• #10,241
Very unlikely. Many of the public "people" search services online aren't too accurate WRT family members who are passed. I've often seen names of people I know were deceased as still living with family members.
I guess the big question for me is if RH’s mom bought the house in 1994 and his father died in 1975, why was R’s father’s name ever associated with the Palmyra home?
 
  • #10,242
'Heuermann purchased the humble six-room home in 1994 for $170,000.'
''Built in 1956, the one-story residence occupies just 1,323 square feet of space, and has a full basement and one fireplace.
The property’s current estimated price is around $635,000, according to the real estate site Zillow.''
2023
'His home, which he has lived in since the 1980s, is also being picked apart by forensic teams who have been painstakingly taking items from the property since Friday.'
View attachment 507574
'
I wondered previously about the house. Can the victim's families of RH sue his estate for the proceeds if it does indeed go up for sale? Or is it strictly EA's property?

I still think it needs to be torn down to the ground. It gives off evil vibes to me. :oops:

JMO
 
  • #10,243
I guess the big question for me is if RH’s mom bought the house in 1994 and his father died in 1975, why was R’s father’s name ever associated with the Palmyra home?
bbm
.... and the telephone under his name (if I remember well). Strange. IMO
 
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  • #10,244
bbm
.... and the telephone under his name (if I remember well). Strange. IMO
women of his mother's generation often remained Mrs. Theodore Heuermann for the remainder of their lives. Old newspaper articles never listed their names, they were always Mrs. Husband'sLastName. Widows put telephones in the names of late husbands so no one knew a woman lived there. It was a safety measure.
 
  • #10,245
women of his mother's generation often remained Mrs. Theodore Heuermann for the remainder of their lives. Old newspaper articles never listed their names, they were always Mrs. Husband'sLastName. Widows put telephones in the names of late husbands so no one knew a woman lived there. It was a safety measure.
.... like today it seems advisable. No first name because of belonging to a certain age group and so on. Maybe.
 
  • #10,246
women of his mother's generation often remained Mrs. Theodore Heuermann for the remainder of their lives. Old newspaper articles never listed their names, they were always Mrs. Husband'sLastName. Widows put telephones in the names of late husbands so no one knew a woman lived there. It was a safety measure.
They have the command within their family, but are using the name of their (dead) husband, if it seems practical. I understand. ;) I understand very well.
 
  • #10,247

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  • #10,248
Suspected killer Rex Heuermann facing new charge, multiple sources say alleged Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex A. Heuermann is expected back in court later this week on a new indictment charging him with an additional killing, multiple sources told Newsday.Heuermann, 60, will appear for arraignment before State Supreme Court Justice Timothy Mazzei in Riverhead, the sources said.

Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney and Heuermann defense attorney Michael J. Brown declined to comment.

 
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  • #10,249
Suspected killer Rex Heuermann facing new charge, multiple sources sayAlleged Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex A. Heuermann is expected back in court later this week on a new indictment charging him with an additional killing, multiple sources told Newsday.Heuermann, 60, will appear for arraignment before State Supreme Court Justice Timothy Mazzei in Riverhead, the sources said.

Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney and Heuermann defense attorney Michael J. Brown declined to comment.

Can someone summarize what's in the article please? It's subscription based.
 
  • #10,250
Can someone summarize what's in the article please? It's subscription based.
MOO. It reads as if he is going to be indicted for a new murder. Due in court later this week. Nothing more of substance really. Just that it is following the new search
 
  • #10,251
  • #10,252
'Suspected Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex Heuermann will be charged with another murder this week, per several reports.

Heuermann, 60, is expected to appear in court in Riverhead on Thursday for his arraignment, according to Newsday.

It comes after investigators connected to the Gilgo Beach cases began searching a wooded area in Manorville, New York, in April.'
 
  • #10,253
MOO. It reads as if he is going to be indicted for a new murder. Due in court later this week. Nothing more of substance really. Just that it is following the new search
Thank you @NyxNY. And if he's being charged for one more victim, it's likely he's responsible for even more than the Gilgo4. MOO.
 
  • #10,254
I wondered previously about the house. Can the victim's families of RH sue his estate for the proceeds if it does indeed go up for sale? Or is it strictly EA's property?

I still think it needs to be torn down to the ground. It gives off evil vibes to me. :oops:

JMO
RH owes tens if not hundreds of thousands of dollars between federal/state income taxes and local property taxes.

The Gilgo Beach serial killer suspect owed hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxes and was litigious, filing numerous lawsuits against motorists

Idk NY law but typically the government can take possession of a property and sell at auction for unpaid taxes. That of course would have to be litigated.

During the 2023 search the town talked about buying the property and were already taking legal steps to do so.

Town looking to buy Gilgo Beach suspect Rex Heuermann’s home, which has become a magnet for gawkers

MOO… but nothing will happen with this house for a while… at least not until the criminal case is done. Not a lawyer but it looks like NY statute of limitations on a wrongful death suit is 2 years, based on my unprofessional opinion I don’t think the families will have legal standing to sue. I’d imagine the state/town will strong arm AE into accepting some low ball offer or fight it in court where she will probably loose the house anyways.
 
  • #10,255
  • #10,256
If he IS charged with one of the cases involving dismemberment, it's big, it's really big. Because if he did one and they have proof, then there is a high likelihood he did the others. Karen, Peaches and her baby, Jessica, Valerie. I think he killed Asian Doe, too, they're grouped too closely with the GB4 - both physically and chronologically - to be unconnected.

MOO
 
  • #10,257
If he IS charged with one of the cases involving dismemberment, it's big, it's really big. Because if he did one and they have proof, then there is a high likelihood he did the others. Karen, Peaches and her baby, Jessica, Valerie. I think he killed Asian Doe, too, they're grouped too closely with the GB4 - both physically and chronologically - to be unconnected.

MOO
This is def big. I think the G4 are similar enough nobody doubted they were killed by the same person. All the other victims, anything else, those cases are just different in a fundamental way.
 
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  • #10,258
This is def big. I think the G4 are similar enough nobody doubted they were killed by the same person. All the other victims, anything else, is just different in a fundamental way.
I’d implore everyone to watch the 2010 “BluChip Marketing” series of interviews with then Suffolk County Police Commissioner Richard Dormer on YouTube. Lots of insight and specific details that aren’t referenced much elsewhere, don’t have the time right now to figure out which episode it’s referenced, but police and FBI thought it was 1 killer from the very start (or at least that it was statistically improbable that 2 killers used that same area for a dump site, can’t remember the exact wording).
 
  • #10,259
  • #10,260
RH owes tens if not hundreds of thousands of dollars between federal/state income taxes and local property taxes.

The Gilgo Beach serial killer suspect owed hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxes and was litigious, filing numerous lawsuits against motorists
Not a lawyer but it looks like NY statute of limitations on a wrongful death suit is 2 years, based on my unprofessional opinion I don’t think the families will have legal standing to sue. I’d imagine the state/town will strong arm AE into accepting some low ball offer or fight it in court where she will probably loose the house anyways.
Not a lawyer either, but isn't timing on filing normally tied to say the arrest when the murderer is unknown before? Might they not have two years to bring suit after his arrest or even after his conviction?
 

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