Case Update: The full 6-hour sentencing proceeding for Rex Heuermann has surfaced, offering a detailed look inside the c0urtroom
About 33 years since he claimed his first victim, Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex Heuermann was sentenced to life in prison without parole Wednesday as part of a court hearing that represented the end of a long road.
The killings of primarily young female sex workers on Long Island, New York, took place between 1993 and 2010, and Heuermann was arrested in 2023 and earlier this year pleaded guilty to seven of the killings and admitted to an eighth.
Family members of victims who had waited years to confront the killer stood up and spoke about their loved ones, their emotional and psychological challenges, and their disgust for Heuermann, who in April admitted he fatally strangled eight women and discarded their remains.
“For so many years, this case has been a weight I carried every single day,” said Liliana Waterman, the daughter of victim Megan Waterman.
“Today’s proceedings do not erase what happened, and nothing ever will. But today brings accountability.”
In 2010, Waterman was among the four women whose remains were found on an isolated stretch off Ocean Parkway in Gilgo Beach, earning them the nickname the “Gilgo Four.” That gruesome discovery set off a wider search, and investigators ultimately found at least 10 sets of human remains.
“He took my sense of safety, he took my peace of mind,” said Melissa “Missy” Cann, the sister of Maureen Brainard-Barnes, another of the Gilgo Four. “In many ways, I became one of his victims, too.”
Here are a few takeaways from the sentencing hearing, including Heuermann’s muted statement, the heartfelt and emotional speeches from victims’ families and the next steps on the road to justice.
Heuermann speaks – but quietly
During the victims’ family statements, Heuermann showed little interest. He sat stone-faced, his hands crossed on the table in front of him, and looked down, declining to make eye contact.
The question hung over the courtroom: Would Heuermann actually stand up in court and speak about his crimes? What would he say?
The answer: Not much.
Heuermann was seated when he first began to speak, and Judge Timothy Mazzei directed him to stand up.
“There are no words I can say,” Heuermann said in a quiet voice, nearly inaudible in the courtroom.
“I am responsible for all that was said in this room today. The words I would say have no meaning,” he said.
Mazzei asked whether Heuermann was truly remorseful.

“I know that you’re sorry that you got caught. I assume that you’re sorry for what you’ve done to your wife and children,” Mazzei said, his voice growing louder. “Are you a little bit sorry for what you’ve done to these poor, innocent women? Eight women that you strangled to death? At least eight that we know of? Are you at least a little bit sorry for that? Yes?”
“Yes,” Heuermann replied, nodding.
The judge sighed deeply.
“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 said.
Mazzei then sentenced Heuermann to the maximum: three terms of life without parole and four terms of 25 years to life.
All 8 victims represented

The eight victims have often been reduced to a grainy photo and a short description, but in court their families and loved ones sought to make them into three-dimensional figures.
Valerie Mack had a “fire inside of her that lit up the world around her,” her sister Danielle Mack said.


