• #921
I wonder if this was part of the 2.5 million dollar grant from the federal Sexual Assault Kit Initiative that got Matthew Nilo in trouble for crimes he committed 15-16 years ago? DNA has come a long way from that era. I’m so happy for these victims families getting any kind of peace or answers. My heart goes out to them.
 
  • #922
I don't see any uniformed police - just plain clothes men that are way smaller and shorter than him - I hope they had backup closeby
I think many of the people on the sidewalk are also cops. It's a beautifully executed arrest, imo.

jmo
 
  • #923
  • #924
  • #925
Is it my understanding that RH and his wife have been married 22 years? Is the split between the method of disposal between the gilgo four and the other victims right around that 22 years ago mark? Victims prior to their marriage disposed of more crudely with the dismemberment etc, and victims after their marriage more carefully wrapped and disposed of in the burlap. Also while they were married and living together but she was out of town… Noting her hair is present in the burlap, but no mention (so far) of such evidence in the plastic bags or containers the late 90s-2000. A single man living alone in that house has all the time in the world to clean up after a dismemberment, but with a wife out of town it would be too risky to make such a depraved mess in such a short amount of time to clean up, hence the new disposal method.
 
  • #926
was there a dozen or so? I only saw like 3 or 4
The video I saw, looked like minimum 6-8, and I'd bet money there were at least as many further down and across the street in case he did make a break for it, though I can't see them, obviously. (I tried to count heads of the folks surrounding him, but it's hard when the video is so small and low res. I'm sure there are more than four, though, because I counted at least four in suits with ties who appeared in front of him, and then about an equal amount of others came up behind until they completely encircled him, hence my guess of 6-8.)

MOO
 
  • #927
oh yes I hadn't thought of that
Yeah, there are a bunch of genuine civilians who are obviously just navigating around the huddle on the sidewalk, but there are also a bunch who look like they're 'just walkin' here', who once they get close, step in and become part of the containment circle, even though they're just wearing a polo shirt or whatever and look like they're just a regular member of the public. Beautifully choreographed.

MOO
 
  • #928
Here is a photo from the Daily Mail of the truck that was removed from RH's house by LE.

View attachment 434841
It appears he replaced the murder car with another car just like it.
It will be interesting to hear what forensics finds on the one in SC.
 
  • #929
  • #930
He paid cash IMO
Yes, in one of the pictures of him at T Mobile, it looks like he is handing over cash to the employee.
 
  • #931
  • #932
Those searches are extremely disturbing. Wish I hadn’t seen them.
Imagine if no one's searches were private, would this push creepers further into hiding?
 
  • #933
  • #934
His wife showed up at court yesterday so if she was out of town, it wasn't far. But I bet something was brewing that disturbed LE enough to arrest him after work. Good thinking.

jmo
That always surprises me when the spouse/fiancé shows up in court. I’d stay far away.
 
  • #935
“They never stopped working and will continue to work tirelessly until we bring justice to all the families involved,” Suffolk County police Commissioner Rodney Harrison said.

Just as there is no single form of poverty, there also is no distinct set of family patterns or life circumstances that leads to the choices these women made. No formula exists to explain what brought them to Gilgo Beach. Human trafficking was a factor for one of them, addiction for another.

But if they shared something, it was that they never fell off the grid or lived on the streets the way the TV procedural stereotype dictates. They all remained close to their families. They all came from towns with narrowing options and were seeking a way out. That’s one way of looking at “Lost Girls,” the title of my book about this case, later adapted into a movie: They were only “lost” insofar as we — the police, the media, the social safety net — elected to lose them, by deciding they were worth discarding.

Serial killers understand this, of course. Jack the Ripper targeted the women he did for presumably the same reason that the Green River Killer and Joel Rifkin said they did: These were women they believed no one would ever go looking for. And more often than not, sadly, they were right.

Now, 16 years after Ms. Brainard-Barnes went missing, we have an arrest, a suspect: Rex Heuermann was, it seems, living in plain sight, in a Long Island town a short drive from where the bodies were found. He has a spouse and children, and a job with a relatively high profile. In a place as densely populated as New York, he stands accused of a double life that seems hard to contemplate.

His advantage, it would seem, was that no one was looking for him, either. In cases involving escort work, the men who are customers often seem like footnotes, at least to the public. The police locked in on Mr. Heuermann only last year, more than a decade after the four bodies were found on Gilgo Beach.

For Ms. Cann and the other family members, that’s an eternity of wondering and waiting, and feeling every bit as discarded as the loved ones they lost.
 
  • #936
Is it my understanding that RH and his wife have been married 22 years? Is the split between the method of disposal between the gilgo four and the other victims right around that 22 years ago mark? Victims prior to their marriage disposed of more crudely with the dismemberment etc, and victims after their marriage more carefully wrapped and disposed of in the burlap. Also while they were married and living together but she was out of town… Noting her hair is present in the burlap, but no mention (so far) of such evidence in the plastic bags or containers the late 90s-2000. A single man living alone in that house has all the time in the world to clean up after a dismemberment, but with a wife out of town it would be too risky to make such a depraved mess in such a short amount of time to clean up, hence the new disposal method.
According to news reports, his daughter is 26 years old - assuming she is his biological daughter. The media IMO seems to make out that they have a biological child together and a son from his wives previous marriage, so I'm assuming she's his bio daughter. It's likely that they were living together for longer than 22 years if that is indeed when they married. JMO.

It doesn't look like peaches (and her infant) is being considered a victim of his as far as I can tell, at least not yet, but peaches was found 26 years ago..
 
  • #937
That always surprises me when the spouse/fiancé shows up in court. I’d stay far away.

if I believed in their innocence, I'd be there to support
if I suspected they were guilty, I'd be there to hear the evidence
once I realized they were indeed guilty, I'd probably stay away

JMO
 
  • #938
That always surprises me when the spouse/fiancé shows up in court. I’d stay far away.
Omg me too! I wouldn’t show up in court for a lot less than that, even if they told me they were innocent.
I’m a pretty empathetic person but I don’t see how blasting myself on the news supporting my (alleged) murderer partner helps anyone. I think I would just hide away and cry, freaking out.
It doesn’t translate to a testament of love and trust, it appears like a victim of gaslighting and coercive control. Jmo
That said, I feel so sorry for his wife and daughter.
 
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  • #939
It appears he replaced the murder car with another car just like it.
It will be interesting to hear what forensics finds on the one in SC.

So many questions about the major crime/car disposal conundrum. Does the new owner of that vehicle in question just have it seized, with no financial recourse? That could be devastating and highly disruptive to the average person's life. Not to mention the psychological trauma of knowing you may have been daily-driving a vehicle, maybe even with family inside, that has been used to carry murder victims and/or their dismembered remains. Wow.
 
  • #940
if I believed in their innocence, I'd be there to support
if I suspected they were guilty, I'd be there to hear the evidence
once I realized they were indeed guilty, I'd probably stay away

JMO
If as the wife you really had no inkling of this “side” of your husband - I think you would think it’s a terrible case of mistaken identity or an error in the lab, mistaken pings etc. The fact that you were married to a guy like this and bore his child etc while being unaware of his very depraved dark side will take more than one lifetime for her to process. So yes I can understand why she was in court. My heart breaks for her son who I believe lives with them and also for their daughter who works with the monster. I imagine the daughter was learning the business to take over when Rex retired.
Some of these guys are very good at compartmentalizing.
I have to add that just from looking at the booking photo I don’t find him frightening looking or menacing. I need to watch the video. His size is certainly imposing but my first thought was gentle giant. Weird huh? Maybe I have seen too many Shrek movies because imo from all the evidence they have no question he is a terrible depraved sadistic killer. JMO
 

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