxie that had received a parking ticket near one of the shootings.
In the Gilgo Beach investigation, the critical clue had fallen through the cracks.
“If they knew about it then, a major mistake was made in not tracking down this car earlier,” said Rob Trotta, a former Suffolk County detective and a current county legislator, who said he expects to make an official inquiry into what happened.
Dominick Varrone, the former chief of detectives who oversaw the first year of the investigation, questioned whether the Avalanche clue had actually been in the case file, but added, “I will feel very, very badly if our team missed something.”
“I’ll tell you right now: No suspect vehicle was on our radar when I was still there,” he added.
When investigators did finally link the Chevrolet Avalanche to Mr. Heuermann, the investigation entered its critical phase. Investigators began exploring every aspect of his life, using 300 subpoenas and search warrants.


Image
A man in a Tyvek suit walks past a Chevrolet Avalanche in a driveway.

The suspect’s vehicle was relatively uncommon and similar to one seen at a victim’s home the night she disappeared.

A man in a Tyvek suit walks past a Chevrolet Avalanche in a driveway.

They examined his Tinder account and several email addresses — all fictitious names — that led to additional disposable phones that Mr. Heuermann was using to contact massage parlors and women working as escorts, the court papers said. They found internet searches for child pornography.
The more investigators learned about Mr. Heuermann, the more convinced they were.
So much time had passed since the killings that precise locational data from Mr. Heuermann’s personal cellphone — registered to his architectural business — no longer existed. But his billing records showed the general location of the phone when calls were made, the court papers said, putting it in New York City around the same time in 2010 that the cruel and taunting calls were made on Ms. Barthelemy’s cellphone.
Investigators learned that several of the murders had occurred when Mr. Heuermann’s wife and children were out of town, according to prosecutors. One coincided with a trip his wife took to Iceland; another took place when she was in Maryland and a third when she was in New Jersey.
But they had nothing to put the burner phones that had been in contact with the victims in Mr. Heuermann’s hands.

Nor did they have any physical or forensic evidence directly linking him to the crimes.
That would soon change.

The Tipping Point​

Video
00gilgoVideoPromo-overhead-videoSixteenByNine1050.jpg

Investigators found the suspect’s house in the area where they had begun creating their polygon.CreditCredit...
In the investigation’s early days, at least five hairs were discovered on the victims or stuck to the burlap or duct tape that enveloped them. They were deemed unsuitable for detailed DNA analysis.
Forensic science moved ahead: In the past three years, two outside laboratories were able to generate thorough DNA reports, according to court papers.
Now, investigators needed genetic material from Mr. Heuermann. Last July, an undercover detective rooted through his recycling for empty bottles. In January, Mr. Heuermann tossed a pizza box into a sidewalk garbage can outside his office in Midtown. A surveillance team fished it out, and the ragged crusts inside gave them what they needed.

Investigators concluded that most of the hairs found on the victims were likely to have come from Mr. Heuermann’s wife. One was a potential match for Mr. Heuermann himself.
One laboratory compared the DNA profile from the fifth hair to the genetic material found on Mr. Heuermann’s pizza. It found enough markers in common to conclude that while 99.96 percent of the population could be excluded as a match, Mr. Heuermann could not, the authorities said.

Image
A trashcan.

A surveillance team retrieved the remnants of the suspect’s pizza from a trash can in New York.Credit...Suffolk County District Attorney

A trashcan.


Image
The crusts bore genetic material that investigators said directly linked the suspect to the crimes.

The crusts bore genetic material that investigators said directly linked the suspect to the crimes.Credit...Suffolk County Court, via Reuters

The crusts bore genetic material that investigators said directly linked the suspect to the crimes.

Mr. Tierney learned of the results in June.
He read the report again and again — perhaps dozens of times, as if trying to convince his brain of what his eyes were seeing.
Investigators believed they now had direct evidence linking Mr. Heuermann to the killings.
But investigators knew something else: Mr. Heuermann was scouring the internet for information about what they were doing.

Internet searches linked to his anonymous accounts included more than 200 queries in the past 16 months about serial killers generally and the investigation into the Gilgo Beach victims specifically. “Why could law enforcement not trace the calls made by the long island serial killer” was just one.
Mr. Tierney had grown increasingly worried that more victims would drop on his watch. He said that Mr. Heuermann had been visiting massage parlors — and contacting women working as escorts.
Mr. Tierney said he was sleeping badly, bedeviled by tension and worry. Last week, he decided the case had reached a tipping point.
So on the evening of July 13, detectives in suits and ties approached Mr. Heuermann after he walked out of his office building.
Mr. Heuermann, prosecutors said, had methodically covered his tracks and closely monitored the investigation.
But when the detectives arrested Mr. Heuermann after more than a dozen years of pursuit, Mr. Tierney said, his reaction was simple and instinctive: genuine surprise.
William K. Rashbaum is a senior writer on the Metro desk, where he covers political and municipal corruption, courts, terrorism and law enforcement. He was a part of the team awarded the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News. More about William K. Rashbaum
Joseph Goldstein covers health care in New York, following years of criminal justice and police reporting for the Metro desk. He also spent a year reporting on Afghanistan from The Times’s Kabul bureau. More about Joseph Goldstein
A version of this article appears in print on July 21, 2023, Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: A Polygon and a Chevy: How the Gilgo Beach Suspect Was Found. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe



 

The Polygon and the Avalanche: How the Gilgo Beach Suspect Was Found​

As investigators spent years looking for a suspect, a key clue was buried in their files. Could they have solved the case years earlier?




William K. RashbaumJoseph GoldsteinJohnny Milano
By William K. Rashbaum and Joseph Goldstein
Photographs and Video by Johnny Milano
  • July 20, 2023
They called it the polygon.
Using phone records and a sophisticated system that maps the reach of cell towers, a team of investigators had drawn the irregular shape across a map of tree-lined streets in the Long Island suburb of Massapequa Park. By 2021, the investigators had been able to shrink the polygon so that it covered only several hundred homes.
In one of those homes, the investigators believed, lived a serial killer.
A decade before, 11 bodies had been found in the underbrush around Gilgo Beach, a remote stretch of sand five miles away on the South Shore. Four women had been bound with tape or belts or wrapped in shrouds of camouflage-patterned burlap, the sort that hunters use for blinds. They had worked as escorts and had gone missing after going to meet a client.
Each, shortly before she disappeared, had been in contact with a different disposable cellphone. Investigators eventually determined that during the workday, some of the phones had been in a small area of Midtown Manhattan near Penn Station, and at night they pinged in the polygon, mirroring the tidal movements of the 150,000 Long Island residents who head into Manhattan each day.
Last Friday, Suffolk County authorities announced that they had arrested a man who they believed had killed the four women: Rex Heuermann, a 59-year-old architect who had an office near Penn Station and lived on a quiet street right where they had expected to find him. He was charged with three of the murders, to which he has pleaded not guilty, and was named as the prime suspect in the fourth.

The arrest ended years of anguish for some of the victims’ families. But the investigation also raised an unsettling question: Could the authorities have solved the case years earlier?
The following account is drawn from a 32-page bail application and interviews with current and former investigators and Suffolk County’s top law enforcement officials.

Image
A quartet of women in closeup.

The victims were, clockwise from top left, Melissa Barthelemy, Amber Costello, Maureen Brainard-Barnes and Megan Waterman.Credit...Suffolk County Police Department, via Associated Press

A quartet of women in closeup.

The case had unfolded fitfully over more than a decade. But it took a new police commissioner and his task force just six weeks to uncover a crucial clue in the sprawling case file.
Working under Commissioner Rodney K. Harrison, the core group of about 10 investigators was drawn from his department, the sheriff’s office, F.B.I. and State Police and worked closely with District Attorney Ray Tierney of Suffolk County and his prosecutors.

They worked in a beige office, its walls covered with maps, photos and a giant timeline, scouring their suspect’s digital and daily life — email addresses, social media accounts, search history.
All the while, Mr. Heuermann was searching, too, asking Google the same question that so many of his neighbors had been asking each other for more than a decade: “why hasn’t the long island serial killer been caught?”

Grim Discoveries​

Picking up the trail of a serial killer is an exceptional challenge. The killer often has no personal connection to the victims. If the victims lived on society’s margins, months or years can go by before their disappearances are treated as serious matters — or even recognized as the work of a single murderer.
The realization that a serial killer was hunting on Long Island’s South Shore came in December 2010, when a Suffolk County police officer, John Mallia, and his canine partner, a German shepherd named Blue, were searching for a 24-year-old woman named Shannan Gilbert, who had gone missing in the area.

Instead, over several days they found four other bodies near Gilgo Beach. They had been placed roughly 10 yards from Ocean Parkway, the main east-west thoroughfare that traverses a barrier island off the South Shore. After they discovered the bodies, investigators searched for evidence nearby with meticulous care — “sifting the sand like gold miners around each body,” one investigator recalled.

Image
A man and a dog in a thicket under a cloudy sky.

A search for one missing woman on a South Shore beach yielded the remains of four others.Credit...Robert Stolarik for The New York Times

A man and a dog in a thicket under a cloudy sky.

Ms. Gilbert’s corpse and other remains, including those that the authorities described as a man wearing women’s clothing and a toddler, would be found along the same roadway over the following year. The grisly discoveries riveted the region as the police speculated that the killings might be the work of more than one person.
But the first four bodies — all petite women in their 20s who had gone missing in the previous four years — seemed linked. Investigators surmised they had been killed by the same man, in part because of the way the bodies were wrapped and their proximity. And there was reason to believe that a witness might have gotten a look at the man.

The Gilgo Beach Serial Killings​

After a decade-long investigation into multiple murders believed to have been carried out by a serial killer on Long Island, a suspect has been arrested.​

The last of the four to disappear had been Amber Costello, a 27-year-old with a “Kaos” tattoo on her neck who advertised on Backpage and Craigslist. Shortly before she was last seen in September 2010, a would-be client contacted her from a disposable cellphone and visited her at the West Babylon house she shared with three roommates, parking in her driveway, according to court papers filed after Mr. Heuermann’s arrest. He drove a vehicle with a distinctive look: SUV in the front, pickup in the back.
Sign up for the New York Today Newsletter Each morning, get the latest on New York businesses, arts, sports, dining, style and more. Get it sent to your inbox.
The driver was just as distinctive: hulking, in his 40s, with bushy dark hair and 1970s-style eyeglasses. A witness described him as an ogre.

But as soon as the would-be client paid Ms. Costello, a chaotic scene unfolded. A man “pretending to be the outraged boyfriend” rushed in, part of a ruse to steal the money, according to the court papers.
Startled, the hulking man rushed out of the house.
He did not disappear for long, though. He texted Ms. Costello asking for “credit for next time” and arranged another meeting, according to the court papers. Ms. Costello was last seen alive the next night walking out of her home, apparently to meet the man.

Not long after, a witness reported seeing a dark truck drive by.
The description of the vehicle in the driveway, a dark, first-generation Chevrolet Avalanche, ended up tucked away in the case file, the authorities said.

Sifting the Signals​

Video
00gilgoVideoPromo-videoSixteenByNine1050.jpg

The women were each found about 10 yards off Ocean Parkway, the main route along the barrier island.CreditCredit...
The fact apparently lay buried for years among hundreds of thousands of pages of interviews; telephone, travel and credit records; and endless tips as the Suffolk County police department and district attorney’s office endured years of turmoil.

James Burke, the swaggering police chief who had been running the department since 2012, was arrested in 2015 and later convicted on federal civil rights and obstruction of justice charges. He had beaten a suspect who had been arrested after stealing cigars and a bag containing pornography and sex toys from Mr. Burke’s sport utility vehicle. The subsequent cover-up ensnared the district attorney at the time, Thomas J. Spota, who also landed in prison.
The federal investigation into Suffolk County’s top lawmen spanned years during the Gilgo Beach case, a period during which both Mr. Burke and Mr. Spota had spurned help from the F.B.I.
After Mr. Burke’s arrest, the new head of the Suffolk County police, Tim Sini, redoubled the department’s efforts. Mr. Sini, a former Manhattan federal prosecutor, focused on tracking the disposable cellphones, hoping there were more clues to be gleaned.

Image
Tim Sini stands outside, looking off to the side with hands folded, amid state troopers.

Police Commissioner Tim Sini invested in technology that helped investigators narrow their search.

Tim Sini stands outside, looking off to the side with hands folded, amid state troopers.

F.B.I. agents in 2012 had already identified the area where coverage from four cell towers overlapped in Massapequa Park. By mid-2016, Mr. Sini had secured a court order for “tower dumps” — information on every phone that connected to particular towers in a given window of time.

Technology and software had advanced. And Mr. Sini had invested in a system that allowed investigators to “take the relevant areas,” as he told Newsday, and “shrink them to extremely manageable spaces.”
They whittled down the area to what they came to call the polygon, which left them with several hundred homes around First Avenue in Massapequa Park, law enforcement officials said.
A pattern emerged from the disposable phones used to contact the victims: In the evening, nighttime and predawn hours, some were in a small area of Massapequa Park, a person with knowledge of the investigation said. That’s also where the phone of one victim, Megan Waterman, was last logged at 3:11 a.m. on June 6, 2010, shortly before she disappeared, according to court papers.
During the day, the phones were used in Midtown Manhattan.
Among other communications that investigators scrutinized were sadistic, taunting calls someone made from the cellphone of one victim, Melissa Barthelemy, to her teenage sister shortly after she had disappeared in 2009. “Do you think you’ll ever speak to her again?” the person had asked in a bland, calm voice.
Those calls were also linked to cell towers near Penn Station, the court papers said.
For years, investigators looked for suspects who worked in Manhattan and had lived in the polygon. The going was slow, and though investigators expressed optimism they would find their man, they had little to show.

Suddenly, a Suspect​

The big break came in March 2022.
Just weeks after the formation of the task force, an investigator found the witness’s description of the Chevrolet Avalanche in the case file, authorities said. Using a database that can search for vehicles by make and model without license-plate numbers, the investigator found an Avalanche linked to Mr. Heuermann in 2010, the year Ms. Costello went missing.
His name had never come up in the investigation as a suspect, officials said. His physical description matched that of the ogreish man who had rushed out of her house shortly before she disappeared: He was 6-foot-4 and heavyset. His office was in the patch of Manhattan identified by the sophisticated cellphone mapping.
And he lived in what investigators believed was their serial killer sweet spot: the part of Massapequa Park where they had begun drawing their polygon.
The Avalanche lead, said Mr. Tierney, the district attorney, had been “known pretty much from the beginning.” Mr. Tierney, who took office in 2022, said he did not know why investigators had not pursued it. He suggested that perhaps the detail hadn’t been deemed credible or had sunk in significance amid what seemed like more promising leads.
“There are piles of evidence,” he said. “What is credible, what’s not, what seems likely, what’s not — so it’s not as simple as it seems.”


Image
Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond Tierney speaks at a lectern.

District Attorney Ray Tierney said the crucial clue had been in investigators’ possession almost from the start.

Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond Tierney speaks at a lectern.

But crimes are often solved by tracking down a vehicle, and cases often start with a car description. David Berkowitz, known as Son of Sam and perhaps the state’s most notorious serial killer, was arrested in the 1970s after the police found that he owned an illegally parked Ford Galaxie that had received a parking ticket near one of the shootings.
In the Gilgo Beach investigation, the critical clue had fallen through the cracks.
“If they knew about it then, a major mistake was made in not tracking down this car earlier,” said Rob Trotta, a former Suffolk County detective and a current county legislator, who said he expects to make an official inquiry into what happened.
Dominick Varrone, the former chief of detectives who oversaw the first year of the investigation, questioned whether the Avalanche clue had actually been in the case file, but added, “I will feel very, very badly if our team missed something.”
“I’ll tell you right now: No suspect vehicle was on our radar when I was still there,” he added.
When investigators did finally link the Chevrolet Avalanche to Mr. Heuermann, the investigation entered its critical phase. Investigators began exploring every aspect of his life, using 300 subpoenas and search warrants.


Image
A man in a Tyvek suit walks past a Chevrolet Avalanche in a driveway.

The suspect’s vehicle was relatively uncommon and similar to one seen at a victim’s home the night she disappeared.

A man in a Tyvek suit walks past a Chevrolet Avalanche in a driveway.

They examined his Tinder account and several email addresses — all fictitious names — that led to additional disposable phones that Mr. Heuermann was using to contact massage parlors and women working as escorts, the court papers said. They found internet searches for child pornography.
The more investigators learned about Mr. Heuermann, the more convinced they were.
So much time had passed since the killings that precise locational data from Mr. Heuermann’s personal cellphone — registered to his architectural business — no longer existed. But his billing records showed the general location of the phone when calls were made, the court papers said, putting it in New York City around the same time in 2010 that the cruel and taunting calls were made on Ms. Barthelemy’s cellphone.
Investigators learned that several of the murders had occurred when Mr. Heuermann’s wife and children were out of town, according to prosecutors. One coincided with a trip his wife took to Iceland; another took place when she was in Maryland and a third when she was in New Jersey.
But they had nothing to put the burner phones that had been in contact with the victims in Mr. Heuermann’s hands.

Nor did they have any physical or forensic evidence directly linking him to the crimes.
That would soon change.

The Tipping Point​

Video
00gilgoVideoPromo-overhead-videoSixteenByNine1050.jpg

Investigators found the suspect’s house in the area where they had begun creating their polygon.CreditCredit...
In the investigation’s early days, at least five hairs were discovered on the victims or stuck to the burlap or duct tape that enveloped them. They were deemed unsuitable for detailed DNA analysis.
Forensic science moved ahead: In the past three years, two outside laboratories were able to generate thorough DNA reports, according to court papers.
Now, investigators needed genetic material from Mr. Heuermann. Last July, an undercover detective rooted through his recycling for empty bottles. In January, Mr. Heuermann tossed a pizza box into a sidewalk garbage can outside his office in Midtown. A surveillance team fished it out, and the ragged crusts inside gave them what they needed.

Investigators concluded that most of the hairs found on the victims were likely to have come from Mr. Heuermann’s wife. One was a potential match for Mr. Heuermann himself.
One laboratory compared the DNA profile from the fifth hair to the genetic material found on Mr. Heuermann’s pizza. It found enough markers in common to conclude that while 99.96 percent of the population could be excluded as a match, Mr. Heuermann could not, the authorities said.

Image
A trashcan.

A surveillance team retrieved the remnants of the suspect’s pizza from a trash can in New York.Credit...Suffolk County District Attorney

A trashcan.


Image
The crusts bore genetic material that investigators said directly linked the suspect to the crimes.

The crusts bore genetic material that investigators said directly linked the suspect to the crimes.Credit...Suffolk County Court, via Reuters

The crusts bore genetic material that investigators said directly linked the suspect to the crimes.

Mr. Tierney learned of the results in June.
He read the report again and again — perhaps dozens of times, as if trying to convince his brain of what his eyes were seeing.
Investigators believed they now had direct evidence linking Mr. Heuermann to the killings.
But investigators knew something else: Mr. Heuermann was scouring the internet for information about what they were doing.

Internet searches linked to his anonymous accounts included more than 200 queries in the past 16 months about serial killers generally and the investigation into the Gilgo Beach victims specifically. “Why could law enforcement not trace the calls made by the long island serial killer” was just one.
Mr. Tierney had grown increasingly worried that more victims would drop on his watch. He said that Mr. Heuermann had been visiting massage parlors — and contacting women working as escorts.
Mr. Tierney said he was sleeping badly, bedeviled by tension and worry. Last week, he decided the case had reached a tipping point.
So on the evening of July 13, detectives in suits and ties approached Mr. Heuermann after he walked out of his office building.
Mr. Heuermann, prosecutors said, had methodically covered his tracks and closely monitored the investigation.
But when the detectives arrested Mr. Heuermann after more than a dozen years of pursuit, Mr. Tierney said, his reaction was simple and instinctive: genuine surprise.
William K. Rashbaum is a senior writer on the Metro desk, where he covers political and municipal corruption, courts, terrorism and law enforcement. He was a part of the team awarded the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News. More about William K. Rashbaum
Joseph Goldstein covers health care in New York, following years of criminal justice and police reporting for the Metro desk. He also spent a year reporting on Afghanistan from The Times’s Kabul bureau. More about Joseph Goldstein
A version of this article appears in print on July 21, 2023, Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: A Polygon and a Chevy: How the Gilgo Beach Suspect Was Found. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe




Thanks for posting this in full.

It confirms that they had the vehicle tip but it was forgotten in the files.

"Suddenly, a Suspect​

The big break came in March 2022.
Just weeks after the formation of the task force, an investigator found the witness’s description of the Chevrolet Avalanche in the case file, authorities said. Using a database that can search for vehicles by make and model without license-plate numbers, the investigator found an Avalanche linked to Mr. Heuermann in 2010, the year Ms. Costello went missing.
His name had never come up in the investigation as a suspect, officials said. His physical description matched that of the ogreish man who had rushed out of her house shortly before she disappeared: He was 6-foot-4 and heavyset. His office was in the patch of Manhattan identified by the sophisticated cellphone mapping.
And he lived in what investigators believed was their serial killer sweet spot: the part of Massapequa Park where they had begun drawing their polygon.
The Avalanche lead, said Mr. Tierney, the district attorney, had been “known pretty much from the beginning.” Mr. Tierney, who took office in 2022, said he did not know why investigators had not pursued it. He suggested that perhaps the detail hadn’t been deemed credible or had sunk in significance amid what seemed like more promising leads.
“There are piles of evidence,” he said. “What is credible, what’s not, what seems likely, what’s not — so it’s not as simple as it seems.”

District Attorney Ray Tierney said the crucial clue had been in investigators’ possession almost from the start.

But crimes are often solved by tracking down a vehicle, and cases often start with a car description. David Berkowitz, known as Son of Sam and perhaps the state’s most notorious serial killer, was arrested in the 1970s after the police found that he owned
an illegally parked Ford Galaxie that had received a parking ticket near one of the shootings.
In the Gilgo Beach investigation, the critical clue had fallen through the cracks.
“If they knew about it then, a major mistake was made in not tracking down this car earlier,” said Rob Trotta, a former Suffolk County detective and a current county legislator, who said he expects to make an official inquiry into what happened.
Dominick Varrone, the former chief of detectives who oversaw the first year of the investigation, questioned whether the Avalanche clue had actually been in the case file, but added, “I will feel very, very badly if our team missed something.”
“I’ll tell you right now: No suspect vehicle was on our radar when I was still there,” he added.
When investigators did finally link the Chevrolet Avalanche to Mr. Heuermann, the investigation entered its critical phase. Investigators began exploring every aspect of his life, using 300 subpoenas and search warrants." "



It then explains how technology advances to help narrow the field.

"The Tipping Point​

Investigators found the suspect’s house in the area where they had begun creating their polygon.CreditCredit...
In the investigation’s early days, at least five hairs were discovered on the victims or stuck to the burlap or duct tape that enveloped them. They were deemed unsuitable for detailed DNA analysis.
Forensic science moved ahead: In the past three years, two outside laboratories were able to generate thorough DNA reports, according to court papers.
Now, investigators needed genetic Lbc0l o⅛ from Mr. Heuermann. Last July, an undercover detective rooted ď112 his recycling for empty bottles. In January, Mr. Heuermann tossed a pizza box into a sidewalk garbage can outside his office in Midtown. A surveillance team fished it out, and the ragged crusts inside gave them what they needed.

Investigators concluded that most of the hairs found on the victims were likely to have come from Mr. Heuermann’s wife. One was a potential match for Mr. Heuermann himself.
One laboratory compared the DNA profile from the fifth hair to the genetic material found on Mr. Heuermann’s pizza. It found enough markers in common to conclude that while 99.96 percent of the population could be excluded as a match, Mr. Heuermann could not, the authorities said. "
 
Thanks for posting this in full.

It confirms that they had the vehicle tip but it was forgotten in the files.

"Suddenly, a Suspect​

The big break came in March 2022.
Just weeks after the formation of the task force, an investigator found the witness’s description of the Chevrolet Avalanche in the case file, authorities said. Using a database that can search for vehicles by make and model without license-plate numbers, the investigator found an Avalanche linked to Mr. Heuermann in 2010, the year Ms. Costello went missing.
His name had never come up in the investigation as a suspect, officials said. His physical description matched that of the ogreish man who had rushed out of her house shortly before she disappeared: He was 6-foot-4 and heavyset. His office was in the patch of Manhattan identified by the sophisticated cellphone mapping.
And he lived in what investigators believed was their serial killer sweet spot: the part of Massapequa Park where they had begun drawing their polygon.
The Avalanche lead, said Mr. Tierney, the district attorney, had been “known pretty much from the beginning.” Mr. Tierney, who took office in 2022, said he did not know why investigators had not pursued it. He suggested that perhaps the detail hadn’t been deemed credible or had sunk in significance amid what seemed like more promising leads.
“There are piles of evidence,” he said. “What is credible, what’s not, what seems likely, what’s not — so it’s not as simple as it seems.”

District Attorney Ray Tierney said the crucial clue had been in investigators’ possession almost from the start.

But crimes are often solved by tracking down a vehicle, and cases often start with a car description. David Berkowitz, known as Son of Sam and perhaps the state’s most notorious serial killer, was arrested in the 1970s after the police found that he owned
an illegally parked Ford Galaxie that had received a parking ticket near one of the shootings.
In the Gilgo Beach investigation, the critical clue had fallen through the cracks.
“If they knew about it then, a major mistake was made in not tracking down this car earlier,” said Rob Trotta, a former Suffolk County detective and a current county legislator, who said he expects to make an official inquiry into what happened.
Dominick Varrone, the former chief of detectives who oversaw the first year of the investigation, questioned whether the Avalanche clue had actually been in the case file, but added, “I will feel very, very badly if our team missed something.”
“I’ll tell you right now: No suspect vehicle was on our radar when I was still there,” he added.
When investigators did finally link the Chevrolet Avalanche to Mr. Heuermann, the investigation entered its critical phase. Investigators began exploring every aspect of his life, using 300 subpoenas and search warrants." "



It then explains how technology advances to help narrow the field.

"The Tipping Point​

Investigators found the suspect’s house in the area where they had begun creating their polygon.CreditCredit...
In the investigation’s early days, at least five hairs were discovered on the victims or stuck to the burlap or duct tape that enveloped them. They were deemed unsuitable for detailed DNA analysis.
Forensic science moved ahead: In the past three years, two outside laboratories were able to generate thorough DNA reports, according to court papers.
Now, investigators needed genetic Lbc0l o⅛ from Mr. Heuermann. Last July, an undercover detective rooted ď112 his recycling for empty bottles. In January, Mr. Heuermann tossed a pizza box into a sidewalk garbage can outside his office in Midtown. A surveillance team fished it out, and the ragged crusts inside gave them what they needed.

Investigators concluded that most of the hairs found on the victims were likely to have come from Mr. Heuermann’s wife. One was a potential match for Mr. Heuermann himself.
One laboratory compared the DNA profile from the fifth hair to the genetic material found on Mr. Heuermann’s pizza. It found enough markers in common to conclude that while 99.96 percent of the population could be excluded as a match, Mr. Heuermann could not, the authorities said. "

Yeah, I saw that, and it would have been much easier to track than I thought. They really screwed up there.
 
We didn't have a big family, either. Just two kids. I have many family members close to my age with parents that were in their 30s and I went to school with many that had parents even older than mine.
I don't recall your age but it seems to me you were younger than mel who is younger than me by a number of years. Birth control was around by then. Also if you sister is ten years older (it is only you two?), so is my sister but again she is going to be older than your oldest sibling who is far more likely closer to my age or younger than I. It's not the same time frame I am talking about. Are either of you Crybaby's age or a bit younger? I KNOW you aren't.
 
The bit I quoted said that she wasn't at home when the murders were committed. The police have already determined this, I guess, so he was home alone.

"investigators stated that she had been traveling to Maryland, New Jersey, and Iceland during the suspected murders of the sex workers"

I thought her hair was inside the camo and actually on the tape around the body/bodies.
I think they were only able to determine this in two. In part because they couldn't get all of her cell records due to retention policy of her provider. They said this I believe in the PC.

One would think though if she's been cooperative as it sounds like she has they could ask her about the other times. That is a long time ago though and confirming it I'm sure would take more than her word for it to use as evidence, like airline records or something.

Yeah I think her hair was inside these things. It is a question no doubt. If just on the outside of their bodies it could have been picked up from the victim if she was in their home or even if the wife rode in Rex's vehicle a lot. Inside the camo is a hmmm. The tape too really... Did he ensure it or make sure she used these things for something too... It is odd. More of hers than his.
 
My mother was 35 when she had me and 40 when she had my younger brother, her 4th and 5th child. And that was common in the 1950's in the UK. My eldest sibling was 10 years older than me and was born in 1944 when my mother was 25.

You have made me curious about his father. So he died 48 years ago - which would be 1975.
The Netflix series the Midwives although fictional does a good job of portraying what birth control meant to people and in what years. The show is based on times in your country for time frame events and with birth control and how badly women were trying to get it, etc.

I am curious about his father too. There is sooo little.info out on him and I am not the type who takes the word of the offender about anything like as to him being an aerospace engineer or anything. There's no actual mention that his parents were even together when that happened or married for that matter. Not that I've seen or heard anyhow. Kids tend to glorify a missing parent whether by death, not caring they exist, and other things like that. So I'm really curious and curious what he died from as well as many other things. I also would like to know his brother's age to give a true picture of the era and the years of birth. I know where his age lands him as to big families or not, etc. but I don't know the brother's. I'm about as curious about the brother as the father... The mother too of COURSE no doubt but the two men more so first. It is looked at with every serial killer and will be for years to come but I feel in this case this one's childhood is definitely at play here.

Need Mel to chime in too but we all know somewhat, arent' there often sexual problems with serial killers... As in dysfunction sexually or at least with conventional marital sex and intercourse... They need that violence or that extra... I don't want to go too far into that as it isn't necessary but it sure plays in in these cases... And this is one of the ones with prostitutes as the victims. There are others but Mel is as minefield of info on them, I'm not. And of course it is rape not sex which it would be sex on any occasion he paid a prostitute and did not kill her or kidnap her.

Maybe she has chimed in or more has come out, I haven't been able to look at anything all day today or tonight yet. I am behind on here too.
 
His father was called Theodor. His grandfather was a William and he also had (has?) an uncle called William. (the "WH" on the belt binding one murder victim.)

So obit for his grandfather. Good work!

Interesting his grandfather was born in New Jersey. So a good chance there was family there during Crybaby's childhood or connections to Jersey. Not proof of anything but the Atlantic City murders have been mentioned... He wouldn't have known his grandfather as this obit was in 1964. So grandpa died when he was at oldest around 1 year old. Dad died when he was 11.

Grandpa was a long term Long Islander. It mentions CB's dad (Rex) being from Massapequa. Theodor. Was he living at home with his parents when CB was born? Or did they both have homes on LI? Wondering if this house was the grandpa's home, then the father's, then CB's... So we don't know CB's father's age but his mother is 93 or 95 (I've heard both) 90s anyhow. If dad was about the same age they'd both be around 34 when they had CB. It also means his grandpa and grandma would have had Theodor/CB's dad when he was... Oh man I am confusing myself here been a VERY long day. I'm close to it, it makes grandpa born in about 1888 which fits because I'm CB's age and my grandpa was born in 1894... One of them anyhow.

On another note as I leave that to sit for now he lost two paternal figures early in life both his dad and his dad's dad. If mom actually grew up in Iceland and her family lived there) he had no male figures in his life other than maybe an uncle or some such if that. No mention of mom every remarrying so far and doesn't sound as if she did as far as we know. Assuming they were married at some point. Seems they were if she ended up with the paternal side's home in LI.

All guesswork but this does likely answer a few of those questions but now I am wondering if he ever lived anywhere else prior to buying the home... It seems he may have been living as a baby in the grandparents' home with dad at least or maybe they weren't married yet and he was out of wedlock. UNLESS both grandpa AND CB's dad owned homes in LI at the time of his death.

Nothing on dad for an obit that you've seen anywhere?

I'm confusing myself. This is a lot of thinking after the day I've had. Four hours on the road on a turnaround trip and four hours at the destination of something I had to take care of. It has been a very tiring day.

Chances are I will read ahead and some of what I am trying to figure out will be answered lol.
 
Brain clicked in right after I posted that. So IF CB's dad is same general age as his mom, grandpa would have been give or take around 41 when he and grandma had CB's dad. NO birth control in those years and seven children and his dad maybe one of the younger ones since his father/grandpa would be about 41 so doubtful he was the first child by a long shot at that age. Not a huge family in those years depending on when grandpa married and ate what age. Tended to be younger back when with a majority of people. You grew up and you got married not too long after adulthood hence the old maid thing, etc. Most women did not work outside the home and so forth and in grandpa's era that's certainly very true for the most part. Not saying none did of course.
 

The Polygon and the Avalanche: How the Gilgo Beach Suspect Was Found​

As investigators spent years looking for a suspect, a key clue was buried in their files. Could they have solved the case years earlier?




William K. RashbaumJoseph GoldsteinJohnny Milano
By William K. Rashbaum and Joseph Goldstein
Photographs and Video by Johnny Milano
  • July 20, 2023
They called it the polygon.
Using phone records and a sophisticated system that maps the reach of cell towers, a team of investigators had drawn the irregular shape across a map of tree-lined streets in the Long Island suburb of Massapequa Park. By 2021, the investigators had been able to shrink the polygon so that it covered only several hundred homes.
In one of those homes, the investigators believed, lived a serial killer.
A decade before, 11 bodies had been found in the underbrush around Gilgo Beach, a remote stretch of sand five miles away on the South Shore. Four women had been bound with tape or belts or wrapped in shrouds of camouflage-patterned burlap, the sort that hunters use for blinds. They had worked as escorts and had gone missing after going to meet a client.
Each, shortly before she disappeared, had been in contact with a different disposable cellphone. Investigators eventually determined that during the workday, some of the phones had been in a small area of Midtown Manhattan near Penn Station, and at night they pinged in the polygon, mirroring the tidal movements of the 150,000 Long Island residents who head into Manhattan each day.
Last Friday, Suffolk County authorities announced that they had arrested a man who they believed had killed the four women: Rex Heuermann, a 59-year-old architect who had an office near Penn Station and lived on a quiet street right where they had expected to find him. He was charged with three of the murders, to which he has pleaded not guilty, and was named as the prime suspect in the fourth.

The arrest ended years of anguish for some of the victims’ families. But the investigation also raised an unsettling question: Could the authorities have solved the case years earlier?
The following account is drawn from a 32-page bail application and interviews with current and former investigators and Suffolk County’s top law enforcement officials.

Image
A quartet of women in closeup.

The victims were, clockwise from top left, Melissa Barthelemy, Amber Costello, Maureen Brainard-Barnes and Megan Waterman.Credit...Suffolk County Police Department, via Associated Press

A quartet of women in closeup.

The case had unfolded fitfully over more than a decade. But it took a new police commissioner and his task force just six weeks to uncover a crucial clue in the sprawling case file.
Working under Commissioner Rodney K. Harrison, the core group of about 10 investigators was drawn from his department, the sheriff’s office, F.B.I. and State Police and worked closely with District Attorney Ray Tierney of Suffolk County and his prosecutors.

They worked in a beige office, its walls covered with maps, photos and a giant timeline, scouring their suspect’s digital and daily life — email addresses, social media accounts, search history.
All the while, Mr. Heuermann was searching, too, asking Google the same question that so many of his neighbors had been asking each other for more than a decade: “why hasn’t the long island serial killer been caught?”

Grim Discoveries​

Picking up the trail of a serial killer is an exceptional challenge. The killer often has no personal connection to the victims. If the victims lived on society’s margins, months or years can go by before their disappearances are treated as serious matters — or even recognized as the work of a single murderer.
The realization that a serial killer was hunting on Long Island’s South Shore came in December 2010, when a Suffolk County police officer, John Mallia, and his canine partner, a German shepherd named Blue, were searching for a 24-year-old woman named Shannan Gilbert, who had gone missing in the area.

Instead, over several days they found four other bodies near Gilgo Beach. They had been placed roughly 10 yards from Ocean Parkway, the main east-west thoroughfare that traverses a barrier island off the South Shore. After they discovered the bodies, investigators searched for evidence nearby with meticulous care — “sifting the sand like gold miners around each body,” one investigator recalled.

Image
A man and a dog in a thicket under a cloudy sky.

A search for one missing woman on a South Shore beach yielded the remains of four others.Credit...Robert Stolarik for The New York Times

A man and a dog in a thicket under a cloudy sky.

Ms. Gilbert’s corpse and other remains, including those that the authorities described as a man wearing women’s clothing and a toddler, would be found along the same roadway over the following year. The grisly discoveries riveted the region as the police speculated that the killings might be the work of more than one person.
But the first four bodies — all petite women in their 20s who had gone missing in the previous four years — seemed linked. Investigators surmised they had been killed by the same man, in part because of the way the bodies were wrapped and their proximity. And there was reason to believe that a witness might have gotten a look at the man.

The Gilgo Beach Serial Killings​

After a decade-long investigation into multiple murders believed to have been carried out by a serial killer on Long Island, a suspect has been arrested.​

The last of the four to disappear had been Amber Costello, a 27-year-old with a “Kaos” tattoo on her neck who advertised on Backpage and Craigslist. Shortly before she was last seen in September 2010, a would-be client contacted her from a disposable cellphone and visited her at the West Babylon house she shared with three roommates, parking in her driveway, according to court papers filed after Mr. Heuermann’s arrest. He drove a vehicle with a distinctive look: SUV in the front, pickup in the back.
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The driver was just as distinctive: hulking, in his 40s, with bushy dark hair and 1970s-style eyeglasses. A witness described him as an ogre.

But as soon as the would-be client paid Ms. Costello, a chaotic scene unfolded. A man “pretending to be the outraged boyfriend” rushed in, part of a ruse to steal the money, according to the court papers.
Startled, the hulking man rushed out of the house.
He did not disappear for long, though. He texted Ms. Costello asking for “credit for next time” and arranged another meeting, according to the court papers. Ms. Costello was last seen alive the next night walking out of her home, apparently to meet the man.

Not long after, a witness reported seeing a dark truck drive by.
The description of the vehicle in the driveway, a dark, first-generation Chevrolet Avalanche, ended up tucked away in the case file, the authorities said.

Sifting the Signals​

Video
00gilgoVideoPromo-videoSixteenByNine1050.jpg

The women were each found about 10 yards off Ocean Parkway, the main route along the barrier island.CreditCredit...
The fact apparently lay buried for years among hundreds of thousands of pages of interviews; telephone, travel and credit records; and endless tips as the Suffolk County police department and district attorney’s office endured years of turmoil.

James Burke, the swaggering police chief who had been running the department since 2012, was arrested in 2015 and later convicted on federal civil rights and obstruction of justice charges. He had beaten a suspect who had been arrested after stealing cigars and a bag containing pornography and sex toys from Mr. Burke’s sport utility vehicle. The subsequent cover-up ensnared the district attorney at the time, Thomas J. Spota, who also landed in prison.
The federal investigation into Suffolk County’s top lawmen spanned years during the Gilgo Beach case, a period during which both Mr. Burke and Mr. Spota had spurned help from the F.B.I.
After Mr. Burke’s arrest, the new head of the Suffolk County police, Tim Sini, redoubled the department’s efforts. Mr. Sini, a former Manhattan federal prosecutor, focused on tracking the disposable cellphones, hoping there were more clues to be gleaned.

Image
Tim Sini stands outside, looking off to the side with hands folded, amid state troopers.

Police Commissioner Tim Sini invested in technology that helped investigators narrow their search.

Tim Sini stands outside, looking off to the side with hands folded, amid state troopers.

F.B.I. agents in 2012 had already identified the area where coverage from four cell towers overlapped in Massapequa Park. By mid-2016, Mr. Sini had secured a court order for “tower dumps” — information on every phone that connected to particular towers in a given window of time.

Technology and software had advanced. And Mr. Sini had invested in a system that allowed investigators to “take the relevant areas,” as he told Newsday, and “shrink them to extremely manageable spaces.”
They whittled down the area to what they came to call the polygon, which left them with several hundred homes around First Avenue in Massapequa Park, law enforcement officials said.
A pattern emerged from the disposable phones used to contact the victims: In the evening, nighttime and predawn hours, some were in a small area of Massapequa Park, a person with knowledge of the investigation said. That’s also where the phone of one victim, Megan Waterman, was last logged at 3:11 a.m. on June 6, 2010, shortly before she disappeared, according to court papers.
During the day, the phones were used in Midtown Manhattan.
Among other communications that investigators scrutinized were sadistic, taunting calls someone made from the cellphone of one victim, Melissa Barthelemy, to her teenage sister shortly after she had disappeared in 2009. “Do you think you’ll ever speak to her again?” the person had asked in a bland, calm voice.
Those calls were also linked to cell towers near Penn Station, the court papers said.
For years, investigators looked for suspects who worked in Manhattan and had lived in the polygon. The going was slow, and though investigators expressed optimism they would find their man, they had little to show.

Suddenly, a Suspect​

The big break came in March 2022.
Just weeks after the formation of the task force, an investigator found the witness’s description of the Chevrolet Avalanche in the case file, authorities said. Using a database that can search for vehicles by make and model without license-plate numbers, the investigator found an Avalanche linked to Mr. Heuermann in 2010, the year Ms. Costello went missing.
His name had never come up in the investigation as a suspect, officials said. His physical description matched that of the ogreish man who had rushed out of her house shortly before she disappeared: He was 6-foot-4 and heavyset. His office was in the patch of Manhattan identified by the sophisticated cellphone mapping.
And he lived in what investigators believed was their serial killer sweet spot: the part of Massapequa Park where they had begun drawing their polygon.
The Avalanche lead, said Mr. Tierney, the district attorney, had been “known pretty much from the beginning.” Mr. Tierney, who took office in 2022, said he did not know why investigators had not pursued it. He suggested that perhaps the detail hadn’t been deemed credible or had sunk in significance amid what seemed like more promising leads.
“There are piles of evidence,” he said. “What is credible, what’s not, what seems likely, what’s not — so it’s not as simple as it seems.”


Image
Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond Tierney speaks at a lectern.

District Attorney Ray Tierney said the crucial clue had been in investigators’ possession almost from the start.

Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond Tierney speaks at a lectern.

But crimes are often solved by tracking down a vehicle, and cases often start with a car description. David Berkowitz, known as Son of Sam and perhaps the state’s most notorious serial killer, was arrested in the 1970s after the police found that he owned an illegally parked Ford Galaxie that had received a parking ticket near one of the shootings.
In the Gilgo Beach investigation, the critical clue had fallen through the cracks.
“If they knew about it then, a major mistake was made in not tracking down this car earlier,” said Rob Trotta, a former Suffolk County detective and a current county legislator, who said he expects to make an official inquiry into what happened.
Dominick Varrone, the former chief of detectives who oversaw the first year of the investigation, questioned whether the Avalanche clue had actually been in the case file, but added, “I will feel very, very badly if our team missed something.”
“I’ll tell you right now: No suspect vehicle was on our radar when I was still there,” he added.
When investigators did finally link the Chevrolet Avalanche to Mr. Heuermann, the investigation entered its critical phase. Investigators began exploring every aspect of his life, using 300 subpoenas and search warrants.


Image
A man in a Tyvek suit walks past a Chevrolet Avalanche in a driveway.

The suspect’s vehicle was relatively uncommon and similar to one seen at a victim’s home the night she disappeared.

A man in a Tyvek suit walks past a Chevrolet Avalanche in a driveway.

They examined his Tinder account and several email addresses — all fictitious names — that led to additional disposable phones that Mr. Heuermann was using to contact massage parlors and women working as escorts, the court papers said. They found internet searches for child pornography.
The more investigators learned about Mr. Heuermann, the more convinced they were.
So much time had passed since the killings that precise locational data from Mr. Heuermann’s personal cellphone — registered to his architectural business — no longer existed. But his billing records showed the general location of the phone when calls were made, the court papers said, putting it in New York City around the same time in 2010 that the cruel and taunting calls were made on Ms. Barthelemy’s cellphone.
Investigators learned that several of the murders had occurred when Mr. Heuermann’s wife and children were out of town, according to prosecutors. One coincided with a trip his wife took to Iceland; another took place when she was in Maryland and a third when she was in New Jersey.
But they had nothing to put the burner phones that had been in contact with the victims in Mr. Heuermann’s hands.

Nor did they have any physical or forensic evidence directly linking him to the crimes.
That would soon change.

The Tipping Point​

Video
00gilgoVideoPromo-overhead-videoSixteenByNine1050.jpg

Investigators found the suspect’s house in the area where they had begun creating their polygon.CreditCredit...
In the investigation’s early days, at least five hairs were discovered on the victims or stuck to the burlap or duct tape that enveloped them. They were deemed unsuitable for detailed DNA analysis.
Forensic science moved ahead: In the past three years, two outside laboratories were able to generate thorough DNA reports, according to court papers.
Now, investigators needed genetic material from Mr. Heuermann. Last July, an undercover detective rooted through his recycling for empty bottles. In January, Mr. Heuermann tossed a pizza box into a sidewalk garbage can outside his office in Midtown. A surveillance team fished it out, and the ragged crusts inside gave them what they needed.

Investigators concluded that most of the hairs found on the victims were likely to have come from Mr. Heuermann’s wife. One was a potential match for Mr. Heuermann himself.
One laboratory compared the DNA profile from the fifth hair to the genetic material found on Mr. Heuermann’s pizza. It found enough markers in common to conclude that while 99.96 percent of the population could be excluded as a match, Mr. Heuermann could not, the authorities said.

Image
A trashcan.

A surveillance team retrieved the remnants of the suspect’s pizza from a trash can in New York.Credit...Suffolk County District Attorney

A trashcan.


Image
The crusts bore genetic material that investigators said directly linked the suspect to the crimes.

The crusts bore genetic material that investigators said directly linked the suspect to the crimes.Credit...Suffolk County Court, via Reuters

The crusts bore genetic material that investigators said directly linked the suspect to the crimes.

Mr. Tierney learned of the results in June.
He read the report again and again — perhaps dozens of times, as if trying to convince his brain of what his eyes were seeing.
Investigators believed they now had direct evidence linking Mr. Heuermann to the killings.
But investigators knew something else: Mr. Heuermann was scouring the internet for information about what they were doing.

Internet searches linked to his anonymous accounts included more than 200 queries in the past 16 months about serial killers generally and the investigation into the Gilgo Beach victims specifically. “Why could law enforcement not trace the calls made by the long island serial killer” was just one.
Mr. Tierney had grown increasingly worried that more victims would drop on his watch. He said that Mr. Heuermann had been visiting massage parlors — and contacting women working as escorts.
Mr. Tierney said he was sleeping badly, bedeviled by tension and worry. Last week, he decided the case had reached a tipping point.
So on the evening of July 13, detectives in suits and ties approached Mr. Heuermann after he walked out of his office building.
Mr. Heuermann, prosecutors said, had methodically covered his tracks and closely monitored the investigation.
But when the detectives arrested Mr. Heuermann after more than a dozen years of pursuit, Mr. Tierney said, his reaction was simple and instinctive: genuine surprise.
William K. Rashbaum is a senior writer on the Metro desk, where he covers political and municipal corruption, courts, terrorism and law enforcement. He was a part of the team awarded the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News. More about William K. Rashbaum
Joseph Goldstein covers health care in New York, following years of criminal justice and police reporting for the Metro desk. He also spent a year reporting on Afghanistan from The Times’s Kabul bureau. More about Joseph Goldstein
A version of this article appears in print on July 21, 2023, Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: A Polygon and a Chevy: How the Gilgo Beach Suspect Was Found. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe



Long but very thorough. This is at least the second time now I've seen that both kids lived at home. I'm not sure if this is known or assumed because they were all there when about simultaneously told of his arrest. No matter

One thing I'd like to know is how many square feet this home is.

It goes into the corruptness, let's not forget it, of the former police chief and D.A. and their arrest.

And it doesn't surprise me considering how this was handled or mishandled for years that this vehicle ID was "missed" or fell through the cracks.

It says exactly what I was saying they said about the vehicle, they searched a database and knew the vehicle.

I guess someone could try to say they inserted an old tip into the files to get what they needed to get him (planted the tip) but I think that's a stretch. The witness is very likely still alive whether it is Costello's bf or they had more than one.

There are things I'm not going to go into right now that I wonder. I'd like to know what this man did other than the crimes and who he hung around if anyone or socialized with. There are different accounts on how he struck people even amongst neighbors. As the psych lady said on one of the YT videos I posted, he shows a different face depending on who he is dealing with. He seemed sociable enough in his interview and not shy or odd. I didn't watch it all but enough and I should I guess. There is an account of him striking up a conversation with a woman in a bar, again, sociable enough. Unlike the Idaho 4 killer who was awkward, strange, odd, whatever one wants to call it. He was a businessman who apparently could pay to staff and maintain an office and how many homes, and worked with people big time in his job with city stuff, etc. I want to know who if anyone he hobknobbed with, met for drinks, had dinner or lunches with and I don't mean women, I mean colleagues, other people in upper types of jobs, college educated in the city etc. There are a lot of dead people, mostly women, who have been found on LI. And the Shannon Gilbert one, which I don't deny we know she was at the home of someone else, ended up in the same area as these women. As I've said before I believe, there seem to be a lot of men who apparently call escorts or sex workers out to Long Island although we also are led to believe it could have just been the dumping ground of one or a few others. The police chief with the porn and before that imo not caring or OBSTRUCTING Gilbert, a lost vehicle description in this case and a whole lot more, bothers me that the former admin or whatever would botch, not care, obstruct or screw up both cases. Then you have one who had his sex toys stolen out of his car who was in charge of these cases... I guess I did go into it some but I have a LOT MORE. One thing that sticks with me through the years where some details don't about people of note and people from LE and parties on LI with prostitutes is part of it.

He may well be a solo killer and may be or may not be responsible for many of the others but that doesn't mean one killer did not know another or others, etc. It would explain lack of investigation into both things and messing up the investigations... Or lack of same. I'm not sold on it but it just stays present with me and has with some parts of all of the murders through the years even before this arrest.

Anywhooo, I don't believe he likely didn't murder in all his other places.

I see in this the wife was in New Jersey on one trip... Which brings me back to what I said reading the grandparent's obit that he was born there... Do they have a home there too or did they or does the extended family maybe have some home there... And that brings the thought of the Atlantic City bodies again...

I don't believe with all of these homes that LI is the only place victims were left or that it was only in NY.

This case is going to be one of interest for some years to come imo. Not just because of the usual serial killer thing and that they turn out to be that way and of interest but the number of homes just for one, the lack of family info so far or where he was his entire life--always living at home or with mom and dad even when having children until getting mom to sell him the home? Where did she go at that time or did she live with them still? LOTS of questions about just the basics.

I've had a really long couple of days and they were days off!! I did get to eat lunch out (never for me do I get to or do that at all in a longggg time)) or a mid afternoon lunch/dinner. And I got my gas tank in my car filled for FREE. That was nice. We had to reposition cars and not turn the pump off, a little story in itself but I was probably on 1/4 and now have a full tank for free! Of course I drove home two hours but still pretty close to full. My car is a she and she has two very fitting pet names but I don't share them but they're good ones. They fit her and they are very complimentary.
 
Yeah, I saw that, and it would have been much easier to track than I thought. They really screwed up there.
So you see now that they did have the make and such? I knew what you meant because we never did hear that all these years because apparently they didn't know it or pay attention but that's how they finally had a person of interest. It was interesting this article did say his name had come up before and I'm going to guess that was in using prostitutes and talking to other ones or of who any of them knew of in these areas, etc.

I also found this article Tresir posted interesting in that it said the Police Commissioner (is that who?) said it was bothering him to no end if another murder would occur on his watch etc. and he finally decided to pull the plug. We know or knew before this that he was again or continuing to call escorts, etc. but I still wonder if something ramped up or he bought another burner phone etc. that tipped the scales to now is the time even though they'd probably have loved to investigate longer and get more before he lawyered up but I'm sure the trying to keep all secret and the Grand Jury and hundreds of subpoenaes secret, etc. all by itself was worrisome. I believe him totally but do think there may have been something just a bit different that led him to think I can't let this go any longer.

Also, we had no clue this case was heating up but he was searching almost manically worried that it had. Why after all these years would he be? It wouldn't be far fetched to think some bank or something gave some alert that someone accessed his info, etc. Or that he has "some" connection. Do we know the time frame of these internet searches on the case and cell phone records etc.? Was it throughout or was he tipped off somehow and was doing it more recently?

Keeping this all secret with no leaks and so on with a grand jury and how many subpoenaes, wow. It wouldn't be surprising if something got him worried... It also wouldn't be surprising if he was planning a trip (someone said, was that you and I've never heard that) or bought another burner phone, a thought that keeps coming to me. I've not seen anyone suggest that but I just figure it would be a tipping point to LE as he bought one before each murder it seems.
 
I don't recall your age but it seems to me you were younger than mel who is younger than me by a number of years. Birth control was around by then. Also if you sister is ten years older (it is only you two?), so is my sister but again she is going to be older than your oldest sibling who is far more likely closer to my age or younger than I. It's not the same time frame I am talking about. Are either of you Crybaby's age or a bit younger? I KNOW you aren't.
I am not younger than Mel and basically your age, so I don't know how you are coming to that conclusion. It IS the exact same time frame.
 
Nowadays it isn't but back then I'd beg to differ, that was almost considered past childbearing years or more risky. I was born around his time (ugh) but my mom was 20 years younger than my dad. Of course in particular Catholics some kept going and yes over the years it was though risky past 30 even somewhat and Down's Syndrome and other things definitely and so forth. The pill came about as an option to sterilization formerly about the only thing other than abstinence. In comparison until maybe the last decade it was thought not wise to go past 30. I have a sister that took that to total heart and I've seen others do the same.

I'm not saying even that it means anything and of course it isn't unheard of BUT he could have been a tagalong as I've said. One child they had and years behind that he comes along unexpectedly. There are only two here from what I've heard. Or the parents didn't marry until in their 30s or have kids until mid 30s or some such. It isn't unheard of no doubt but we only have a two child family here and his dad died when he was 11? And what was he? Some aerospace engineer per Crybaby? We could have parents who were just focused more on careers and married and had kids later in life. I don't know but am curious.

He goes for awhile in life too and one marriage before he has one child.

To put it simply he seems to hate women.

I suspect there is some root to this all. Not an EXCUSE but a root. Some resentment here somewhere, some abuse, some lack of something. Again not an EXCUSE but some reason he could go this far... At its most simple I guess he could have also been a spoiled rotten brat and prostitutes were beneath him but why the need to kill.

I don't know and much we don't know yet but I just suspect these things are going to come into play at least with psych experts etc.

We don't even know about his dad's death. Why is that? It shouldn't take long for people out there to dig that up. Was it natural causes? Expected? Not expected? For some one with the career his dad had it had to be known about and an obit and articles published one would think...
Yes. Good post. No food. :LOL: Not to put down Catholics. My uncle converted when he married my aunt Jeannie. They had 5. I am their only cousin. Yes. No birth control. My mom was the youngest. He was the oldest by 10 yrs. Then my aunts in the middle. My mom converted to Southern Baptist. No birth control needed. My grandparents were Lutheran, But not really practicing. My mom was a surprise. Sheryl was an oops by 6 yrs. I'll say. :tongueouttoall: And back in my great grandparents, Grandparents day. There just wasn't birth control like now. 7 children on my grandpa's side and 7 on my grandma's side. And it was very common for farm families to have alot of children. Aren't you tired already?.
 
I am not younger than Mel and basically your age, so I don't know how you are coming to that conclusion. It IS the exact same time frame.
Well I got the idea you weren't back around when Mel was turning the big one and thought you said something about not being there yet, being younger, in humor. I could be wrong and apparently am as you know your own age lol.

Well then you should know the whole birth control thing, large families in most cases until then unless abstaining or sterilized, etc. or with fertility problems.
 

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