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Rex Heuermann told ex-wife he murdered Gilgo Beach victims at family’s home, documentary reveals

NEW YORK (AP) — Adam recently pleaded guilty to new york Gilgo Beach serial murders In the latest episode of the docuseries, he is seen telling his ex-wife while in prison that he killed most of his female victims in the basement of the family’s dilapidated house.

His ex-wife Asa Ellerup said: a teaser For the episode, which aired Thursday on NBC’s streaming service Peacock, Rex Heuermann also told her that the eight women he confessed to killing were his only victims.

Ellerup later said the teaser said he killed seven people in the basement of the family’s home in Massapequa Park on Long Island while he was away.

“I said to him, ‘Mr. Heuermann, I understand that you confessed to me about these murders. Could you please tell me how many of these women you killed,'” she said in the 90-second clip. he said. “‘Eight,’ he said.”

Ellerup said she did not intentionally use her ex-husband’s name to “build a wall” between the two.

“When he started talking, it started to feel like the Rex I knew,” he said. “But I didn’t want to see that. I wanted to see what I needed to see.”

The last and final episode of “The Gilgo Beach Killer: House of Secrets” follows the release of the first three episodes of the series last june. Another documentary called “Killing Grounds: The Gilgo Beach Murders” is coming out Wednesday On Amazon’s streaming service, Prime Minister Video.

Ellerup’s attorney, Robert Macedonio, declined to discuss other new details revealed in the new episode of the Peacock documentary.

“This has been an extremely emotional and painful process for the family to endure and come to terms with the allegations that Rex Heuermann was the Gilgo Beach serial killer,” he said in an email. “Ms. Ellerup wants the focus to remain where it belongs: on the victims and their families who have suffered immeasurable and lasting losses.”

Vess Mitev, a lawyer for the couple’s two adult children, Victoria and Chris, said the pair “echoed their mother’s feelings and wanted to move forward as best they could, given this pretty dark chapter in their lives.”

Heuermann’s lawyers did not respond to an email seeking comment.

Earlier episodes of the documentary showed the family trying to reconcile their memories of the architect, who had an office in Manhattan, with the portrait of the killer described by authorities.

Ellerup, who divorced Heuermann after his arrest in 2023, has staunchly defended her ex-husband’s innocence in previous incidents. But his daughter eventually acknowledged that her father “most likely” committed the brutal murders that baffled investigators and attracted intense attention from true crime observers for years.

The saga ended earlier this month when Heuermann, 62, of Massapequa Park, admitted in Riverhead court to killing seven women and also killing an eighth woman for whom he had not yet been charged over a period of more than 17 years.

Heuermann told the court that he strangled the women, most of them sex workers, and dismembered some of their bodies before dumping them on a deserted parkway about 50 miles from Manhattan, not far from Long Island’s Gilgo Beach.

He will be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole in June.

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Follow Philip Marcelo on X: @philmarcelo.

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