Recognizing that human traffickers deliberately target adults who might not be immediately reported missing because they’re independent and mobile.

3 years after the abduction, Rebecca Martinez stood before a conference room full of college students at the University of Texas, sharing her story as part of a campus safety awareness program.

She described the sophisticated tactics that had been used to gain her trust, the warning signs she had missed, and the importance of verification and skepticism even when something seems legitimate.

These weren’t stupid mistakes, she emphasized.

These were calculated manipulations by professional criminals who studied human psychology and exploited our natural desire for connection and our trust in technology platforms.

She always ended her presentations with specific actionable advice.

Always video call before meeting someone from a dating app to verify they’re who they claim to be.

Never go to a hotel room or private location for a first meeting, regardless of how legitimate the reason sounds.

Always tell multiple people exactly where you’re going, who you’re meeting, and when you expect to be back.

Share your location through your phone with trusted friends or family.

Trust your instincts if something feels wrong, even if you can’t articulate exactly what’s concerning you.

The college students always had questions.

How could she have known it was a scam when everything seemed so legitimate? The answer was complex.

The criminals had invested significant time and resources into creating a believable scenario, and they had exploited the specific characteristics that make dating apps attractive, the ability to connect with new people, the excitement of potential romance, the trust placed in platform verification systems.

But there had been small red flags that both she and Ashley had rationalized away in their desire for the situation to be real.

Marcus Valdez had never agreed to a video call, always having plausible excuses.

The Gala invitation had come from a company email address, but had never been verifiable through the organization supposedly hosting the event.

The request to check in hours before the event and meet in a private suite rather than a public lobby had been unusual, even if it had been explained away with security concerns.

Individually, none of these things had seemed like major warning signs.

Collectively, they formed a pattern that, in retrospect, screamed danger.

Ashley speaking at a similar event in California often focused on the role of technology in both enabling the crime and ultimately saving their lives.

The same platforms that criminals use to find victims also create digital trails that can help catch them.

She explained, “My Apple Watch location data, security cameras, cell phone records, all of that technology that we sometimes complain about as invasive was what saved us.

The key is being smart about how we use technology and understanding both its risks and its protective potential.

Both women emphasized that human trafficking wasn’t something that only happened to people who were economically desperate or socially isolated.

They had been successful professionals with good jobs, close friends, and involved families.

They had been educated about online safety.

They had taken what they thought were reasonable precautions and they had still been targeted successfully because the criminals who operate in this space are sophisticated, patient, and expert at exploiting human psychology.

The dating app companies themselves faced scrutiny after the case became public.

Hinge and other platforms were criticized for insufficient identity verification and for making it too easy for criminals to create fake profiles using stolen photos and information.

In response, several platforms implemented new safety features, including mandatory video verification for certain profile types, AI systems designed to detect suspicious patterns of communication, and easier reporting mechanisms for users who suspected they were being targeted by scammers or criminals.

But technology alone couldn’t solve the problem.

The fundamental challenge was that human trafficking networks were constantly evolving their tactics to stay ahead of detection systems.

What worked to protect people this year might be ineffective against next year’s techniques.

The solution required ongoing education, vigilance, and a willingness to question things that seemed too good to be true.

Detective James Reeves, who had led the initial investigation, later spoke at law enforcement conferences about the case.

He emphasized the importance of taking missing person reports seriously, even when the circumstances suggested voluntary absence.

If Ashley Thompson’s father hadn’t pushed for immediate investigation, if we had waited the traditional 24 to 48 hours before taking action, both women would likely be dead.

He said the old rules about waiting to report adults missing don’t apply in an era where criminals can move victims across state or international borders within hours.

The case also highlighted the role of ordinary citizens in preventing and solving crimes.

The hotel security guard who had filed a report about the suspicious interaction even though he didn’t pursue it at the time had provided crucial evidence.

Ashley’s sister, who noticed the missing bracelet and trusted her instincts that something was wrong, had initiated the chain of events that led to the rescue.

Multiple witnesses who didn’t realize the significance of what they had seen had provided pieces of information that came together to locate the victims.

5 years after the abduction, Rebecca Martinez married a man she met through mutual friends.

Someone she got to know gradually over months in group settings before ever going on a date alone.

Her wedding included security measures that would have seemed paranoid before her experience, but now seemed like reasonable precautions.

Ashley Thompson became a nurse educator, teaching other health care professionals about recognizing signs of human trafficking in patients and how to connect victims with appropriate resources.

Both women maintained contact with some of the other victims who had been rescued as a result of the investigation into their case.

The bond between people who have survived extreme trauma creates a unique kind of connection, and the group provided mutual support as they all worked to rebuild their lives.

Some victims recovered more quickly than others.

Some were able to return to relatively normal lives with therapy and time.

Others struggled with ongoing mental health challenges, substance abuse issues, and difficulty maintaining relationships or employment.

The long-term impact of human trafficking extends far beyond the immediate trauma of captivity.

Victims often experience complex PTSD characterized by difficulty regulating emotions, problems with self-perception, and challenges in relationships.

Many struggle with feelings of shame or self-lame even though they were clearly victims of sophisticated criminal operations.

The psychological manipulation that traffickers use to control victims can create lasting damage to a person’s ability to trust their own judgment.

Rebecca sometimes thought about the moment in the warehouse when Marcus Valdez had looked at her and Ashley, clearly considering whether he had time to kill them before the police arrived.

She thought about how close they had come to death, how many small factors had aligned to save them, the watch location data, the sister’s attention to detail, the father’s police instincts, the security guard’s vague report, the timing of the search pattern.

Remove any one of those elements and they would have died.

She also thought about the women who hadn’t been as fortunate, the four victims from the same network who remained missing and presumed dead, and the countless others who had been trafficked by different networks operating around the country and around the world.

The UN estimates that there are approximately 40 million people living in some form of modern slavery globally, with hundreds of thousands of those in the United States.

The vast majority are women and girls.

and many are trafficked for sexual exploitation or forced labor.

The case of Rebecca Martinez and Ashley Thompson became a teaching example used in law enforcement training, university criminal justice programs, and public awareness campaigns.

It demonstrated how traffickers had evolved beyond the stereotypical image of foreign criminals abducting people off the street.

Modern trafficking operations often involve sophisticated digital recruitment, psychological manipulation, and exploitation of legitimate platforms for illegitimate purposes.

The criminals were often educated, wellspoken, and skilled at blending into normal society while operating deadly criminal enterprises.

On the 10th anniversary of their rescue, Rebecca and Ashley were invited to speak at a congressional hearing about human trafficking and technology.

They testified about their experience and advocated for stronger regulations requiring dating platforms to implement enhanced safety features and identity verification systems.

They also pushed for increased funding for law enforcement agencies to combat trafficking and for support services for survivors.

During her testimony, Rebecca made a point that resonated deeply with the committee members.

Human trafficking is often presented as something that happens to other people, vulnerable people, people who made bad choices or didn’t protect themselves adequately, she said.

But Ashley and I were educated professionals with good jobs, strong family connections, and awareness of online safety.

We still became victims because the criminals targeting us were professionals, too.

They studied us.

They knew what we wanted to hear, and they created an elaborate scenario specifically designed to exploit our particular vulnerabilities.

This isn’t about victim blaming or suggesting that people need to live in constant fear.

It’s about recognizing that these are sophisticated criminal operations that require equally sophisticated prevention and response systems.

The legislation that eventually passed included provisions for mandatory identity verification on dating platforms, increased penalties for human trafficking involving digital recruitment, and funding for victim services and law enforcement training.

It was a small step in addressing a massive problem.

But Rebecca and Ashley felt that if their terrible experience could help protect even one other person from a similar fate, the advocacy work was worthwhile.

Marcus Valdez, serving his life sentence at a maximum security federal prison, never expressed remorse for his crimes.

In a prison interview with a journalist researching trafficking networks, he was asked how he could justify what he had done to innocent people.

His response was chilling in its lack of empathy.

It was business, he said.

Supply and demand.

There’s a market for what I was providing and I was good at delivering the product.

If I hadn’t done it, someone else would have.

The journalist pressed him about whether he ever thought about the lives he had destroyed.

Valdez shrugged.

I tried not to think about them as people.

That makes it harder to do what needs to be done.

They were assets.

Inventory.

You don’t feel bad about inventory.

This statement, when published, reinforced the reality that human traffickers often rely on dehumanization to rationalize their crimes.

By viewing victims as objects rather than people, they can commit horrific acts without experiencing the empathy that would normally prevent such behavior.

Rebecca read the interview and felt a complex mixture of emotions.

Part of her was grateful that Valdez was locked away where he could never hurt anyone else.

Part of her was disturbed by his complete lack of remorse.

The confirmation that to him she had never been a person worth caring about.

But primarily she felt determined to ensure that his dehumanizing philosophy was countered by a society that valued human dignity and took serious action to protect vulnerable people from predators.

The story of two Texas nurses who were invited to a gala via Hinge and nearly executed the moment they checked in became more than just another crime story.

It became a case study in how modern technology can be weaponized by criminals, how sophisticated trafficking operations target successful professionals, and how a combination of luck, technology, and quick police response can sometimes save lives that would otherwise be lost.

It became a reminder that in an interconnected world where we can connect with strangers instantly through apps and websites, we must balance the benefits of that connection with realistic awareness of the risks.

Rebecca and Ashley both emphasized in their advocacy work that they didn’t want people to stop using dating apps or to live in fear of every new connection, but they wanted people to be educated about warning signs, to trust their instincts when something felt wrong and to take reasonable precautions that could make the difference between a wonderful new relationship and a deadly trap.

They wanted people to understand that verification matters, that it’s okay to ask questions and expect answers, and that anyone who tries to rush you into a situation you’re not comfortable with is showing a red flag that shouldn’t be ignored.

The gala that never existed, the luxury hotel suite that was a trap, the charitable entrepreneur who was actually a human trafficker.

All of these elements combined to create a nightmare that almost ended in murder.

But it also created two survivors who refused to let their experience define them as victims.

Instead, they chose to use their platform to educate, to advocate, and to fight against the systems that allow human trafficking to flourish.

It is a case that has haunted the public for more than 13 years and many feared that the Gilgo Beach murders may never be solved.

The officer located a body.

It seemed to be wrapped in burlap, which didn’t make any sense.

The crime scene gets expanded.

I’m called and chief, we found another set of remains.

They find another one and another one.

We were dealing with a serial killer.

Well, they’re available.

They’re vulnerable and very petite.

This killer has a type, right? Does he want the petite body because he wants to feel more empowered and more in control? I want the world to know like my sister mattered.

I want answers.

I just want answers.

An arrest more than a decade in the making in a serial killer case that’s baffled law enforcement and the public.

59-year-old Rex Herman plead not guilty.

I dropped my phone.

I couldn’t believe it.

So, just who is Rex Herman? An architect who ran a company called RH Consultants and Associates.

Rex.

Hello.

How you doing? Good to see you.

When a job that should have been routine suddenly becomes not routine.

Yeah.

I get the phone call.

Rex Herman is a mystery man.

Rex is capable of presenting himself one way to one person, one way to another person.

My first memory of Rex was that he was very big, imposing, scary, angry.

He was bullied.

He was bigger than everyone else.

The kids would gang up on him.

And Rex was very smart, too.

He’s a smart person.

Very smart.

He liked to shock people.

He was interested in power games.

Rex loved hunting and he loved guns.

Going out, shooting, hunting.

That was his passion.

All petite, all bound in burlap bags.

The burlap on the bodies that’s points right at a hunter.

It was DNA collected from a pizza slice he tossed in a Manhattan trash can that came back as a match with hair found on the victims.

That’s where we obtained, you know, his full profile from from the pizza crust left in the box.

In terms of speaking to my client, the only thing I can tell you that he did say as he was in tears was, “I didn’t do this.

” Everyone’s just trying to put the pieces together.

I want to know what I missed.

I think we all want to know what we missed.

Not far from this quiet stretch of Gilgo Beach on Long Island, New York, investigators uncovered the hidden remains of four young women.

The mystery of who they were and how they got here might have stayed a secret if not for a woman named Shannon Gilbert.

In the early morning hours of May 1st, 2010, 23-year-old Shannon working as an escort called 911.

State police.

Yeah, there’s somebody after me.

The call came from a neighborhood not far from Gilgo Beach.

These people are flying to kill me.

Shannon starts running, knocking on doors.

Where are you, Shannon? She screams and then nothing.

Shannon was gone.

Hello.

Hello.

[Applause] K9 searched the area exhaustively for Shawn and Gilbert.

Dominic Veron was chief of detectives at the Suffach County Police Department.

Months passed without a sign of the missing woman.

And then in December of 2010, near Gilgo Beach, a police officer and his K-9 named Blue found human remains.

Everyone assumed it was Shannon Gilbert.

But it wasn’t Shannon.

Stunned searchers would go on to discover the remains of four other women.

The women were identified as Moren Brainer Barnes, Melissa Bartholomew, Megan Waterman, and Amber Costello.

Like Shannon, all were in their 20s.

All were online escorts.

All petite.

Three of the four were wrapped in burlap, the kind you can find in hunting stores.

They became known as the Gilgo 4.

It’s really, really hard cuz I miss her so much.

48 Hours has reported on this case since 2010.

Over the years, we’ve secured exclusive interviews with the family and friends of the Gilgo 4.

Missy K will never forget the wintry day when she got the devastating news.

The detectives came to my house and just said that Moren has been positively identified as one of the victims on the Ocean Parkway.

Her sister, Maren Brainer Barnes, a mother of two, was the first to disappear on July 9th, 2007.

She was very smart and very creative.

She liked being a mom.

She loved being a mom.

But life as a single mom living in Norwich, Connecticut was difficult.

Missy didn’t know it.

But Moren had turned to escort work and that July went to New York City for a weekend to make [Applause] money.

On her way home, she called Missy from Penn Station in Midtown Manhattan.

Attention, please.

I could hear the commotion from the train station.

From the time that she called me, it was poof.

She was gone.

She reported Moren missing.

Eventually, officers would tell Missy that after her sister’s disappearance, someone had used Morin’s cell phone to make a call from Long Island.

It wasn’t known then, but those two locations, Long Island and Midtown Manhattan, would become important clues in the hunt for a serial killer.

Nearly 2 years to the day that Meen vanished, 24year-old Melissa Bartholomew went missing in July of 2009.

Also from Midtown Manhattan.

Lyn Bartholomew is Melissa’s mother.

How often do you think about Melissa? Every single minute of the day.

It just didn’t happen to the girls.

I mean, it destroyed all of our families.

Melissa moved from Buffalo to New York City to work as a hairdresser.

At some point, she also began working as an escort and then disappeared.

About a week after she went missing, Melissa’s then 15-year-old sister, Amanda, started getting calls from Melissa’s phone.

We agreed not to show Amanda’s face.

And she answers, you know, Melissa, where have you been? and this voice is saying, “Oh, this isn’t Melissa.

” Steven Cohen was the family’s lawyer at the time.

He was taunting Amanda and he said, “Do you know what I did to your sister? I killed Melissa.

” All I can say is he’s sick and he’s going to make a mistake and we’re going to catch him.

Those calls from Melissa’s own phone may very well have been that mistake.

When police traced them, the calls placed the person they believed to be Melissa’s killer in Midtown Manhattan.

The following year, Megan Waterman, the mother of a three-year-old girl, disappeared from a hotel on Long Island.

Part of you is like missing or it’s just like something’s always off.

We spoke with Megan’s daughter, Liliana, in 2020.

I would do anything to bring her back, but I can’t and it just like frustrates me so bad.

Megan’s family says the 22-year-old was a creative but troubled young woman who loved fashion and was devoted to her daughter.

What would you say to your mom if you could? I would just want to tell her that like I love her.

I just want her to know like she has a special place in my heart.

No one can ever replace her.

Like the other two women, Megan disappeared in the summer on June 6th, 2010.

She was working as an escort on Long Island.

No matter what her job was, she was a person and she needs justice.

This haunting video from a Holiday in Express is the last time she was seen alive moments before she went to meet a client.

Cell phone records later placed her phone in a Long Island neighborhood called Masipiqua Park.

Amber Costella was the last of the Gilgo fort to disappear.

She lived here just 7 and a half miles from Masipiqua Park.

She used to say she was 411, but she wasn’t.

She was like 4’9, you know? I mean, she was small.

Amber’s friend and former roommate, Dave Showler, spoke with us in 2011.

She was an amazing person.

She really was.

He says Amber was addicted to drugs and used sex work to support her habit.

But as amazing as she was, was as tormented as she was.

After Amber disappeared, police say Shaller told them about her clients.

He described one of them as looking like an ogre and having a first generation Chevrolet Avalanche.

On the night she went missing, Shaller says a client offered Amber $1,500 for the night, six times her hourly rate.

This guy was so relentless.

He called several times.

He was on the phone with her for quite a while.

each time.

He says the client got Amber, an experienced escort, to do something she never did, leave without her purse or cell phone and meet him in his car.

I walked out the front door with her.

She She gave me a hug.

She’s like, “I love you.

” And she left.

It was nearly midnight.

Shaller says that when Amber left this house, she walked down the street and he never saw her again.

Shaller told us that he didn’t see the client’s face that night, but suspects he had seen him before.

So, this is a guy you might have seen.

Yeah, this is somebody that I seen.

I might be the one of the only people who knows who he is.

It would be more than a decade before Shallor’s description would lead to a break in the case and a prime suspect.

The shocking developments in a murder case gone cold.

My coworker called me and she said, “Did you hear what happened to Rex?” And I’m like, “No.

” A husband, a father, an architect stood before a judge charged as a serial killer.

She says it’s Rex.

I said, “No way.

” This house was a main focus and they brought out a lot of evidence.

I just didn’t think it was real.

A Long Island community is still a crime scene tonight.

I even thought to myself, it’s crazy that there’s two Rex Hermans out there.

Mary Shell and Muriel Henriquez worked with Rex Huerman and couldn’t wrap their heads around the news.

We never thought he would be that kind of person.

It’s shocking.

In July of 2023, nearly 13 years after the Gilgo 4 were discovered, Suffach County Police Commissioner Rodney Harrison made the announcement.

Authorities believe Rex Huerman is the Long Island serial killer.

Rex Sherman is a demon that walks among us, a predator that ruined families.

The man he calls a demon is a 6’4 architect.

He’s charged with killing Melissa Bartholomew, Megan Waterman, Amber Costello, and is the prime suspect in the death of Moren Brainer Barnes.

What has my client told me? He told me he didn’t do this.

Huerman was living about 20 minutes from Gilgo Beach in Masipa Park, the very same town where Megan’s phone last connected with the cell tower.

And Huerman worked here at his architectural firm in Midtown Manhattan, just blocks from where Moren disappeared, the same area where several of the threatening calls to Melissa’s little sister were made.

The cause of death with regard to the three victims is homicidal violence.

A married man, Huerman, lived in this run-down house and has a daughter and stepson with his second wife, Assa.

Assa, who was born in Iceland, would take the children to see her family there in the summers.

It was during these trips and others, police believe, that Humeman killed the women.

You never got any kind of hint of another life.

No.

two to Muriel Henriquez worked at Huerman’s company RH Consultants and Associates and spoke exclusively to 48 hours.

She says she saw nothing alarming about the Rex Huerman she saw daily.

A little bit of a nerd in a way.

He liked to talk about himself, what he knew.

I mean, not a narcissist, but a little bit of a, you know, I know everything kind of guy.

Pompus.

Pompus.

She remembers him running to and from job sites, eating fast food on the run.

Pizza, that was his number one thing.

Police say they found nearly 300 guns in a basement vault.

When she heard that police had recovered almost 300 firearms from a vault in Huerman’s basement, she was surprised only by the number.

She knew him as an avid hunter.

Going out, shooting, hunting, that was his passion.

What was it about hunting he liked? I don’t know.

I guess he liked the idea of having a prize.

Stalking prey.

Stalking prey and winning.

He liked to win, you know.

And while she says it never occurred to her that Huerman could be dangerous, she does remember a time when his tracking skills unnerved her.

It was her 40th birthday and she had booked a cruise vacation.

Where are you going? I’m going to, you know, I’m going to be in the middle of the ocean.

You’re not going to find me in the middle of the ocean.

He said, “Oh, yes, I can.

” Muriel didn’t think much of the comment until the second day of her trip.

There was a white envelope under my door.

It was a note from him.

The note said, “I told you I could find you anywhere.

” He had photos from hunting trips.

Mary Shell worked with Huerman in the summer of 2010.

It was the same summer that both Amber Costello and Megan Waterman vanished.

He would talk about, you know, the meat in particular that bear meat could keep in the freezer for months.

Hearing authorities now say that some of the victims were wrapped in a burlap that hunters often use was chilling.

The burlap really got to me.

Since Huerman’s arrest, Mary has written about her experience with him.

She’s also talked to other former female employees who said they weren’t always treated with respect.

He would have one of them uh clean the toilet if he thought the cleaning person hadn’t done a good enough job.

A woman in the office.

Yes.

He more than once commented on women’s bodies.

If someone perhaps had gained some weight, you know, that kind of that kind of thing.

John Perezy grew up with Herman.

He says Herman was bullied as a child.

I remember meeting Rex when I was in first and second grade.

He was a loner, not many friends.

The children were super mean to him.

made fun of him and teased him.

But John says he never saw Humman fight back.

He was big enough that if he got upset and started swinging, he would hurt somebody, but he never did.

As Humean got older, John points out things didn’t get much better.

He was rejected by many girls.

We all go through that awkward stage growing up and it seemed like that awkward stage stayed with him longer than usual.

Still, he says many in the community find it hard to believe that Huerman is the notorious serial killer living a double life for more than a decade.

People were saying, “Oh my god, I can’t believe we have a serial killer in our town and we grew up with and we walked amongst the killer.

” Another classmate of humor men’s, actor Billy Baldwin, took to social media when the news broke, tweeting, “It was mindboggling.

” Rex, hello.

How you doing? The awkward Long Island teenager grew up to be a confident and seemingly successful architect.

Antoine Amira met and interviewed him in 2022.

Born and raised on Long Island.

Okay.

Been working in Manhattan since 1987.

There’s nothing in my interview that made me think that this person in front of me uh is a dangerous person.

Anwine is a hotel food and beverage manager in New York who loves real estate.

He has a YouTube interview show where he handpicks guests whom he thinks are interesting and accomplished.

I’m an architect.

I’m an architectural consultant.

I’m a troubleshooter.

Antoine says Huerman was well known for his skill at helping companies and individuals get building permits.

When a job that should have been routine suddenly becomes not routine, Yeah.

I get the phone call.

Gotcha.

Correct.

What really stood out for me was he was very very very smart and known says Antoine for his ability to find loopholes in the rules.

He was pleased when he was doing it that he could that he that he could outwit the the system.

That’s it folks.

That was Rex.

But Antoine says he remembers it was hard to get Huerman to crack a smile.

It’s selfie time.

Selfie time.

Not even during the signature sunglasses selfies he takes with every guest.

Two.

Three.

Can you smile? That is If police are right, Rex Yur was able to hide a life as a serial killer.

And if he did, his habit of eating pizza on the go would turn out to be his undoing.

[Applause] For more than a decade after the discovery of the Gilgo 4, Rex Humeman’s name never appeared on a suspect list until a new task force was formed with Suffach County Police Commissioner Rodney Harrison and Suffach County DA Ray Tyranny.

In February of 2022, we formed the task force and then a mere 6 weeks later, Rex Herman was identified for the first time.

A suspect in six weeks.

So, how did they do it? It turns out that buried in the original case files were a number of critical clues that the new task force was finally able to connect.

Remember Amber’s roommate, Dave Shaller? She’s like, “I love you.

” You know, she gave me a hug and she left.

He had told police about one of Amber’s clients and his vehicle, just a large built man and that he was driving this this first generation Chevy Avalanche.

A first generation Chevy Avalanche with a description of an ogre-like man and the make and model of his truck.

Police took a closer look at Amber’s phone records from 2010.

Shaller had told them that before Amber disappeared, there was one particular client calling incessantly.

He called several times.

He was on the phone with her for quite a while each time.

Police back then knew the client was using a burner phone.

That’s a prepaid phone that anyone can buy and use anonymously.

and they knew that Moren, Melissa, and Megan had all been in contact with burner numbers right before they disappeared.

In 2012, with the help of the FBI, they determined that most of those calls connected to cell towers inside a small area of Masipiqua Park.

They called it the box.

So, how large an area is that box? It’s, you know, a couple of blocks within within Masipua Park.

The new task force began the search for a large built man who also lived in that small area and owned a Chevy Avalanche at the time of the disappearances.

Was there a aha moment when all of a sudden his name came up? Once we were able to attach the avalanche inside of that massipa box which then attached to Rex Herman, that was a moment where we said, “Okay, there’s something here.

” The task force now had a prime suspect.

And when they looked at Humeman’s personal cell phone records, they found that his phone was in the same area as those burner phones when they were used to contact a victim in Masipiqua Park or in Midtown Manhattan.

It was always consistent.

Tyranny says this was also true for those awful calls Melissa’s family got from that man using her phone back in 2009.

He said, “Do you know what I did to your sister?” And he said, “Well, I killed Melissa.

” The task force says that it confirmed that Huerman does in fact use burner phones.

Investigators say he had two different burner numbers in 2022.

and they say they watched and put money on one of those accounts here.

And according to court papers, the team also documented three email accounts using fake names, including John Springfield, Thomas Hawk, and Hunter 1903.

And all linked to those burner numbers.

And prosecutors say that Huerman was using a burner phone to send these selfies to solicit and arrange for sexual activity.

One of those accounts linked to Huerman, prosecutors wrote, was used to conduct quote thousands of searches related to sex workers, sadistic torture related pornography, and child pornography.

There was a lot of uh torture, uh porn, and depictions of women uh being abused, uh being raped, and being killed.

Investigators also say that while they were busy watching Humen, Huerman was trying to watch them, conducting searches on the task force and the Gilgo victims.

not only pictures of the victims, pictures of their relatives, their their their sisters, their children.

Uh and he was trying to locate those individuals.

The circumstantial evidence was building, but investigators also had physical evidence from the Gilgo 4, including one male hair that was found in the burlap used to quote restrain and transport Megan Waterman’s body.

and they wanted to see if they could link it to Huerman.

Police tailed Huerman and when he threw out this pizza box in this trash can here in Midtown Manhattan, they pounced the pizza, which was, you know, obviously very significant.

Tierney says that Huerman’s DNA that was found on that pizza crust was consistent with a DNA profile from the hair found with Megan Waterman’s body.

And that DNA profile is only found in 0.

04% of the population.

That was a remarkable day.

It was, you know, the weekend and, you know, you read, you get the report and you read it and then you read it again and then you read it a third time and then you read it a fourth time.

Uh, and then you start making calls.

With the DNA, the search histories, and the burner phone evidence, the team felt it was time.

When we decided to take down the case, we, you know, it was a sudden decision.

We did see him contacting a number of sex workers using a burner phone, which obviously is concerning.

Playing clothes, officers arrested him around the corner from his office.

I don’t think he had any clue.

I don’t think he had any clue that we were going to him.

Police spent 12 days looking through Herman’s home, pulling those guns out of the basement and digging in the backyard.

They say it will take some time to comb through what they have now.

And they were tight lipped about what they found.

Has the search been fruitful? Great question.

And the answer is yes.

Can you elaborate on fruitful? You said yes, it’s fruitful.

There have been items that we have taken into our possession.

That makes it fruitful.

And one more big piece of evidence taken into possession.

A first generation Chevy Avalanche Herman once used and it was sitting on property he owns in South Carolina when they recovered it.

We were able to seize that Chevy Avalanche pursuant to a search warrant and we’re certainly going to analyze that.

But there were female hairs found on some of the victim’s bodies that don’t belong to the victims.

So who do they belong to? After Rex Herman’s arrest, his quiet neighborhood in Masipeka Park was overrun by investigators and media, focusing intense scrutiny on the ramshackle home and its remaining residents, his stepson Christopher Sheridan, daughter Victoria Herman, and his wife of more than 25 years, Assa.

Ellerup.

Their life going forward is always going to be the wife or the children of suspected serial killer.

That’s what it’s going to be from now on.

Attorney Bob Macedonio represents Assa Erup who has since filed for divorce from Hurman.

He says she was as stunned as anyone by the accusations.

She had no idea any of this was going on.

The allegations are shocking.

Nobody wants to think that they’ve been living with sleeping next to a serial killer for the past 25 years.

As it turns out, Assa may have inadvertently helped focus the investigation on her husband.

Investigators say they’ve identified strands of female hair that were found on two of the victims.

One hair on Waterman comes back to his wife or the DNA profiles are consistent and then the DNA profile from Costello is consistent with the wife.

Although prosecutors have evidence that Osa was out of town when those murders occurred, they will have to explain how those hairs got on the victims.

Suffach County DA Ray Tierney says it could be as simple as transfer.

You live at home with a spouse.

A little bit of your hair falls on your shoulder as well as as your spouse’s.

Then you go out and you interact with a third party and that hair gets on them.

Assa Erup has not been charged or named a suspect in any of the murders.

You don’t believe that Rex Humeman’s wife was involved in this in any way? There’s no evidence to indicate that? No.

Along with the public scrutiny of Assa, there’s also been support from people that perhaps know all too well what she’s going through.

Carrie Rosson, the daughter of serial killer Dennis Rder, who named himself BTK, tweeted, “Asa and her kids are also victims.

I can tell that they are going through hell.

” And from Melissa Moore, the daughter of Keith Jesperson, a serial killer known as the Happy Face Killer, for taunting authorities with letters signed with a happy face.

She reached out immediately to myself and we put her in contact with Assa.

At a press conference, Macedonia announced more set up a GoFundMe page for Assa, which raised over $50,000.

Money he says will largely go to medical bills.

Assa is battling breast and skin cancer.

And because Rex Huerman was a sole provider for the family, Macedonio says she will soon lose her health insurance.

Assa would like me to express her thanks for the support she’s received.

Um, she’s going through a very difficult time.

Assa’s children have also paid a heavy price.

Her daughter Victoria, who worked for her father at the architectural consulting firm, and her son Christopher are both now unemployed.

Assa struggles to support them, says Macedonio, while she’s also trying to figure out how to start over.

How is she getting through every day? Honestly, yeah.

Minute by minute, she has no one else to turn to.

At this time, family and friends have been hesitant to have her come over because they don’t want the media attention.

She gets followed wherever she goes.

For the moment, she and her children continue to live in the house in Masipiqua Park, which the family says was excessively damaged during the police search seen in these photos provided by Osa’s attorney.

It’s a daily reminder of the unimaginable crimes her estranged husband is charged with and the investigation that continues into what else he may have done.

Rex Huerman awaiting trial is locked inside a Suffach County jail in a 60s square foot cell.

He denies killing Melissa Bartholomew, Megan Waterman, and Amber Costello.

Their voices now silent as the sand where they have been ruthlessly discarded.

How sure are you as you’re sitting here now that Rexerman is the Long Island serial killer? So, we’re just at the beginning stages of this case, but we would not have brought this indictment if we weren’t confident in our case.

He took away somebody’s mother, somebody’s daughter, somebody’s sister, and not just one person, multiple individuals.

Huerman is currently the prime suspect for the murder of Moren Brainer Barnes.

And for investigators, an obvious question still hangs heavy.

If Huerman is a killer, are there other victims? I mean, isn’t there a real concern that there may be other victims out there? Always.

Who’s to say that there’s not more bodies out there that we need to investigate? In 2011, police did find other bodies along Ocean Parkway.

After finding the Gilgo 4, there is victim number five, Jessica Taylor, an escort who went missing in 2003.

Another set of remains police called Jane do number six is now identified as Valerie Mack, also working as an escort.

Number seven, to investigators surprise, they found a toddler girl.

Number eight, an Asian male dressed in women’s clothing.

Number nine, a female skull belonging to Karen Vada, an escort who disappeared in 1996.

Number 10, female remains from a victim cops nicknamed Peaches because of a tattoo on her torso.

Although her remains were found six miles away, police say DNA confirms Peaches is the mother of that toddler.

None of those victims has been linked to Huermen.

Is it that you can’t connect him yet or you believe he probably isn’t the person who killed these other other individuals? I don’t know.

Investigations also spread to Las Vegas in South Carolina where Huerman owns property with detectives there taking a fresh look at cases of missing women.

And then there’s Nikki Brass.

I remembered him because one, he’s massive and how many massive like 6’5 architects work in Manhattan, live in Masipa.

You’re going from brown and blonde.

Now a hairdresser, Nikki claims she may be one that got away.

She told us she used to work as an escort.

And while we cannot substantiate her story, Nikki claims she can’t shake her memory of the night she says she was solicited for sex by Rex Herman and says she fled the restaurant where they met.

I had never gone anywhere and like felt fear.

My gut was telling me I needed to get away and I’ve never had that before.

Nikki says what she found most disturbing is that Huerman himself brought up those bodies bound in burlap by Gilgo Beach.

He wanted to like really get into it.

Like he asked me how I thought they could get rid of the bodies without being caught in that area.

And I said, “I’ve never been over there.

I’ve never even seen Gilgo Beach.

” And his response was, “Well, it’s really dark and desolate.

I’m John Ray and I’m the lawyer.

Nikki is now represented by John Ray, an attorney who is also representing Shannon Gilbert’s family.

In December of 2011, investigators finally found Shannon here in the marsh, not far from Gilgo Beach.

But they don’t believe she was murdered.

It’s an unfortunate incident, but right now we believe that she just ran into the marsh and unfortunately drowned.

A former investigator told us that he believes Shannon was high on drugs that night and says her death was an accident, something John Ray just can’t believe.

While he doesn’t think Shannon was a victim of humor, he does believe she was murdered and points to that 911 call.

It absolutely makes no sense that she’s found where she is except that someone else put her there or killed her there.

While questions remain about Shannon’s last hours, there’s no question she’s the reason so many families may finally be getting answers they have long waited for.

We spoke to her sister Sheree in 2011.

If my sister, you know, didn’t make that 911 call, I don’t think that these other women would have been recovered either.

Now, investigators hope that with an arrest, they can give the victim’s families who stood with them a sense of justice and of peace.

I’ve gotten to know the families and I’m inspired by them and I’m impressed by their patience.

A local legend has it that this place, Gilgo Beach, was named for a skilled fisherman called Gil.

These silver gray waters, once his secret hunting ground.

Today, this beach area is better known for a relentless hunter of human prey, a serial killer whose chilling presence can still be felt in the ocean air.

a 35year-old case.

His father was indicted for killing his mother.

Whoever did this hated this woman.

Their entire case is circumstantial.

But can he find the truth? I want to know what happened.

48 hours is all new.

CBS next in streaming on Paramount Plus.

I think Forest wanted to become a legend and I actually think he succeeded.

He was described as a modern-day Indiana Jones.

Forest came up with the idea to hide a bronze chest filled with gold somewhere in the Rocky Mountains.

I bought this beautiful little treasure chest and I started filling it up with wonderful things.

There’s 265 gold coins, hundreds and hundreds of gold nuggets.

He wrote a 24line poem guiding people to the location of the treasure.

Yeah, that’s exactly it.

He created effectively a treasure map in the form of that poem.

I’m going to read the poem.

So, here it goes.

As I have gone alone in there and with my treasures bold, I can keep my secret wear and hint of riches new and old.

There’ll be no paddle up your creek, just heavy loads and water high.

So hear me all and listen good.

Your effort will be worth the cold.

If you’ve been brave and in the wood, I give you title to the gold.

And I read that poem and oh god, it was like a hook.

No place for the meek.

The bug got in me and I couldn’t let it go.

I tried to climb up into that cave there.

I couldn’t sleep.

I thought it was the coolest thing I’d ever heard.

How much was that treasure worth? I I think that 1 million is a pretty good mark to use.

I made at least 85 trips.

I didn’t find the treasure yet.

We had so much fun.

It was crazy.

Since there’s a mountain lion in the area, we don’t want to take any chances.

So, we’re bringing our gun.

I have spent over 2,000 hours.

This is where I ran into my rattlesnake.

Searching for forest fence treasure.

Well, I made it hard deliberately.

If it was easy, anyone could do it.

For at least five people, the search for Fen’s treasure was the last thing they ever did.

Yes.

Unfortunately, you know, this treasure hunt did claim at least five lives.

Randy Bill was the first.

Paris Wallace also died in the Rio Grand River.

Eric Ashby died in the Arkansas River.

There was a gentleman who was hiking in Yellowstone and ended up falling off of a cliff.

Two men who went out with snowmobiles.

I’ve got him in sight still.

One of them froze to death and the other one was hospitalized.

Of course, Finn was a bad person.

He could have stopped this madness before it became what it became.

It wasn’t worth it.

How does Forest Fen respond to that? By to some degree digging in his heels.

He didn’t like the idea that anyone would tell him to bring his hunt to an end because of a few deaths.

And he said that if somebody was murdered because of the hunt, that would probably be too much.

High at top a ridge near Dinosaur National Monument, 53-year-old Mike Sexon froze to death.

This is the last known photo of him taken in March 2020 as he hiked in that remote area.

Days later, Mike’s body was airlifted off the mountaintop.

Okay, he’s coming up.

All right, he’s about halfway.

Mike became the fifth person to die while searching for Forest Fen’s hidden treasure.

Mike was full of life.

Mike was an adventurer and always smiling, always laughing, a big deep chuckle.

Friend Liz Keyi struggles to reconcile Mike’s love of adventure with his terrible loss.

I’m glad that he took this adventure.

I am very sad that he’s gone.

I miss Mike every day.

I miss his hugs when I’m stressed.

I miss his support.

I miss his voice, his laughter.

Beth Van Oz today is forced to cope without her longtime boyfriend.

Mike had been her rock after she suffered a brain injury.

He was more than just my partner.

He was in some ways my caretaker.

After Mike’s death, Liz felt compelled to send Forest Fen an anguished email.

How many people have to die before your game is done? I had received an email back and and he just gave his condolences to Beth.

First, Fen was a very complicated person.

Dan Barbaresi explores Fen’s complexities in his new book, Chasing the Thrill, Obsession, Death, and Glory in America’s Most Extraordinary Treasure Hunt.

He believed in stories that were bigger than just your run-of-the-mill standard tale.

And he dreamed big.

He believed in big things.

And Fen had lived a big life, beginning with his days in the Air Force when he was shot down twice in Vietnam and later as the owner of a well-known southwestern art gallery.

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