• #15,101
"We received in excess of 50 manila envelopes, in addition to personal electronic devices that were acquired by the family after the arrest of Rex Heuermann," said Macedonio. "We were told by the district attorney's office that we would continue to receive personal property of Asa [Ellerup], Victoria [Heuermann] and Christopher [Sheridan] on a rolling basis as it's processed."

Macedonio said the items consisted of personal documents, including a greeting card from a family member, and numerous gift cards sent to the family after Heuermann's arrest.

The family also was given back laptops and a digital drawing device used by Heuermann's daughter, Macedonio said.

Vess Mitev, the Stony Brook-based attorney who represents Heuermann's daughter and stepson, confirmed that some of his clients' personal items were returned last month, but said there remains a voluminous amount of personal effects that remain in police custody without explanation.

In addition to a number of books, antiques, art supplies, clothing and writing instruments, Mitev said authorities still have his clients' social security cards, passports and birth certificates, despite the district attorney's office repeatedly saying that Heuermann's family members are not suspects.

"Puzzled chagrin is the best way to describe my clients and my view that these items still remain in the possession of law enforcement," said Mitev.

Heuermann's next court date is October 16.

 
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Mitev certainly has style, that’s for sure. Puzzled chagrin - one for the books.
 
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Mitev certainly has style, that’s for sure. Puzzled chagrin - one for the books.
Perhaps he is writing a book. Personally, I don't find it puzzling but encouraging. We've seen an enormous amount of items taken from the home, office and storage. It's encouraging to me that LE seems to be still working through all of it. Who knows what may still be useful for evidence? I can see attorneys who need to grouse about LE for their clients. That's the job. And LE's job is to completely and thoroughly examine anything that might prove to be useful. Seems LE is still working, too.
 
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Former Suffolk County Commissioner Rodney K. Harrison said he had asked the county administration for funding to create a cold-case unit and other specialized units but was rebuffed for budget reasons. When he became commissioner, he said solving the Gilgo Beach case was a high priority."Of course one person being found outside is alarming, but hearing a number of 100 is something that is unacceptable," he said.


 
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Former Suffolk County Commissioner Rodney K. Harrison said he had asked the county administration for funding to create a cold-case unit and other specialized units but was rebuffed for budget reasons. When he became commissioner, he said solving the Gilgo Beach case was a high priority."Of course one person being found outside is alarming, but hearing a number of 100 is something that is unacceptable," he said.


Very happy to see these 4, along with the others finally getting news coverage for the first time in decades!




 
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The thing with The Associated Press is that often the stories are picked up, and sometimes edited or shortened, from the newspapers that belong to the AP, then sent on to subscribing newspapers.

In the rural area where I live, there were some stories AP sent their own reporters into the local newspaper office and they covered events, wrote stories and filed them from the local newspaper office. However, generally, the AP stories from our local area were actually written by local reporters and just picked up by AP. It's been years since I've worked at the local newspaper, so I wonder if now, with the Internet and remote writing so easy, if the AP reporters actually go into the local papers. In the past, AP executives and reporters did maintain contact with the local newspapers. I would expect they still do to some extent.

But having the AP story originating at a local newspaper would explain the matching wording.
Late to reply to this, but I work at a newspaper and while we stopped our AP membership a few years ago, that's how it still worked back then. Nowadays a lot of newspapers are part of other wire services, but most work the same way. The one my paper is part of now gets New York (and a lot of national) stories from the Daily News.

So yeah, a lot of wire stories might be edited for style/grammar, but the reporting comes directly from the local outlets and isn't really fact checked. It's assumed the local reporter and their editor already did that.
 
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No way you can be married to someone with these tendencies and for them to not have at least spoke re such. Moo

really? people do it all the time - we read stories here about spouses and other family members who had no clue
 
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MOD NOTE: It appears that the conversation lately is about spousal privilege, but I don't see a link regarding either party invoking spousal privilege in this case. If no link is available, please move on from that part of the discussion.
 
  • #15,110
Late to reply to this, but I work at a newspaper and while we stopped our AP membership a few years ago, that's how it still worked back then. Nowadays a lot of newspapers are part of other wire services, but most work the same way. The one my paper is part of now gets New York (and a lot of national) stories from the Daily News.

So yeah, a lot of wire stories might be edited for style/grammar, but the reporting comes directly from the local outlets and isn't really fact checked. It's assumed the local reporter and their editor already did that.
What fun this will be with the overtrained AI algorithms (models) doin’ their thing.

Humor aside, I do hope serious topics such as RH will be proofread by sober actual people.
 
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What fun this will be with the overtrained AI algorithms (models) doin’ their thing.

Humor aside, I do hope serious topics such as RH will be proofread by sober actual people.

The situation is better at larger papers like NYT, Newsday, etc., but a lot of small community papers no longer have a dedicated editing staff (copy editors, proofreaders, department editors) and often have overworked reporters who cannot dedicate much time to a story and overworked editors trying to do it all by themselves. It's not a good time to be working at a small community paper. Hedge funds buying up so many of the small papers and then cutting their teams to the bone has really caused irreparable damage to the newspaper industry.

I'm not as familiar with how other types of news outlets operate, but TV news, at least on main channels and not dedicated cable news channels, have always been more limited due to time on how in-depth they can go on most stories.
 
  • #15,112
i think it was so he could sign the house over to her and then he gets a free lawyer. They are legally separated now, so if found guilty, Families can not touch anything if they want to sue. I'm so curious as to how she got his so fast. She had him in like two days...so maybe she new him already and he went to her... his offices are not close to her home and how would she find him so fast? IMO it is shady
Michael Brown was appointed to RH on Friday, July 14, 2023 the day after he was arrested which was Thursday, July 13th.
Brown had been law partners with Bob Macedonio and over the weekend AE had Macedonio as her legal counsel.
 
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Michael Brown was appointed to RH on Friday, July 14, 2023 the day after he was arrested which was Thursday, July 13th.
Brown had been law partners with Bob Macedonio and over the weekend AE had Macedonio as her legal counsel.
@ 4:24 Macedonio says he was representing AE by Saturday morning, July 15th.

 
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  • #15,115
Rh is in court today
 
  • #15,116
Oct 16, 2024
Suspected Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex Heuermann will face a judge Wednesday in Suffolk County, Long Island.
 
  • #15,117
Former Suffolk County Commissioner Rodney K. Harrison said he had asked the county administration for funding to create a cold-case unit and other specialized units but was rebuffed for budget reasons. When he became commissioner, he said solving the Gilgo Beach case was a high priority."Of course one person being found outside is alarming, but hearing a number of 100 is something that is unacceptable," he said.


A video companion to the article. Free for all to view.

I will be spending some time today going thru the article and making sure every victim mentioned has a websleuths thread
 
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I'm really surprised. I expected more charges. moo Also, I had hoped more families would get closure.
 
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