“‘THREE WORDS THAT SHOCKED THE COURTROOM…’ Rex Heuermann Breaks Silence Before Sentencing With Emotional Statement Following Guilty Plea in Gilgo Beach Murders Case as Decades-Long Investigation Into the Deaths of Eight Women Reaches Its Final and Most Critical Turning Point”! Rex Heuermann appeared in court ahead of sentencing after pleading guilty in the long-running Gilgo Beach murders case involving the deaths of eight women. During proceedings, he delivered a brief three-word statement, “I accept responsibility,” marking a significant moment in a case that has stretched across years of investigation and legal proceedings. The appearance represents a major turning point in one of the most closely followed criminal investigations in recent U.S. history, bringing a decades-long search for answers closer to its conclusion as sentencing approaches.

 

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Long Island serial killer Rex Heuermann chillingly told a disgusted judge “I am responsible” before he was sentenced to three life terms behind bars on Wednesday.

Heuermann, who was in Suffolk County court Wednesday after admitting to the savage murders of eight sex workers between 1993 and 2010, had to first listen to victim impact statements from more than a dozen relatives of the women he strangled and butchered.

Then he faced the fury of Judge Timothy Mazzei, who asked the 6-foot-4 former architect if he had anything to say before sentencing, then ordered him to “Stand up!” while addressing the court.

Rex Heuermann in court, surrounded by law enforcement, with a woman in a red jacket in the foreground.
Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex Heuermann at his sentencing in Suffolk County Court in Riverhead, NY on June 17, 2026.via REUTERS

“There are no words I can say, but I am responsible for what was said today,” Heuermann said.

“The words I would have no meaning and I’m going to leave it there at this time,” he added meekly.

Someone from the crowd yelled “Speak up!” before Mazzei unloaded on the killer.

“Mr. Heurmann, as [Suffolk County District Attorney Ray] Tierney said, I know that you’re sorry you got caught,” Mazzei said, barely containing his disgust with the sicko. “I assume that you’re sorry for what you did to your wife and children.

“Are you a little bit sorry for what you did to these poor innocent women – eight women you strangled to death, at least eight women that we know of,” he added. “Are you at least a little bit sorry about that. Yes!?”

Rex Heuermann in court, speaking, with officers visible behind him.
Heuermann chillingly told a disgusted judge “I am responsible” before he was sentenced.Newsday
Judge Tim Mazzei wiping a tear from his eye during the sentencing of Rex Heuermann.
Judge Tim Mazzei wiping away tears while listening to victim impact statements during the sentencing.via REUTERS

Heuermann stood emotionless as several stone-faced officers hovered near him.

“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,” Mazzei told Heuermann then delivered his sentence before adding “Get him out of here.”

The crowd erupted in cheers with some in attendance chanting “Ogre! Ogre!” as Heuermann was cuffed behind his back.

Rex Heuermann in a black suit with handcuffs, escorted by officers at Suffolk County Court.
Heuermann is escorted away after being sentenced by Judge Timothy Mazzei to three life sentences.Newsday
New York Post front page with the headline "SMIRK OF A SERIAL KILLER" next to a photo of Rex Heuermann.
How The Post covered Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex Heuermann’s guilty plea in April.scalle

Heurmann, 62, pleaded guilty in April to the heinous murders — all but one of which unfolded in a basement “kill room” in his family’s Massapequa Park home.

He entered the courtroom wearing a black suit — and sporting the same sinister stare he wore in a new mug shot released this week by the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office.

Outside the Riverhead courthouse, a group of sex workers protested against the killer.

People waiting for the sentencing of Rex Heuermann, with signs reading "STOP MYTHOLOGIZING MEN WHO KILL SEX WORKERS" and "IT HAS ALWAYS BEEN YOUR FATHERS, YOUR HUSBANDS, YOUR BOYFRIENDS, YOUR BROTHERS, and YOUR SONS."
People wait to enter for the sentencing of convicted Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex Heuermann at Suffolk County Court in Riverhead, New York, U.S., June 17, 2026.REUTERS
Amanda Funderburg leaves court in Riverhead after giving an impact statement during the sentencing of Rex Heuermann.
Amanda Funderburg leaves court in RIverhead after giving an impact statement during the sentencing of Rex Heuermann.Dennis A. Clark for NY Post

The fiend’s plea deal with Suffolk County prosecutors called for the three life sentences — and his sentencing Wednsday closed out a national-headline-grabbing case involving a grisly string of killings that haunted the region for decades.

Heuermann confessed to killing eight women between 1993 and 2010 and dumping their broken bodies along desolate stretches of Long Island, where they were found starting in December 2010.

But the cases remained unsolved for decades until the investigation was reopened in 2022 and led to Heuermann’s arrest the next year — partly thanks to a pizza box he tossed in the trash outside his Manhattan office.

Melissa Cann, sister of Maureen Brainard-Barnes, speaks during the sentencing of Rex Heuermann.
Melissa Cann, the sister of victim Brainard Barnes, speaking before Heuermann was sentenced.Newsday
Cousins Jasmine Robinson and Violet Swagger embrace in a courtroom, with police officers and other observers in the background.
Jasmine Robinson (left) and Violet Swagger, the cousins of victim Jessica Taylor, embracing in the court room.Newsday

In April, the confessed killer admitted he murdered all but one of his victims in a basement “kill room” in the family home while his wife and two kids were away, eventually developing a meticulous four-day routine to plan his crimes, clean up afterward and dispose of the bodies.

He kept a Tinder account and buzzed prostitutes on burner phones more than 500 times while also embarking on “significant searches for pornography related to bindings, torture, rape, snuff videos, crying, bruised and impaled women and/or girls,” authorities said.

Some of the victims were dismembered and wrapped up in burlap before being dumped.

District Attorney Ray Tierney speaks to reporters outside the Riverhead courthouse after Rex Heuermann's sentencing.
Suffolk County DA Ray Tierney speaking at a press conference outside the courthouse after Heuermann was sentenced.Dennis A. Clark for NY Post
DA Ray Tierney speaking to reporters outside the Riverhead courthouse with several individuals standing behind him, after Rex Heuermann's sentencing.
Tierney was joined by family members of several of the Gilgo Beach victims.Dennis A. Clark for NY Post

The killings remained a dark mystery until former NYPD Chief Rodney Harrison took over as Suffolk County police commissioner and reopened the cases in 2022.

Heuermann was arrested in July 2023 outside his office and charged with three of the cold-case killings, with DNA evidence later linking him to four more women — and eventually another in a surprise development.

Map of Gilgo Beach victims, showing images and names of eight victims along with the locations where their bodies were found.
The victims were Long Island sex workers.NY Post Design
Suffolk County Police investigate the scene in Gilgo Beach where bodies were found.
Heuermann’s victims were killed between 1993 and 2010, but he was not arrested until 2023.Dennis A. Clark for NY Post

The 6-foot-4 architect confessed to killing Amber Lynn Costello, 27; Megan Waterman, 22; Melissa Barthelemy, 24; and Maureen Brainard-Barnes, 25, who were famously known as the “Gilgo Four” — as well as Valerie Mack, 24; Jessica Taylor, 20; and Sandra Costilla, 28, the first victim killed in 1993.

He also copped to killing Karen Vergata, 34, whose 1996 murder had not been linked to him.

Michael Brown, Heuermann’s lawyer, told reporters that his client was not involved in two other Gilgo Beach slayings — Shannon Gilbert, a sex worker who disappeared in 2010, and an unidentified victim known only as “Asian Doe.”

Evidence photo of a discarded pizza box containing a paper plate, foil, and pizza crust remnants, used for DNA analysis.
DNA found on a discarded pizza box tied Heuermann to the Gilgo Beach murders, prosecutors said.Suffolk County
Four police officers returning items to a home, one holding a cardboard box.
Police carried out two thorough searches of Rex Heuermann’s home after his arrest.James Keivom for NY Post

Suffolk County officials said Heuermann has been held in solitary confinement at the county jail since his arrest, whittling away his time with books and the occasional outdoor time in the jail yard — alone.

Sources revealed that the killer has also found a sympathetic pen pal while locked up — Keith Jesperson, the notorious “Happy Face Killer,” who is serving a life sentence at the Oregon Correctional Facility.

\for signing taunting letters to cops and media outlets with a smiley face, was arrested in 1995 and confessed to killing eight women between 1990 and 1995 in C