MASSAPEQUA PARK, Long Island (WABC) — Beyond Long Island, the search for forensic and physical evidence in connection with Gilgo Beach murder suspect Rex Heuermann has expanded to at least two other states.
The sheriff’s office in Chester, South Carolina said Tuesday it received a request to seize a vehicle — a Chevrolet Avalanche.
Authorities said at the time of Heuermann’s arrest on Friday, the vehicle was located in South Carolina and is linked to the investigation.
Heuermann purchased four lots along Rippling Brooke Drive in Chester in 2021.
Authorities in Nevada are also investigating a connection between the accused Long Island serial killer and Las Vegas.
“We are aware of Rex Heuermann’s connection to Las Vegas,” the Las Vegas Metro PD said in a statement this afternoon. “We are currently reviewing our unsolved cases to see if he has any involvement.”
Cops are trying to determine whether they should be searching any locations in Vegas and what those sites might be.
Meanwhile, detectives in New York are combing through storage units linked to the suspect and using DNA evidence to see if he’s connected to other cold cases.
The multi-agency investigation led prosecutors to charge Heuermann with murder last Friday in the deaths of three of the 11 women whose remains were found buried along a remote beach highway in 2010 and 2011.
Heuermann, who has lived for decades across a bay from where the remains were found, is also considered the prime suspect in the killing of a fourth victim. He has pleaded not guilty. His lawyer said Heuermann denied committing the crimes.
Investigators have said it’s unlikely just one person killed all of the victims, and they insist the probe is far from over after the watershed moment of Heuermann’s arrest.
Suffolk County Police Commissioner Rodney Harrison, who spearheaded the creation of an interagency task force last year to solve the Gilgo Beach killings, has vowed that authorities will “work tirelessly until we bring justice to all the families involved.”
Detectives executed a search warrant at Omega Self Storage in Amityville on Sunday and searched another nearby storage facility on Monday. Both are less than a 10-minute drive from Heuermann’s home
This followed a multi-day search at Heuermann’s house in Massapequa Park, about a 25-minute drive across a causeway spanning South Oyster Bay to the sandy stretch known as Gilgo Beach where the women’s remains were found. That search yielded more than 200 guns, Harrison said.
Suffolk District Attorney Ray Tierney said Heuermann had permits for 92 firearms.
Investigators were also checking to see if Heuermann’s DNA – obtained from pizza crust he disposed of and linked to genetic material found on a Gilgo Beach victim’s remains – connected him to other unsolved cases.
The married father of two is behind bars, charged with first-degree murder in the deaths of Melissa Barthelemy, Megan Waterman, and Amber Costello, according to an indictment unsealed in Suffolk County Criminal Court. He is also considered the prime suspect in the death of Maureen Brainard-Barnes.
Harrison believes Heuermann’s wife and adult daughter had no idea.
“They were shocked, they were disgusted, they were embarrassed…so if you ask me, I don’t believe that they knew about this double life that Mr. Heuermann was living,” he said.
Heuermann was first eyed in the cases in March 2022. At the time, he was connected to a Chevy pickup truck a witness had seen where a victim disappeared in 2010.
Tierney, personally appearing before the judge, called Heuermann an “ongoing danger.” He implored the judge not to allow bail as Heuermann owns houses in South Carolina and Las Vegas and is a flight risk.
He said Heuermann used seven burner phones to make more than 200 searches about the Gilgo Beach investigation and family members of the victims.
Allie Pertel, the sister of one of the victims, Megan Waterman, spoke out after the arrest of Heuermann.
“I was honestly very shocked because he doesn’t look like the monster that he is,” Pertel said. “But hearing details from the day, I guess he really was a monster.”
Heuermann was ordered held on no bail pending a bail application based on what the judge called the “extreme depravity of the allegations.”
The four women Heuermann is linked to were all found covered in burlap along a half-mile stretch of Ocean Parkway on Long Island’s South Shore in late 2010.
Shannan Gilbert’s disappearance in 2010 triggered the hunt that exposed the larger mystery. A 24-year-old sex worker, she vanished after leaving a client’s house on foot in the seafront community of Oak Beach, disappearing into the marsh.
This story includes information from the Associated Press.
MORE: Who are the ‘Gilgo Four?’
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