Crime & Safety

Search Of Accused Gilgo Beach Killer's Home Ends, Family Back: Lawyer

It appears the new search of Rex Heuermann's home was centered on the basement, an attorney for his estranged wife told Patch.

The massive new search took five days, officials said.
The massive new search took five days, officials said. (Jerry Barmash / Patch)

LONG ISLAND, NY — The new search of accused Gilgo Beach killer Rex Heuermann's home ended Saturday — with his family allowed to return home Sunday, according to Robert Macedonio, attorney for Heuermann's wife Asa Ellerup.

"We returned to the home Sunday morning and it appears the search was focused on the basement," Macedonio told Patch.

The exhaustive search spanned five days as a swarm of investigators were back at Heuermann's home last week — and Macedonio spoke with Patch about the toll the week has taken on his family.

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"This family has been though the most traumatic year imaginable," said Macedonio. "I never, ever want to minimize what victims' families are going through — but what you have here is that Asa, Victoria and Christopher are collateral damage to this case. Whether Rex is found innocent or guilty — if Rex get acquitted, their lives are destroyed, because he's still known as a serial killer. If he's found guilty, they're always going to be known as the as wife and children of a serial killer."

Victoria, Heuermann's daughter, 27, was working for her father when he was arrested, Macedonio said. "Who's hiring her now?" he asked.

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He added that she was only 10 or 11 at the time of the Gilgo Beach killings.

The family, he said, has had their life in turmoil since last July, when Heuermann was arrested. At the time, investigators conducted an extensive 12-day search of their home. "Everything was just thrown in when the police left, floor to ceiling," Macedonio said. "They literally had a 2-foot path to get to the door."

He added: "If you take everything out of a house, from the attic to the basement, they're not putting it all back neatly back in closets."

Ellerup and her son were in South Carolina when authorities converged upon the home last week and Victoria, still in New York, went with Macedonio Wednesday to retrieve her car, he said.

The new search has left the family with questions, Macedonio said. "They went through this a year ago, now it's, 'Here we go again,'" he said. "We have no idea why, or what they are looking for — what they missed."

Macedonio said he does not have a copy of the warrant and the application will likely be sealed under protective order, he said.

Again, he emphasized: "Nobody wants to minimize the victims or their families. No one should die that way."

It was not immediately clear what investigators at the house were searching for.

Heuermann is next expected to appear at court for conference in Riverhead on June 18.

"As District Attorney Ray Tierney has previously stated, the work of the Gilgo Beach homicide task force is continuing. We do not comment on investigative steps while ongoing," said a representative for Tierney's office, who confirmed to Patch that the search was continuing last week.

Macedonio first confirmed last Monday that New York State Police and Suffolk County Police activity was ongoing at the house.

"I assume it the execution of an additional warrant," Macedonio told Patch. "I can't imagine what they're looking for, since almost a year ago they executed one of the most extensive searches I've ever seen," he said.

And, Macedonio added that he believed, "They are not looking to arrest anyone. I'm sure they would have notified us if they wanted to make an arrest."

Michael Brown, Heuermann's attorney, also did not comment after repeated requests.

Last year, the search of the Heuermann property went on for 12 days and included the home, an excavator on the grounds, and an Amityville storage facility.

Heuermann, the Massapequa Park man originally charged in three of the Gilgo Beach murders, was also charged with the murder of a fourth woman, Maureen Brainard-Barnes, in January. New DNA evidence helped connect Heuermann to all four of the deaths, said Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney, who is prosecuting the case.

Heuermann was charged with second-degree murder, an A-1 violent felony, in the death of Brainard-Barnes on July 9, 2007.

Heuermann has pleaded not guilty.

Last July, Heuermann was indicted on three counts of first-degree murder charges and three counts of second-degree murder charges in the deaths of sex workers Melissa Barthelemy, Megan Waterman and Amber Costello, whose remains were found along Ocean Parkway in 2010. Heuermann also pleaded not guilty to those charges.

A total of 11 sets of remains were found in the Gilgo Beach murders, which rocked Long Island. The remains included that of a toddler and an Asian male.

Recently, the DA's office said, of an ongoing search in areas of Suffolk County, including Manorville, Calverton and Southampton: "DA Tierney has repeatedly publicly stated that the task force would continue to investigate additional murders beyond Gilgo."

It was not immediately clear if the new search of Heuermann's home was connected in any way to the recent searches of woods in Manorville and other areas.

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