48 Hours - Inside the Sentencing of the GIlgo Beach Serial Killer
Episode Date: June 19, 2026After decades of waiting, the victims of Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex Heuermann finally faced him in a courtroom that became a space for grief, rage, and release. One by one, loved ones delivered sea...ring victim impact statements—describing the lives stolen and the generational trauma left behind. Heuermann, largely expressionless, spoke briefly. In this episode, we focus on the emotional heart of the sentencing—from raw statements to the quiet devastation of children who grew up without their mothers—and what it meant to finally say these words, face-to-face.
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A million years isn't enough because you won't suffer for that long.
You will spend the rest of your forever in prison and it doesn't feel satisfying.
Nothing will ever make this right.
This kind of grief stays.
It was an incredibly emotional day in court for the families of the victims of the Long Island serial killer Rex Heuerman,
who had pleaded guilty to the murders of seven women spanning from 1993 to 2,000.
My mother was not a headline, a statistic or illegal.
You thought you took her voice, but you didn't know that she had people who loved her.
You hunted her and I hunted you.
His actions changed the course of my life forever.
They devastated my family, but they also shattered the lives of his own family,
who now must live with the knowledge that they shared a home with a serial killer.
We have reached the final chapter of this high-profile campaign
that has cast a shadow over the shores of Gilgo Beach on Long Island and over so many families for years.
I'm 48-hourst correspondent Aaron Moriarty, and this is case-by-case.
On Wednesday, June 17, 2026, fewer men was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole
for three counts of first-degree murder, and then 25 years to life for each of the four-counts.
of second-degree murder, all to run consecutively for the murders of Melissa Barthelomey,
Megan Waterman, Amber Costello, Maureen-Branor Barnes, Jessica Taylor, Sandra Costea, and Valerie Mack.
Rex Newman spoke in court, didn't say a lot, and he showed very little emotion.
There are no words, I can say. I am responsible for what we're said in this room today.
The words I would say have no meaning.
And I'm going to leave it there.
Huberman has also admitted to killing an eighth woman, Karen Vergata.
However, is part of the plea deal.
He was not actually charged with Vergata's murder.
Rex Huberman, though, will never hurt another woman.
I've been reporting on this case since 2011.
Over the years, we've interviewed the family members and friends of the murder victims.
I've come to know many of them personally.
And from the beginning, our goal was to make sure these women weren't seen simply as escorts as they were often portrayed in the media,
but as mothers, sisters, daughters and friends, people whose lives mattered and whose loved ones never stopped searching for answers.
Joining me today to discuss the dramatic sentencing is CBS News legal analysts and criminal defense attorney,
Caroline Polisi, who has been following this case since Hureman was arrested in
2023. Thanks for joining us, Caroline.
Thanks for having me, Erin. I've been watching your coverage of this case for many years now,
and it's a real honor to be here today. I mean, you could feel that emotion in the courtroom.
I found it so interesting. I mean, you could literally hear the judge's voice quivering as he
delivered this colloquy, which was escalating, to,
the end, he was yelling. He even wiped away tears at one point. I mean, I've never seen a judge
really get so worked up at sentencing. I mean, in fact, the only person who didn't show emotion
was the person who should have, the one who brought everybody together, Rex Sherman. Let's start
about, let's just start where this whole case started. And it's interesting, it began as a search
for a missing woman, 23-year-old Shannon Gilbert. I want to be clear, Shannon was not.
one of the murder victims. Shannon had been working as an escort and had been at a client's house on Long Island
when she called police in a panic and then she suddenly vanished. State police? Yeah, there's probably
asked me. Police did an exhaustive search for Shannon and while searching in an area near Gilgo Beach,
police found human remains of four other women who became known as the Gilgo Four, Marine Brainer Barnes,
Amber Costello, Megan Waterman, and Melissa Bartholomey.
Shannon's remains were eventually found about a year and a half after her disappearance.
The police believe her death was not a murder and not connected to the other victims
that Shannon had instead died from an accidental drowning.
But given that police described the Gilgo Four as all petite in their 20s and working as online escorts,
investigators believed that they were dealing with a serial killer.
who soon became known as the Long Island serial killer.
They got a description of him and the car he drove from a roommate of Amber Costello.
The roommate had told police about the client she'd left with the night she disappeared,
describing him as looking like a, quote, ogre and having a first-generation Chevrolet avalanche.
You know, it's funny. I met David Schaller, and he did use that term ogre.
Investigators didn't have much else to go on, though.
I mean, that could fit any large man, and the investigation stalled for over 10 years.
That lack of movement was so tough on the families of the four women.
I talked to Missy Cannes, Maureen-Brainor-Barned sister frequently over the years.
She tried so hard to keep a spotlight on the case.
But it finally took a new Suffolk County Police Commissioner, by the name of Rodney Harrison,
who happened to be a retired high-ranking New York City Police Detention.
to make real progress. He set up a task force in 2022 devoted to cracking the case, and it worked.
Yeah, and kudos to them and that task force. It was so gut-wrenching for those families when this
case had turned cold for so many years. But they turned it around, and really once that task force
was formed, they figured out pretty quickly. It turns out that in the original case files,
there were a number of critical clues that this new task force was finally able to
connect like the pieces of a puzzle. It was all really there. Like that information we just talked about
from the roommate of Amber Costello who told police about this big ogre-like man who drove a Chevy
avalanche. Police back then also knew that a client used a burner phone to contact Amber
Costello on the night she disappeared. Also that Maureen, Melissa, and Megan had also been in
contact with burner numbers right before they disappeared. So in 2012, with the help of the FBI,
the task force determined that most of those calls were connected to cell towers inside a small area of Massapequa Park, Long Island. They called it the box.
We had known that for a long time that it was, they believed it was someone who lived on Long Island. They didn't know Massapequa Park right away and someone who worked downtown. We always knew that. So the task force knew now that they were looking for a large belt man who also lived in that small area, the box.
and owned a Chevy Avalanche, and he owned it at the time of the disappearances. In March
2022, they had what we call that aha moment. A female state trooper linked a man by the name of
Rex U.R. Men who lived in Massapipa Park to a first-generation Chevrolet avalanche pickup truck that
was registered to him at the time of the murders. So after years, and we are talking years of
uncertainty. Suddenly, six weeks sound so fast to identify a suspect. I have to be honest, I remember
hearing the news, Rex Ewerman. I mean, that name wasn't even on the radar. Same. I mean,
I was shocked. I was really initially just stunned by the profile of this guy. I mean,
essentially, he's the monster living among us, right? He went undetected for years. They finally
were able to put all of those pieces together. Investigators say Heuerman's personal cell phone
records show that his phone was in the same area as those burner phones when they were used to contact
victims. They also say that when the burner phones contacted victims, they were often in
Massapequa Park where Hewerman lived or Midtown Manhattan where his architectural firm was
located. But there was also DNA evidence. Police tailed Heurman and recovered his DNA from a discarded
pizza crust in Midtown Manhattan, which was consistent with the DNA profile found on a male
hair discovered with Megan Waterman's body. And from a legal perspective, when you think about
investigative techniques, you know, a discarded pizza crust is fair game for law enforcement
to use to test for DNA. Remember, Heerman had never been arrested before. So obviously,
none of his forensic information was in any database like CODIS, which is the centralized system
that combines local state and national crime labs information.
So they had to get a new sample for this guy.
And that's what made it so difficult to track him down for so long was usually a killer
is connected to a victim and he was picking strangers.
So this DNA became so crucial.
Heerman was arrested in 2023 and he was charged with multiple counts of murder in the deaths
of Melissa Bartholomey, Megan Waterman and Amber Costello.
he pleaded not guilty. And then in 2024, he was also charged with more murders, Maureen Brainer Barnes,
Sandra Costea, Jessica Taylor, and Valerie Mack, and again, also pleaded not guilty.
So let's talk a little bit, Caroline, what the investigators learned about this man after his arrest.
Well, that's right, Aaron. I mean, it's just so chilling. This is where we start to get this picture of a serial killer,
essentially hidden in plain sight. By all accounts, he was this family man who led a normal sort of
boring suburban existence. He commuted to the city every day to do his job and provide for his family.
He ran an architectural consulting firm in Midtown Manhattan. He has a stepson and a daughter
with his now ex-wife, Asa Elrop, who was born in Iceland, and she would take the children to see
her family there in the summers. And it was during those trips and some others.
that police believe that Hewerman killed the women.
Huberman's wife filed for divorce shortly after the arrest.
Her attorney said she was as stunned as anyone, any of us, by the accusations.
And I know there were real questions by the public.
How could she not know?
But I have seen this happen over and over again when wives of serial killers didn't know.
But others would see personality traits that seemed odd or stood out.
That was true with Hewerman as well, including some of Heurman's neighbors, right?
Yeah.
Heurman's neighbors obviously were shocked when police made the arrest at the house.
One neighbor described him as very quiet, dark, keeping to himself, extremely intelligent, very smart.
You know, I remember reading a New York Times article that reported that he used to swing an axe in his front yard while he was glaring at neighbors.
and that parents told their children not to go to his house on Halloween.
I think we all have that one weird neighbor, you know, that we all tell our kids not to go to on Halloween.
But none of us obviously expect them to be a serial killer.
I also remember the neighbors being shocked by how many firearms that he owned and were found in his house because he was a hunter.
He had an arsenal.
Yes, he did.
This case was expected to go to trial in September of 12.
26, with prosecutors' plan to call more than 100 witnesses. That would have been a very long trial.
But then in April of 26, almost three years after Hugherman's arrest, he suddenly changed his plea.
He pleaded guilty to killing seven women between 1993 and 2011 and admitted to killing an a-victim,
Karen Vergata. So can you tell me, can you give me an idea of how unusual this is,
from a legal perspective, why do you think he decides to take a plea?
Yeah. I mean, to tell you the truth, I wasn't totally surprised. I think the timing was more
surprising than the guilty plea itself. Look, we'll never know for sure why he did it. But
when the evidence in a case is just so strong like this one, and, you know, when you lose
constantly those pretrial motions like Heurman did in this case, of course, the logical thing to do
would be to plead guilty. And the prosecution really saves so much.
many resources when you get a guilty plea. Also, he gives up his right to appeal. So saving you so much
time and money and really the angst for those victims' families. And so that gives you a sense of
sort of the benefit that both sides get here. The defense really essentially saves him from having
to sit through all the gory details of what he actually did. And he may have wanted to spare his
own family from hearing that. Well, that's what Michael Brown, who are men's defense attorney,
told me that he did want to spare his family. But he also told me saying that I found so interesting
that as part of the plea agreement, Hewerman agreed to cooperate with the FBI behavioral unit. It's the
department that analyzes offenders' motivations. It also is the department that creates profiles
and it assists in solving cases. So are you at all surprised that this would actually be part of a
A plea agreement? Have you run into that? I am so surprised. I've never, ever come across this. I find this to be one of the most fascinating aspects of this plea agreement. I've never seen it before. And honestly, you know, I do believe that this sort of excites Heurman and makes him feel important. We know other serial killers often love that attention because they're narcissists and this likely feeds into that feeling of importance for Heurman.
Nonetheless, it is obviously so rare to be able to get inside the mind of someone like Heurman
that there may be some benefit to law enforcement in terms of what the psychological profile is of this specific kind of serial killer.
In court documents, prosecutors released an image of what they called a blueprint that Hewerman allegedly used to, I mean, it's detailed to plan out his kills with these excruciating details.
What all do we know about that blueprint? And how unusual is that really to keep track of all these things for a killer?
Yeah, well, and he would have to, given how many victims there were over the course of how many years. I mean, 17 years we're talking about.
The details are, as you would expect, just absolutely chilling. The document has four columns labeled problems, supplies, DS and TRG, which police believe stood for
dump site and targets. Among the problems that he listed down there, DNA, tire marks, bloodstains,
and more. I mean, it's just chilling. Well, also, he was really keeping track of the investigation
itself. I mean, I did not initially believe that so many bodies would be connected with the Long Island
serial killer, but he is really proof of how someone would change his MO because he did over the years.
Yeah, it really seemed like he was essentially, you know, honing his craft, as it were.
And, you know, these meticulous notes that he would have when his family were away on vacation.
I mean, he had to plan it out day by day, minute by minute, in order to stay undetected and under the radar for that period.
And there were also some interesting reports of how Hureman has spent the last three years in jail.
specifically what he reads, who he's been talking to, that also give a sense of his character and
mindset. Yeah, absolutely. Sepple County Sheriff Errol Tulin told the Associated Press that
Heurman has been a really voracious reader in jail with a preference for violent crime and mystery novels,
some involving serial killers. Tulin also said that Keith Hunter Jesperson, the infamous happy-face
killer who's currently serving multiple life sentences in Oregon reached out to Heurman by letter.
Heerman did write back, but he hasn't responded to several follow-up letters from Jesperson.
Sorry, I think it's very creepy that this case is brought out response from other serial killers.
So it gives you a sort of a look inside the mind of, you know, some of these guys want to feel
important and this is this is how they do it. Right, but on this sentencing hearing, this was not about
the killer now. This now was something that was specifically for the families of the victim,
saying they have been waiting for for years. And in the case of one family since 1993,
on June 17, 2026, Rex Sherman showed up in court. He sat at the defense table without
much reaction. There were times I thought he looked red, but he didn't seem to be reacting. He remained
still with like one hand over the other. Yeah. You know, noticeably, his ex-wife, Asa Ellorup, was not at the
sentencing hearing. Her attorney did release a statement on her behalf that read, quote,
Ms. Ellorup believes this day should be centered on the victims, their families, and the profound
impact these crimes have had on their lives. Out of respect for those who have endured unimacted,
unimaginable loss in suffering, she does not wish her presence to distract from the purpose of these
proceedings. Her thoughts remain with the victims and their loved ones as they continue their
pursuit of justice, healing, and closure. In hindsight, I think it was wise that she did not go to this
hearing. During the sentencing, we heard from several of the victim's families and friends.
these families have been through a terrible time. They are angry. They want answers. And they were allowed to
address him directly, which actually surprised me. Do you believe that they were limited in what they
could actually say to him? Well, look, this was really meant to be a catharsis for those families,
letting out all that anger. And yeah, they were basically allowed to say anything that they wanted,
obviously within these usual boundaries of courtroom decorum. So generally, no swear words, no yelling,
et cetera. Every judge has different rules about what they allow. But they were very powerful in
those statements and just very gut-wrenching. I thought it's kind of odd that they were
facing the judge and he was to their left. So they had to keep like looking over. So I thought.
That's pretty typical.
That's pretty typical, but, you know, if you listen to the statements, they are directed at Heerman.
I thought, you know, while he was emotionless, you could see sort of something on his face that wasn't, you know, he wasn't, it wasn't penetrating.
He wasn't feeling the emotion that was on display by the victim's families.
Well, it could be also because he was like looking down most of the time.
We first heard from Valerie Mack's family.
She disappeared in 2000, and this is what her adoptive mother, Joanne Max, said to the court.
Even though justice is done, it cannot replace what you have taken from us.
Or can it give our beloved Valerie back her life here on earth?
I do, however, want you to understand that even though you were able to commit these horrendous,
atrocities against our daughter.
And no matter what sense of power or control you felt over Valerie's body,
you were never able to touch her soul.
We then heard from Jasmine Robinson,
a cousin of Jessica Taylor, who was killed in 2003,
and she was the one that was just so emotional.
And I think it really was because they were marking Jessica Taylor's 43rd birthday.
I can't even put into words the viscerating loathing I have for you.
My heart broke even more that there were more victims, sick, twisted, heartless.
There aren't enough words for these murders.
Missy Cannes is the sister of Maureen Brainer Barnes, and I have spoken to her actually many times before.
She always carried so much guilt the last time she talked to her sister.
Her sister had called her from Penn Station right before she did.
disappeared asking for a ride home, but Missy was living in Connecticut. It was late at night.
So this is what Missy said at the hearing, and this just broke my heart.
When Rex chose to take Martin's life, he didn't just take her from us. He took my sense of safety.
He took my peace of mind. He took the way I used to move through the world without fear. In many ways,
I became one of his victims, too. Well, I do have a, I could say that. Just,
What I had forgotten until I heard her speak is that they also had a brother Will.
And, I mean, she just vanished.
And then he died.
So Missy lost two siblings and then had all of this guilt.
Yeah, it's absolutely gut-wrenching.
Also in attendance there was Maureen's son, Dylan Haggett, who was just one year old at the time of her murder.
He spoke about how he never had her when he needed her, and she never got to see who he had become.
And there was Nicolette Brainerd Barnes, Maureen's daughter.
She spoke really lovingly about her mother, but Ben really turned her anger on Heerman.
You are a pathetic man who thinks you're better than women.
You need to believe that sex workers are subhuman because you're a coward who takes out your own shortcomings on others.
I feel bad for you because your capacity for hate means that.
that you can't possibly understand love, the purity of it, the kind of love I had and still have
for my mother. Seeing your last appearance and the way you smirked as you finally confessed to what
you did to my mother proves that you need to be locked away for the safety of the community.
There are no words extreme enough to communicate the level of depravity within you.
You make me sick and I don't forgive you.
Well, I think it's the toughest for the kids. The kids of these women, they never really
got to know their parents. Megan Waterman's daughter, Liliana, I know her is Lily Waterman,
who's so grown up now, started her statement, and she was so caught up in emotion,
and she was sniffling as she was trying to speak. And I hadn't even thought about this. She was
noting that she is now the same age as her mother was when she was pregnant with her. And Liliana
to express how difficult it had been living out this tragedy so publicly.
For years, my mother's murder has been discussed in articles, television specials, podcasts,
and across social media. There are weeks when I cannot bring myself to open any social apps
because I'm constantly confronted with reminders of the worst thing that's ever happened to me.
I am grateful that people want to say her name and seek justice for her, but there's a different
between remembering who she was and profiting off of the tragedy that she's been through.
Then there was a statement from Kimberly Overstreet. That was the sister of Amber Lynn Costello.
That was read aloud in court. In it, she spoke of finding religion and direction in the wake of
her sister's murder. And she actually credited her sister's death as leading to a crack in the case.
For Karen Vergata, another victim, her two sons were.
present in court for support, but they chose not to speak. A statement was read from Sandra Castilla's
sister, Ruth Ramos. She spoke of Sandra as a mother. I was actually a little surprised to see
Amanda Funderberg there. She was the little sister, Melissa Bartholomey. And when she was 15 years old,
right after her sister disappeared in 2009, she gets a call and it looks like it's from her sister's
phone. But when she answered, it wasn't Melissa at all. It was a man. It was her killer. We now know that
was Rex Hewerman, which means that he has such an evil, sadistic streak because he threatened to do
to Amanda what he had done to Melissa. What was interesting was, as Amanda is talking,
as we've mentioned, Caroline all the way through this, you know, he's looking down. He's looking down.
And she's looking over him, and you could tell it was really upsetting her.
And so she tells him, you know, stop looking down.
Look at me.
You can look at me when you talk about 17 years since we spoke, don't forget.
Yeah, I mean, talk about taking the bull by the horns.
I mean, this is her one shot, her one chance to finally get that closure.
And she was not going to throw it away.
Amanda also specifically referenced Fuhrman's call.
during that sentencing hearing.
And that said something that, I don't know about you, Caroline,
but it really took me back and showed how angry she really is.
You murdered my sister.
The things that do to you are far worse than anything you've ever done to anyone
or even thought of.
And just because you have a few fans, remember, you are hated by so many.
I know everyone spoke on heaven,
but do me a favor, save me a spot and help, and I'll see you there.
I mean, I really was, I was so.
sad at, at her, I think her statement's the most. You'll see a range of emotions from each victim,
some just extreme sadness, obviously, at the loss. But then others really did have this angry side
because there's obviously so much anger here. And it was almost like, you know, an emotional
release for these victims to have their day in court, to have this justice, to have this closure.
After hearing from many of the victims' families, the Judge Timothy Maisie himself addressed
Rex U.R. Men. Let's take a listen to that.
I know that you're sorry that you got caught. I assume that you're sorry for what you've done
to your wife and children. Are you a little bit sorry for what you did to these poor,
innocent women? Eight women that you're strangled to death? At least eight that we know of?
Are you at least a little bit sorry for that? Yes?
Yes, I am.
Yeah, and Aaron, if you listen closely, you can faintly hear him in the background saying, yes, I am.
The judge, though, didn't mince words at all.
I mean, he seemed to be getting angrier, didn't you think?
Yeah, I mean, honestly, you don't see that that often at a sentencing.
This judge, again, you could hear the quiver in his voice.
He was audibly yelling by the end.
You know what? You've been described as a very big man, but you're a disgusting and despicable small man if you're a man at all. And you're a coward.
You know, when we watch sentencings on television, typically it is for heinous crime. So judges do get a little more worked up and emotional. But typically at your average sentencing, a judge is much more tempered, much more.
more, you know, really a little bit more toned down and follows the sort of courtroom etiquette,
which is not to raise your voice, be controlled. Here, he just threw all caution to the wind and
really let loose on Heurman. So the judge sentenced Heurman to three consecutive sentences of
life imprisonment without the possibility of parole for the deaths of Bartholomew, Waterman, and Costello,
and four consecutive sentences of 25 years to life for each of the murders of Brainerd Barnes,
Taylor, Castilla, and Mack.
I mean, just for those four, that 25 to life, that's 100 years.
When he's dead, he'll still be serving.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, this obviously is somewhat symbolic, the point being that this man is never going
to see the light of day outside of a jail cell.
And with that, the judge concluded the hearing.
Anything else, gentlemen?
Nothing from the people right.
Mr. Brown?
Nothing further.
Get him out of here.
I mean, you can hear the cheers and jeers in the courtroom, almost like this physical release for the victim's families who've just been waiting so long for justice.
But I even know you hear cheers, what I always hear after these kind of cases is no one really wins, you know.
They get to face them.
they don't get their loved ones back.
None of those women are coming back.
So that it's got to be frustrating, too, that he just sat there.
How does someone like Hugherman compare to other infamous killers and serial killers
and the sentences that they've gotten in the past?
Yeah.
I mean, look, he really flew under the radar.
This reminds me so much of the BTK killer.
In fact, Aaron, the similarities are.
quite striking. Dennis Raider, better known as the BTK killer for bind, torture, kill,
even called Herman a clone of himself in a letter to a news outlet in 2023. Raider was also married
with two kids, lived in his community undetected for years. I mean, there were both even 59 years old
at the time of their arrests. Also, I'm reminded of Joseph James DeAngelo, better known as the Golden State
killer. He comes to mind. And believe it or not, I actually,
met Dennis Raider. I was trying to get an interview with him, so I went into the
Wichita jail and spoke with him. And another comparison I could add to that is that lack of
emotion we saw in Rex Ehrman. I really saw it with Dennis Raider. He spoke so casually about what
he did. And the only time he cried was when he told me that his daughter would no longer speak
to him. So it was all about him. He was only crying about his life. He was only crying about his life.
nothing about what he did.
And I think also, now in that case, Dennis Rader gave more details about what he did to his victims.
But in this case, the victims' families did not get to get the details that they always wanted to hear.
The fact is, you know, we may never know those answers.
I was somewhat surprised that part of his plea agreement wasn't a more,
fulsome description potentially of what he had done. And that sometimes is why victims families
actually want a trial. They want to know specifically what happened. But I think in this instance,
you know, just having this be done and over with for the victims' families was sort of more
at top of mind was going to be more preferential than going through the just arduous and
and gut-wrenching nature of a trial.
Here's what Lily Waterman had to say afterwards at a press conference.
This has been a long day coming.
And from this day forward, stop saying his name,
stop putting his face everywhere, put the girl's face, put their names,
and make it known that we are the ones who live on for them.
So, I mean, I'm so happy for these families,
finally getting closure.
Obviously, Aaron, like you said,
there will never truly be closure.
or they will never get their loved ones back.
But I do have to admit, I'm not sure this is the last we're going to hear about Rex
Heerman, Aaron.
I personally feel that there may be more victims out there whose families are looking for
accountability.
He insists, according to his defense attorney, that it was just these eight women, but we'll
find out.
I really appreciate you being here talking about this very, very tough and emotional
hearing, but thanks for being with us today. Thank you so much for having me. And I want to thank
all of you for listening. Be sure to rate and review wherever you get your podcasts.
