Suffolk County prosecutors can use high-tech DNA evidence against accused Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex Heuermann – who will face just one trial for the murders of seven sex workers, a Long Island judge said in a bombshell ruling Tuesday.
The decision by Judge Tim Mazzei is a slam dunk for Suffolk County DA Ray Tierney, whose case against Heuermann hinges largely on DNA.
“If I wasn’t confident in this case I would’ve never brought it to trial,” Tierney told reporters.
Accused Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex Heuermann appears in Judge Tim Mazzei’s courtroom with his attorney Michael Brown at Suffolk County Court on September 3, 2025, in Riverhead, New York. Getty Images
Angela Pollina takes the stand as Judge Tim Mazzei looks on at Suffolk County Court in Riverhead on Tuesday, March 7, 2023. James Carbone/PoolHeuermann’s lawyer, Michael Brown, had challenged the DNA evidence and sought to have his client tried separately for each of the seven sex workers he is accused of killing.
Mazzei ruled earlier this month that crucial DNA evidence could be used in the case against the 61-year-old accused serial killer – which Brown challenged, leading to Tuesday’s ruling.
The DNA matches link Heuermann to seven sex workers found dead along a desolate stretch of Long Island – Valerie Mack, 24, Jessica Taylor, 20, Megan Waterman, 22, Melissa Barthelemy, 24, Maureen Brainard-Barnes, 25, Sandra Costilla, 28, and Amber Lynn Costello, 27.
Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney speaks outside the courtroom where accused Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex Heuermann appeared at Riverhead Court on Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2025. Brandon Cruz / NYPost
A Suffolk County police dive team searches for possible Gilgo victims in 2011. APThe bodies were dumped between 1993 and 2010, but the murders remain unsolved until former NYPD bigwig Rodney Harrison took over as Suffolk County police commissioner and reopened the case – leading to Heuermann’s arrest in July 2023.
Investigators then carried out two thorough searches of the Heuermann home in Massapequa Park, which led to the alleged discovery of a grisly “planning document” allegedly kept by the accused killer, including a “lessons learned” section.
“I think a big consideration by the court, which was stated in their decision, was that planning document,” Tierney said. “That planning document talks about murders that had occurred, that are about to occur and that are going to occur in the future.”
The hulking architect, who has denied he was behind the grisly slayings, has since been held without bail while the case crawls toward a trial.
The Gilgo beach victims. Suffolk County Police DepartmentBrown has called the DNA evidence “magic,” and moved to have it thrown out while asking that each of the murders be the subject of separate trials.
“We’re not making motions for the sake of making motions,” he said outside the courtroom. “We’re making motions because we are confident in the law and confident in our position.
“Ultimately, we do not make the decision,” he said.
The DNA evidence, processed by Astrea Labs, was tested using high-tech science that allowed damaged samples to be used for the first time in a New York State courtroom.
Brown argued on Sept. 3 that the lab is not licensed in the state and that using the evidence would violate Empire State health laws.
Rex Heuermann is accused of being the Gilgo Beach serial killer. Getty ImagesMeanwhile Tierney said he plans to call “well over” 100 witnesses from 15 different states to testify at the upcoming trial, with more than 6.5 million documents entered into evidence.
Brown called the 100 terabytes of evidence “a mountain of a mountain.
“You got to remember we’re talking about 30 years of investigation,” he said. “We’re talking about seven victims. So, it is an enormous amount of discovery.”
Police on the scene where a body was discovered near Gilgo Beach on Long Island in April 2011. Getty ImagesBob Macedonio, the lawyer representing Heuermann’s ex-wife, Asa Ellerup, said he anticipated the judge’s DNA ruling.
He said the high-stakes case has been difficult on Ellerup and her children, Victoria Heuermann and stepson Christopher Sheridan.
“The longer this drags, the longer they have to basically have their lives on hold,” Macedonio said. “They cannot move forward until the conclusion of this case.”





