Rex Heuermann, the Long Island architect charged in the Gilgo Beach serial killings, is expected to plead guilty to murdering seven sex workers, according to AOL.com. The plea would close a chapter on one of the most notorious unsolved cases in Suffolk County history — murders that haunted the South Shore for more than a decade.
The Gilgo Beach victims were found along Ocean Parkway starting in 2010, turning a stretch of barrier island into a crime scene that made national headlines. For years, families waited for answers while the case went cold. Heuermann was arrested on July 13, 2023, at his Massapequa Park home, just miles from where the bodies were discovered.
A guilty plea would spare families the trauma of a lengthy trial, but it also means we may never get full details about how these crimes went undetected for so long. The case exposed gaps in how missing persons cases involving sex workers were initially handled — failures that advocates say contributed to the killer's ability to operate for years. Suffolk County has since overhauled its approach, but those changes came too late for the seven women whose lives were cut short.
Jones Beach just dropped one of its most loaded concert lineups in years — and Wu-Tang Clan's farewell tour might be the crown jewel. The "Final Chamber" tour hits Northwell at Jones Beach Theater on September 13, with all surviving original members and Bone Thugs-N-Harmony opening. If you grew up with "36 Chambers," this is your last call.
But Wu-Tang is far from the only reason to keep Jones Beach on your radar this summer. The waterfront amphitheater is stacking names across every genre: Dave Matthews Band (July 21), Muse (July 25), James Taylor (June 23), Chris Stapleton (August 26), and an Outlaw Music Festival headlined by Willie Nelson with Sheryl Crow and the Avett Brothers (August 28). Hip-hop fans also get Lil Wayne's "20 Years of Carter Classics" with 2 Chainz on September 10 — just three days before Wu-Tang.
The rock side is just as deep: Evanescence with Spiritbox (June 24), Godsmack with Stone Temple Pilots (June 27), Five Finger Death Punch (August 4), Lynyrd Skynyrd and Foreigner on a double bill (August 21), and Breaking Benjamin with Chevelle (September 5). Even the nostalgia bookings hit — TLC and Salt-N-Pepa with En Vogue close out mid-September.
Tickets are already moving for the big dates. The full schedule is at jonesbeach.com.
When 2-year-old Harper Wengrod needs help fighting a rare ovarian cancer diagnosis, Long Island's hockey community didn't just send thoughts and prayers — they sent $40,000. The fundraising effort mobilized through local rinks, teams, and the tight network of parents who spend half their weekends in ice-cold arenas cheering for kids in oversized equipment.
According to Greater Long Island, the toddler has been called "the toughest little girl in the world" by those close to her family. The hockey community's response shows what anyone who's spent time around youth sports already knows: these aren't just teammates, they're extended family. When one family faces something this big, everyone shows up.
Hockey families on Long Island are used to early morning practices, expensive equipment, and long drives to tournaments. Turns out they're also pretty good at rallying around each other when it counts. The $40K raised will help cover medical expenses as the family focuses on what matters most — getting their little fighter healthy.
The New York Islanders surprised active military member and FDNY firefighter Joseph O'Brien with a special gift this week, according to the New York Post. The team recognized O'Brien's dual service by presenting him with a new Ford F-150 pickup truck, donated by Hempstead Ford and featuring custom Islanders-upholstered seats.
This kind of gesture hits different on Long Island, where half the neighborhood seems to have someone in the fire department, police, or military. The Islanders have been making more community moves lately, probably trying to rebuild some goodwill after years of arena drama and playoff heartbreak.
The timing's interesting too — with the team currently holding a playoff spot in second place in the Metropolitan Division, these community connections remind fans why local teams matter beyond wins and losses. Sometimes the best assist happens off the ice.
The former Chroma Paint site is getting a complete makeover — developers want to turn the industrial property into a mixed-use complex with apartments and retail space. The project would bring new housing to one of Nassau's most transit-accessible areas, just blocks from the Hicksville LIRR station.
This is exactly the kind of development Nassau has been pushing for: putting housing near mass transit instead of sprawling further into what's left of our farmland. Hicksville already handles some of the highest train ridership on Long Island, so adding residents who can actually walk to the platform makes sense.
The timing is interesting — Nassau just updated its zoning laws last year to encourage this type of mixed-use development, particularly near train stations. If approved, this project joins several others transforming former industrial sites across the county into places people actually want to live.
Pizza Depot, a Canadian chain with more than 48 locations north of the border, just opened its first U.S. location in Hicksville. The company chose Nassau County as its beachhead for American expansion, setting up shop at 350 South Broadway.
The timing is interesting — while other pizza places struggle with rising costs and labor shortages, Pizza Depot is betting on Long Island's pizza-obsessed market. They're bringing their Canadian take on pies, wings, and subs to a place where everyone already has strong opinions about where to get a slice.
For context: Hicksville has become something of a restaurant testing ground lately. Between the new shopping developments and the steady LIRR foot traffic, chains see it as a way to gauge whether suburban Long Island will embrace their concept. Pizza Depot is banking that Long Islanders will try something new — even if it means pizza with a Canadian accent.