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Rex Heuermann’s peculiar connection to ‘Manorville Butcher’ and victims’ scattered body parts

Rex Heuermann’s peculiar connection to ‘Manorville Butcher’ and victims’ scattered body parts

Before Rex Heuermann‘s arrest, years of unanswered questions about the murders of at least 10 sex workers birthed the phantom personas of “LISK” and the “Manorville Butcher.”

Four of the victims – known as the “Gilgo Beach 4” – have been connected to Heuermann, who is believed to be “LISK,” short for Long Island Serial Killer.

He was charged in three of the killings, and is the prime suspect in a fourth.

But there are at least six more victims – including some who were dismembered – that were found in the same vicinity along the South Shore of Long Island by April 2011, which pushes a fiercely debated question back to the forefront.

“This is hard to talk about, but is this same killer or are there two?” said Josh Zeman, a filmmaker and producer who sunk his teeth into this case for a 2017 documentary called “The Killing Season.” “It’s been really baffling to some of the best minds in the country.”

Further complicating the notorious New York cold case is when and where the body parts of the dismembered victims were found.

The skull of one victim – known only as “Fire Island Jane Doe” – was found on Gilgo Beach in 2011, but her legs were found about 16 miles east on Fire Island in 1996.

Valerie Mack’s head, hands and right foot were found on Gilgo Beach in 2011, but her torso was found 11 years earlier in Manorville, New York, which is about 40 miles east of Gilgo Beach.

Similarly, Jessica Taylor’s skull, hands and one of her forearms were found around the beach along Ocean Parkway in March 2011, but her torso was found in Manorville in 2003.


Rex Heuermann is the alleged Long Island Serial Killer. He’s been connected to four of the victims – known as the “Gilgo Beach 4.”
Getty Images

Heuermann was charged in three of the killings, and is the prime suspect in a fourth.
JMP-Taamallah/ABACA/Shutterstock

Law enforcement also found body parts of a young Black or biracial Jane Doe, known as “Peaches” after a distinguishing tattoo on her left breast, near Gilgo Beach in 2011. But her torso was found in Hempstead Lake State Park in 1997. 

A toddler that investigators said was a child of “Peaches” was also found on Gilgo Beach in 2011.

“So you have a killer who’s leaving torsos in Manorville, additional body parts in Gilgo Beach and the same person, theoretically, has left other body parts in other parts of Long Island,” Zeman said in an interview with Fox News Digital.

“It’s wicked confusing… The fact that these body parts, these torsos, were found in Manorville is why people call this killer, ‘The Manorville Butcher.’”


John Bittrolff was arrested through DNA in July 2014 for killing two sex workers.
VICTORALCORN.COM

Bittrolff was convicted in 2017 and sentenced to 50 years to life in prison.
VICTORALCORN.COM

Enter John Bittrolff, a Manorville resident and carpenter by trade who was arrested through DNA in July 2014 for killing two sex workers named Rita Tangredi and Colleen McNamee.

Theories concocted by the public and law enforcement immediately tied Bittrolff to the Gilgo Beach case, but he beat his victims to death and left them on the side of the road, a third different MO.

“Many said he must be the Gilgo Beach Killer. He must be the Manorville Butcher. He must be responsible for all these bodies along Ocean Parkway,” Zeman said. “But right now, we don’t know.

“It was originally said during his trial, that an [assistant district attorney] said he might be connected to more bodies, but we’ve yet to find out if that’s really true or speculation.”

Bittrolff was convicted in 2017 and sentenced to 50 years to life in prison.


Rita Tangredi and Colleen McNamee were victims of Bittrolff.
VICTORALCORN.COM

“He remains somewhat of a tangential and mysterious figure in this whole question if there’s one or multiple killers,” Zeman said.

John Bittrolff was one of Heuermann’s 200-plus alleged Google searches related to the Gilgo Beach case, according to his bail application, which detailed thousands of Google searches for explicit pornography and nearby sex workers.

Fox News Digital is not describing many of the Google searches due to their explicit nature, but “John Bitroff (sic)” was listed as No. 14 in searches (pictured below).

One peculiar google search 

There was one alleged Google search that caught Zeman’s eye: “Asian twink tie up porn.”

Twink is defined as a gay or bisexual young man with a “slim, boyish appearance,” according to dictionary.com.

“Personally, I always thought it was two killers,” Zeman said. “But one of the bodies that was found along Ocean Parkway was an Asian male, so that suddenly made me think that suddenly we are dealing with one killer.”


New York State police officers place items into the back of a box truck as law enforcement searches the home of Rex Heuermann.
AP/Jeenah Moon

At least six more victims – including some who were dismembered – were found in the same vicinity of Heuermann’s victims along the South Shore of Long Island by April 2011.
AP/Jeenah Moon

The victim he’s referring to still hasn’t identified. He’s described as a young, biological male found wearing women’s clothing.

Law enforcement believe the victim was dead for about five years when he was found in April 2011. All that’s left is a composite sketch.

“I still don’t know (how many killers), and this was a big problem for Suffolk County from the beginning,” Zeman said. “It’s been said (former Police Commissioner) Richard Dormer was fired because he got in an argument with the DA whether it was one serial killer or two.

“So this debate about one serial killer or two has been raging since the very earliest days of this investigation.”

“No sense makes sense”

Retired Reno, Nevada, Police Lt. Joey Walker, who created the “Serial Defense” program that includes a podcast and life-saving techniques to fend off sex assaults and serial killers, broke down the case for Fox News Digital. 

He started the interview by saying, there’s an old adage, “No sense makes sense,” which is particularly true in this criminal case.

He drew a diagram similar to a clock with each number as another possibility. At the center is the “dump site,” which in this instance is Gilgo Beach.

With serial offenders of any crime, they likely will repeat what they know works, Walker said, so if one person committed all the murders and dumped evidence (or in this case bodies/body parts) without being caught, the “area is safe” and could be used again.

Then there’s the possibility a single offender committed some or most of the murders, and by coincidence another killer used the same dumping ground, Walker said.

He used the cases of Ted Bundy and Edmond Kemper to illustrate why serial killers might scatter body parts.

“Finding human remains from one homicide victim in different locations could have a ritualistic component, where the killer utilizes that body part as a souvenir, or for their sexual gratification,” Walker said. 

Because body parts were found several miles apart, it was likely done on purpose either to confuse investigators or to thwart identification, which is what Whitey Bugler did.

And serial offenders study, read and watch other offenders, and “perhaps mimic their methodology, whole or in part, of their successes,” he said.

To Walker’s point, Dennis Rader, known as the serial killer “BTK,” wrote in a letter to Fox News Digital that he sees Heuermann as “a clone of me.” 

Bodies or evidence can be discarded “purposely or haphazardly,” and that often depends on the sophistication of the offender, Walker said.

Who were the Gilgo Beach victims?

Suspected serial killer Rex Heuermann — a New York City architect and married dad of two — was arrested in connection with the long-unsolved Gilgo Beach murders. The arrest is tied to the so-called “Gilgo Four,” women found wrapped in burlap within days of each other in late 2010.

The years-long investigation that led to the arrest revolved around the discovery of more than 10 sets of human remains along Ocean Parkway near Gilgo Beach in Suffolk County between December 2010 and April 2011.

Most victims were petite female sex workers with green or hazel eyes. But there were also two exceptions: a 2-year-old girl and a young Asian man.

Melissa Barthelemy, 24

  • Barthelemy was a sex worker who lived in the Unionport section of the Bronx and dreamed of one day opening her own beauty salon. She was last seen alive in her basement apartment on Underhill Avenue on July 12, 2009.

Maureen Brainard-Barnes, 25

  • Brainard-Barnes was living in Norwich, Connecticut. She went missing after taking an Amtrak train from New London, Connecticut, to Grand Central Terminal in Manhattan on July 6, 2007.

Amber Lynn Costello, 27

  • Costello, 27, was a sex worker and heroin addict who lived in West Babylon, New York, at a home with a woman and two men. She advertised on Craigslist and Backpage to support her and her roommates’ drug habits. Costello was found in December 2010 after having been last seen leaving her home that September.

Megan Waterman, 22

  • Waterman, a 22-year-old mom of one, was last seen on June 6, 2010. She lived in Scarborough, Maine, and earned a living as an escort. She was last seen by her family boarding a New York-bound Concord Trailways bus in Maine. Her body was found on December 13, 2010, on the north side of Ocean Parkway, near Gilgo Beach.

Jessica Taylor, 20

  • Remains belonging to Jessica Taylor, a 20-year-old woman working as an escort in New York City, were found in a wooded area in Manorville on July 26, 2003. Her additional remains — initially labeled “Jane Doe No. 5” — were discovered on March 29, 2011, along Ocean Parkway.

Valerie Mack, 24

  • Valerie Mack was 24 years old and living in Philadelphia when she went missing. She worked as an escort, using the alias “Melissa Taylor.” Relatives last saw Mack in the spring or summer of 2000 in Port Republic, New Jersey, but she was never reported as missing to the police. Her partial skeletal remains were found in Manorville in September 2000 but were initially known as “Jane Doe No. 6.”

Unidentified Asian man

  • The skeletal remains of a yet-to-be-identified Asian man were found along Ocean Parkway on April 4, 2011. It is estimated that the man was between 17 and 23 years old at the time of his death. He was approximately 5 feet 6 inches tall with bad teeth.

‘Peaches’ and her daughter

  • An African American woman’s partial remains were discovered in Hempstead Lake State Park back in 1997, and she had become known as “Peaches” because of a bitten tattoo of a peach on her left breast. On April 4, 2011, police uncovered the remains of a toddler, who was about 2 years old at the time of her death. DNA testing confirmed that one of the skeletons was that of the 2-year-old girl’s mother, “Peaches.”

Jane Doe No. 7

  • Remains found on April 11, 2011, along with the body of the woman dubbed “Peaches” was linked by DNA to a body that was found 15 years earlier on Fire Island. On April 20, 1996, skeletal remains of a young white female were discovered in Davis Park on Blue Point Beach. Two sets of remains, collectively known as “Jane Doe No. 7,” have not been identified.

Shannan Gilbert, 23

  • Gilbert was a Craigslist escort who lived in Jersey City, traveled with her driver Michael Pak from Manhattan to meet a client, Joseph Brewer, at his home in the Oak Beach Association on the morning of May 1, 2010. She spoke with two neighbors before disappearing. Her body was discovered in a marsh near Oak Beach — about half a mile from where she was last seen alive — on December 13, 2011.

“If the offender discards items in several locations, it may be a purposeful attempt to cast off suspicion from themselves where it might be connected and attributed directly to them,” he said.

“I was arrested age 59. Married, two kids,” Rader wrote in the letter. “Husband, dad longtime a serial killer, stalker, used electronic devices, lives in a neighborhood undetected.”

With all that said, it will likely “take years, if ever, before the totality of the crimes committed are attributed to one or more persons and ultimately resolved,” Walker said.

Not guilty plea


The map details where each victim’s body was found on Gilgo Beach.
Reuters

As it stands now, Heuermann is accused of killing Melissa Barthelemy, 24, Megan Waterman, 22, and Amber Lynn Costello, 27, and is the prime suspect in Maureen Brainard-Barnes’ murder.

He was charged with six counts of murder (first- and second-degree for each victim), and pleaded not guilty to all charges. 

Prosecutors haven’t said if they believe Heuermann is involved with any of the other six victims on Gilgo Beach.

But his arrest sparked law enforcement agencies across the country, including South Carolina, Las Vegas and Atlantic City, to reexamine missing persons cases and cold cases to determine if Heuermann is involved.

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