Rex Heuermann, the Massapequa Park architect who terrorized Long Island for more than a decade, pleaded guilty Wednesday to murdering seven women and admitted to killing an eighth woman whose bodies were found along Gilgo Beach and other Long Island locations. The plea ends one of the most haunting criminal cases in Long Island history — and closes a chapter that has loomed over the South Shore since 2010.
Heuermann admitted to killing seven women: Melissa Barthelemy, Megan Waterman, Amber Costello, Maureen Brainard-Barnes, Sandra Costilla, Jessica Taylor, and Valerie Mack. He also admitted to killing an eighth woman, Karen Vergata, though he wasn't charged with that murder. The murders occurred between 1993 and 2011. Their remains were discovered during a search for a missing woman, Shannan Gilbert, which eventually uncovered 11 bodies along Ocean Parkway. The case went cold for years until Heuermann's arrest in July 2023, when DNA evidence and cell phone records finally connected him to the murders.
For residents of Massapequa Park, where Heuermann lived with his family in a cluttered Victorian house, the news brings an end to the surreal experience of having a serial killer as a neighbor. The case cost Suffolk County an estimated $30 million in investigative resources over 13 years — money that came from the same property tax base that funds schools, roads, and parks. Wednesday's guilty plea means no lengthy trial, no years more of legal fees, and finally, some measure of justice for the victims' families.
Nassau County was under a frost advisory until Wednesday morning as temperatures dropped to around 30 degrees, according to SILive.com. The National Weather Service issued the warning for overnight Tuesday into early Wednesday morning.
This meant your tomato plants, herbs, and any other tender vegetation you planted last weekend during that gorgeous 70-degree weather could have been in trouble. If you had anything green and vulnerable outside, Tuesday night was the night to cover it up or bring it indoors.
The timing is classic Long Island spring — warm enough last week to fool everyone into thinking winter was done, cold enough this week to remind us that Mother Nature doesn't check the calendar. April frost advisories aren't unusual here, but they're always annoying. The good news? This looks like it was a one-night situation before temperatures climb back up for the weekend.
LIRR union officials are throwing around the word "disastrous" when talking about a potential strike, and honestly, they're not wrong. A work stoppage would strand roughly 336,000 daily commuters — that's basically the entire population of Nassau County trying to figure out how to get to work without the railroad.
The unions are using this language strategically, of course. Nothing gets the MTA's attention like the prospect of every parking lot from Babylon to Penn Station turning into a weekday ghost town. For context: the last LIRR strike was in 1994, and it lasted two days before politicians stepped in. Apparently, the economic impact of shutting down the region's main artery focuses minds pretty quickly.
According to Newsday, the unions are emphasizing just how catastrophic a strike would be for Long Island's economy and daily life. Translation: they know they're holding all the cards here, and they want management to remember that before contract talks get too heated.
Spring Long Island Restaurant Week returns April 26-May 3, giving you eight days to sample some of the Island's best spots without the usual sticker shock, according to Greater Long Island. Participating restaurants offer prix fixe menus that let you try places you've been meaning to check out — or finally splurge on that anniversary dinner you've been postponing since property tax season.
The timing couldn't be better. Spring Restaurant Week lands right after the winter budget stress but before summer beach traffic turns every dinner reservation into a logistical nightmare. It's also perfectly positioned for Mother's Day planning — the event ends just before the May 10 holiday, so you can scout locations now and book something special.
Last fall's Restaurant Week featured over 100 participating spots from Montauk to Glen Cove, with prix fixe dinners typically running $29-$55 compared to regular menu prices that can easily hit $80+ per person at Long Island's better establishments. The full list of spring participants should drop in the next week or two.
Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman is suing the state's Public Campaign Finance Board after they denied him public matching funds for his gubernatorial run, according to the Times Union. The board rejected his application, citing issues with filing requirements for joint paperwork with his running mate.
This isn't Blakeman's first clash with Albany — he's been positioning himself as a conservative challenger to Governor Kathy Hochul, criticizing everything from her congestion pricing stance to state housing mandates. The public matching funds program was designed to level the playing field for candidates without deep-pocketed donors, but it comes with strict compliance requirements that can trip up campaigns.
For Nassau residents, this adds another layer to Blakeman's already contentious relationship with state leadership. Whether you agree with his politics or not, a county executive spending time and resources on statewide legal battles raises questions about bandwidth — especially when Nassau still faces its own budget challenges and ongoing fiscal oversight.
A young athlete from Dix Hills just broke a Kids World Record for longest continuous basketball dribble in the Boys 7-9 division, according to Patch. The feat required 2 minutes and 24 seconds of non-stop ball handling — no easy task when you consider most people can barely dribble while walking to their car.
The record attempt took place locally and was officially verified by record-keeping authorities. Breaking a Kids World Record from suburban Long Island is no small achievement, especially in a sport where kids here compete against programs from across the country.
For context, youth sports on Long Island have become increasingly competitive over the past decade, with families investing thousands in training and travel teams. This kid just proved that sometimes the most impressive achievements happen through pure determination rather than expensive coaching. The previous record had stood for several years before this Dix Hills athlete decided to take it on.