Information reaching Kossyderrickent has it that Footage shows moment cops arrested Gilgo Beach serial killer, Rex Heuermann, in Midtown Manhattan.
At his office near the Empire State Building, Rex Heuermann was a master of the meticulous: a veteran architectural consultant and a self-styled expert at navigating the intricacies of New York City’s building code. He impressed some clients and drove others crazy with his fine-toothed directives.
At home in Massapequa Park on Long Island, while some neighbors saw Mr. Heuermann as just another commuter in a suit, others found him a figure of menace. He glowered at neighbors while swinging an ax in the front yard of a low-slung, dilapidated house that parents cautioned their children to avoid on Halloween. He was kicked out of a Whole Foods for stealing fruit.
Neighbor Michael Musto, who has lived in Massapequa Park for 40 years and took the train into Manhattan with Heuerman for work, described the 59-year-old suspect as a “recluse” and kept “to himself.”
“I understand he was an architect in the city. I used to see him on the train cause I take the train to the city every morning, as well. He would walk past my house. I would see his wife driving a beat-up, green, Dodge Charger. I never really thought they were involved in something crazy like this. Not every day you wake up and see every time of law enforcement agency and news channel on your front lawn,” Musto told Fox News Digital.
Massapequa Park is a clean-cut neighborhood where residents keep up with manicured landscaping and hang American flags off their front porches. Several homeowners in Heuermann’s neighborhood are local police officers, and a closed police academy is located down the street from the suspect’s home.
The Twitter account attributed to the name Asa Ellerup uses the handle “@ElvenMaiden,” apparently after an obscure character in a VIDEO? game, with the user claiming to be based in Long Island.
In more than a dozen posts, the Twitter user waxes on about her affection for traveling.
The last posts were in April 2020.
“Wow, spring is creeping up fast! Time to plan a summer vacation. Now where to go, hmm, within the U.S. sounds good. Ideas anyone?,” says one tweet from Feb. 22, 2010.