USA TODAY US Edition

New charges filed in Gilgo Beach murders

Suspect charged in the death of fourth woman

- Christophe­r Cann Contributi­ng: Associated Press; Jeanine Santucci, John Bacon, Jorge L. Ortiz, USA TODAY

The man accused of killing sex workers and dumping their bodies along a coastal parkway on New York’s Long Island was charged Tuesday in the death of a fourth woman.

Rex Heuermann, a former architect, was formally charged with second-degree murder in the killing of 25-year-old Maureen Brainard-Barnes – the last of the so-called “Gilgo Four” murders that police have officially tied to Heuermann.

Brainard-Barnes’ body was found in 2010 along a remote parkway near Gilgo Beach three years after she vanished, according to court records.

In July, Heuermann, 60, was named the prime suspect in her death when he was arrested and charged with the slayings of Megan Waterman, 22, Melissa Barthelemy, 24, and Amber Costello, 27 – all of whom, like Brainard-Barnes, were found along the same stretch of parkway.

Ten sets of human remains have been found buried in the Gilgo Beach area of Jones Beach Island. The majority of the cases remain unsolved and investigat­ors don't think Heuermann is responsibl­e for all the killings. A grand jury task force was set up in recent years to investigat­e the cases, including the deaths of the four women.

Heuermann entered a not guilty plea on the latest charges, according to the Associated Press.

Investigat­ion into 'Gilgo Four' murders is over, DA says

Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond Tierney at a news conference on Tuesday said the new charges mark the end of the investigat­ion into the deaths of the four women.

"The grand jury investigat­ion of the so-called Gilgo Four is over (and) has been concluded," Tierney said. "We will proceed with those cases in court."

Meanwhile, the task force will carry on with its investigat­ions into the deaths of the other people whose remains were discovered in the Gilgo Beach area.

"There should be no mistake the work of the grand jury is continuing," he said. "In regard to those other bodies and those other murders, the task force will continue to investigat­e those cases."

Brainard-Barnes was 'a devoted mother'

The women who make up the "Gilgo Four" were found when police were searching for 24-year-old Shannon Gilbert, a sex worker from New Jersey, in December 2010. They each went missing between July 2007 and September 2010. All of them were believed to be working as sex workers when they disappeare­d, court records showed.

Brainard-Barnes, a mother of two living in Connecticu­t, was the first of the four women to disappear. She vanished on July 9, 2007, after she headed to Manhattan for sex work, according to friends who became concerned when she uncharacte­ristically stopped using her phone.

On July 6, she was contacted by a burner phone, and over the next three days there were sixteen interactio­ns between Brainard-Barnes’ phone and the burner, court records show. Her phone was last traced on July 9 in Midtown Manhattan near the 59th Street Bridge around 11:56 p.m. local time.

On Tuesday, Tierney said BrainardBa­rnes was a devoted mother, sister and daughter who had artistic aspiration­s.

"She was an intellectu­al; she was a writer; she was an artistic person," he said. "She cared very deeply about the people that she loved. She fiercely protected them . ... She's sorely missed by those that love her."

Barthelemy was the next woman to disappear and was last seen in New York City before she died, court records show. She disappeare­d on July 10, 2009.

Waterman disappeare­d on June 6, 2010, and was last seen in Hauppauge, New York, court records show.

Costello was last seen at American Avenue in the West Babylon neighborho­od on Long Island before she died, court records show. She disappeare­d on Sept. 2, 2010.

How was Heuermann caught?

After the many remains were discovered buried in the Gilgo Beach area, police began chasing down leads. Heuermann was not connected with the case until early 2022 when investigat­ors linked him to a Chevrolet Avalanche truck that a witness reported in 2010.

Investigat­ors searched phone and bank records and began to find more connection­s between Heuermann and the murders. He used his American Express card in the same area where a burner phone was used to contact the victims, according to court records. He allegedly used one to call and taunt relatives of Barthelemy.

“Significan­tly, investigat­ors could find no instance where Heuermann was in a separate location from these other cellphones when such a communicat­ion event occurred,” court records said.

In January of last year, a surveillan­ce team following Heuermann saw him throw a pizza box into a garbage can outside his office. Police found pizza crust inside the box and sent it to a forensic lab for analysis. In June, the lab returned results saying the swab from the crust matched a hair found where the women's bodies were discovered.

He was arrested outside his Manhattan office in July. Later that month, his wife, Asa Ellerup, filed for divorce.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT/ GETTY IMAGES ?? A view of Gilgo Beach on July 18, 2023 in Babylon, N.Y. A total of 11 bodies, mostly women, have been found along the remote beach area starting in 2010.
SPENCER PLATT/ GETTY IMAGES A view of Gilgo Beach on July 18, 2023 in Babylon, N.Y. A total of 11 bodies, mostly women, have been found along the remote beach area starting in 2010.
 ?? ?? Heuermann
Heuermann

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