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Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex Heuermann to be sentenced



The saga of the Gilgo Beach serial murders that haunted Long Island for more than three decades is set to come to a close Wednesday — when confessed killer Rex Heuermann is shipped off to prison for life.

Heuermann, a 62-year-old architect from Massapequa Park, is scheduled to be sentenced to three life terms after he pleaded guilty in April to the brutal slayings of eight Long Island sex workers between 1993 and 2010.

His sentencing will be the final chapter in one of the most notorious serial-killing cases in the New York metro area.

The Gilgo Beach serial killer delivers a menacing stare in his latest mug shot. Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office

“We’re close,” Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney told The Post on Tuesday. “I’m looking forward to wrapping it up so we can take the resources dedicated to this case and dedicate them to some of our other cases.

“The defendant is about to be held responsible for all that he’s done.”

For the families of the victims, the sentencing finally gives them closure.

“Justice finally found its way to you,” said Melissa Cann, the sister of Gilgo victim Maureen Brainard-Barnes, after Heuermann’s guilty plea.

These eight sex workers were killed by Heuermann between 1993 and 2010. Suffolk County Police Department

“Your voice was never silenced. Your story never forgotten, and your life will always mean more than the tragedy that took you,” she said of her tragic sibling.

In a newly released mug shot, the killer is seen with a chilling stare that stands in sharp contrast to the sinister smirk he flashed in court as he answered “strangulation” when asked how he killed his victims.

The grisly murders remained unsolved for decades. It wasn’t until 2022 when former NYPD Chief Rodney Harrison took over as Suffolk County police commissioner and reopened the case that cops were able to link Heuerman to the slayings.

How The Post covered Rex Heuermann’s guilty plea to eight murders in April. scalle

In April, the 6-foot-4 architect confessed to killing 25-year-old Brainard-Barnes, Amber Lynn Costello, 27; Megan Waterman, 22; and Melissa Barthelemy, 24, who were famously known as the “Gilgo Four” — as well as Valerie Mack, 24; Jessica Taylor, 20; and Sandra Costilla, 28, the first victim killed in 1993.

In a stunning development, he also admitted to killing Karen Vergata, 34, in 1996, a case that had not been previously linked to him.

Prosecutors have released sick details of the murders, including Heuermann’s meticulous four-day system for preparing and carrying out the sadistic killings, and how to best dispose of the bodies.

He also kept a Tinder account and buzzed prostitutes on burner phones more than 500 times while making “significant searches for pornography related to bindings, torture, rape, snuff videos, crying, bruised and impaled women and/or girls,” authorities said.

Police conduct thorough searches of Heuermann’s Massapequa Park home after his arrest. New York Post

Some of the women were dismembered and wrapped up in burlap and dumped along desolate stretches of Long Island — where the first of the bodies were discovered in December 2010.

Heuermann was arrested in July 2023 outside his office and charged with three of the cold-case killings, with DNA evidence later linking him to four more women — and later another in a surprise development.

He was nailed partly by DNA evidence left on a pizza box he tossed in the trash outside his Manhattan work place.


Stay up to date on the Gilgo Beach murders:


His lawyer, Michael Brown, said his client was not behind two other unsolved murders — Shannon Gilbert, a sex worker who disappeared in 2010, and an unidentified victim known as “Asian Doe.” 

Tierney said that means his work might not be over just yet.

“It’s never really over because there are still more bodies on Gilgo,” the prosecutors said. “There are more unsolved murders in Suffolk County in general. Quite a few actually. So that work will continue.”

Nearly a dozen bodies found along desolate stretches of Long Island haunted locals for more than 30 years. Dennis A. Clark for NY Post

Suffolk County officials said Heuermann has been on solitary confinement at the county lockup since his arrest, whittling away his time with books and the occasional solo outdoor time jail yard.

After sentencing, he will be transported to a state prison to serve it.

Sources revealed that the killer has also found a sympathetic pen pal while locked up — Keith Jesperson, the notorious “Happy Face Killer,” who is serving a life sentence at the Oregon Correctional Facility.

Jesperson, a truck driver who got the moniker for signing taunting letters to cops and media outlets with a smiley face, was arrested in 1995 and confessed to killing eight women between 1990 and 1995 in California, Washington, Oregon, Florida, Nebraska and Wyoming.

Jesperson said he advised Heuermann “not to go to trial” following the hulking architect’s 2023 bust, and urged him not to waste time going through a high-profile trial, The Daily Mail reported.



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US must halt the terror-driven gold rush looting Venezuela



A human-rights horror is unfolding right under America’s nose, with kids under age 10 laboring in mines, girls as young as 12 working in brothels and whole communities fleeing cartel violence.

Venezuela is at the evil heart of an illicit gold-mining rush that’s enriching US enemies like the Tren de Aragua cartel, the terror group Hezbollah and others.

It’s the new El Dorado, run by cartels, enslaving children and fueling terror.

Colombia and Peru are the world’s largest cocaine exporters, yet cartels in both countries are now making more money from illicit gold than from cocaine.

The toxic substances used to refine illegal gold — mercury, cyanide and arsenic — poison entire communities and fund cartel chaos at the US-Mexico border.

The notoriously brutal Jalisco Nueva Generación cartel makes millions of dollars supplying illicit mercury to South American gold and drug cartels.

With the price of gold reaching a record-breaking $5,400 per ounce in January, illegal gold mining is becoming more profitable. 

Estimates suggest that, at 2026 gold prices, criminals and terrorists in Venezuela may be making around $10 to $12 billion a year from illicit gold mining and trading.

Corrupt officials and lawless jungles have made Venezuela a hub of the illegal gold trade, with dirty gold from Colombia, Bolivia, Peru and Brazil, as well as from its own illicit mines, flowing through to international markets.

Cartel gold is reportedly even making its way into coins sold by the US Mint.

Former Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro propped up his regime by opening a wilderness area the size of Portugal to illegal gold mining, where he partnered with the cartels to control the trade in illegal gold, drugs and human trafficking.

That’s why President Donald Trump took Maduro down — yet his successor Delcy Rodriguez is equally guilty.

Maduro in 2020 used cartel gold to purchase goods from Iran; Rodriguez reportedly used it to bribe European officials that same year.

And today, throughout the Rodriguez government, Maduro’s cronies are still in power.

One Venezuelan colonel linked to illegal gold operations, who also ran Maduro’s torture centers, has even been promoted: He now runs the military counterintelligence special unit.

With his dirty profits, this same colonel has used US shell companies to buy businesses in Florida.

If Trump’s administration ignores the problems of cartel gold, it will undercut its primary goal in Caracas: pushing out the criminal organizations that send migrants, drugs and violence flooding toward the United States.

Venezuelan gold has also directly supported Iran’s illicit oil sales, undermining Trump’s efforts in the Middle East.

Hundreds of millions of dollars in Venezuelan gold a year heads to Turkey, enabling Russian and Iranian sanctions evasion and global money laundering.

As then-Sen. Marco Rubio said in 2019, “illegal gold mining’s effects” present a “direct threat to US national security and to the integrity of the US and international financial system.”

Despite those national security threats, the US Treasury Department created a sanctions exception for Venezuelan gold mining and gold purchases earlier this year.

But with more than 90% of Venezuela’s gold being mined illegally, it’s difficult to ensure that US companies are not funneling cash toward terrorists and criminals.

And Venezuela’s government is making it harder to eliminate dirty money: In April, the legislature passed a new law that make gold mining operations and contracts more opaque, helping criminals dodge scrutiny.

To protect American interests, the US should appoint an on-the-ground inspector general to conduct regular audits and monitor gold transactions for corruption, fraud and terror financing.

Without eyes on the money, Washington will hand more power to the very cartels that Trump spent $5 billion in Venezuela to defeat.

Removing Maduro was a chance to restore democracy — but entrenched terrorists must still be rooted out.

The mining sector should be part of Venezuela’s economic rebirth, but that will require a firm US approach that demands more transparency and imposes more oversight.  

The 16th-century search for El Dorado killed millions through violence, disease and exploitation.

Today’s gold rush is following the same path — funding terrorists, poisoning communities and lining the pockets of America’s enemies.

Washington has a chance to help break that cycle, but only if it uses its leverage in Caracas to insist on accountability and action against terror financing.

As Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said last month, “If we are serious about ‘no money for terror,’ then there must also be ‘no room for excuses.’”

Josh Birenbaum is deputy director of the Center on Economic and Financial Power at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, where Susan Soh is a research associate.



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Danny Rohl: Rangers boss leaves for Red Bull Salzburg


Danny Rohl has left Rangers after just eight months in charge to become RB Salzburg’s head coach – with the club saying news of his replacement “will follow in due course”.

Hearts head coach Derek McInnes is widely expected to be the German’s successor as Rangers ready themselves to appoint a third boss in 12 months.

Rohl, 37, replaced Russell Martin in October and steered Rangers into a three-way title fight, but a post-split collapse yielded a third-place finish behind Celtic and Hearts as the Ibrox club ended the campaign without silverware.

Chairman Andrew Cavenagh publicly backed Rohl at the end of the season, but the German now returns to the Red Bull stable, having begun his coaching career at Leipzig under Ralph Hasenhuttl.

“I’d like to thank Danny for his service and commitment to Rangers,” Cavenagh said.

“He and his staff put in a significant amount of hard work during his time in charge, which we are greatly appreciative of.

“We wish them the best of luck moving forward.”

Rohl, who had two years left on his deal, departs to take over a Salzburg side that came third in Austria last season – the club’s lowest finish in two decades – and will enter the Europa League at the third qualifying round, the same stage as Rangers.

Daniel Beichler was sacked as Salzburg boss last month after just 14 games.

Rohl joined Hasenhuttl at Southampton in 2018, then moved to Bayern Munich as assistant to Hansi Flick and helped the club win the Bundesliga. He was then appointed Sheffield Wednesday manager in 2023.



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The Giants with the leadership traits John Harbaugh wants



School is out for the summer.

There is no doubt over the past nine weeks that professor John Harbaugh has imparted a great many lessons to the 90 pupils in his class. There also is no doubt the students taught Harbaugh a thing or two about what to expect from them when everyone reassembles in late July.

Harbaugh was officially hired Jan. 20, and immediately started to gain as much intel as he could about the players he inherited on the roster. Three months later, the bulk of the indoctrination commenced.

The Giants opened their offseason program April 7 and closed it down June 10. In between, there were loads of individual drills and offensive, defensive and special-teams meetings, followed by team work on the field, 10 organized team activity practices and a mandatory three-day minicamp. Through it all, no shoulder pads were worn and no hitting was allowed. But the framework for how the Giants will operate this season was installed.



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Conor McGregor stands up Stephen A. Smith, ditches ESPN appearance



Maybe he didn’t hear the bell ring?

Troubled MMA champ Conor McGregor shockingly stood up broadcasting great Stephen A. Smith yesterday morning, Page Six has learned.

The two-time UFC champion — who has been doing the rounds to promote his comeback fight in July after five years outside of the ring — was booked on Smith’s ESPN morning show “First Take,” we’re told.
But the Irishman was a no-show at the network’s Hudson Square studios, according to sources familiar with the debacle.

Conro McGregor was expected at ESPN in downtown Manhattan on Tuesday morning. Sportsfile via Getty Images

When we contacted the fighter’s team, they offered no explanation for him ghosting Smith.

The tale has something of a familiar ring to it. In 2023, we reported that he ditched another Disney-owned show, ABC’s “Good Morning America” — though, in that case, the reason was more clear.

McGregor had been booked for at least a week to appear on the show but, we reported at the time, his camp made an early-hours call to producers to say he wasn’t going to make it.

The fighter was supposed to appear on Stephen A. Smith’s “First Take” show. ESPN

A few hours later, TMZ reported that an unnamed woman had accused McGregor of sexually assaulting her at Game 4 of that year’s NBA Finals. He denied the allegations and the charges were later dropped.

McGregor, who has had 22 wins and six losses in his career, is set to return to the UFC Octagon next month in Las Vegas. He’ll fight Max Holloway in “a rematch 13 years in the making,” Sports Illustrated wrote, after McGregor beat him in a 2013 bout.

But McGregor was a no-show for the appearance. Getty Images

McGregor also announced in this round of media appearances (the ones he made it to) that he will follow up the Holloway fight with another in July 2027, against an as-yet-unnamed opponent.

Reps for ESPN didn’t comment and a rep for McGregor didn’t get back to us.



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WW2 soldier's brain buried with body 85 years after his death



Donnie MacRae’s brain was removed by German researchers after his death while he was a prisoner of war during World War Two.



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Jude Bellingham: Why unique talent is key to England’s World Cup dreams


Bellingham’s interrupted England career, through shoulder and hamstring injuries as well being left out of the squad by Tuchel, is reflected in the statistic that he has only made nine starts in the 20 games they have played since the Euro 24 final.

Since arriving in the United States following a mixed season at Real Madrid, Bellingham has looked fit, fired up and – significantly – integrated in Tuchel’s squad as they aim to end a barren sequence for the men’s team stretching back to the 1966 World Cup.

Bellingham was seen in England’s dressing room presenting Liverpool’s 17-year-old Rio Ngumoah with his first cap following his debut against New Zealand in Tampa, a sign of seniority even though he is still only 23.

So are the cards falling into place for the player mentor Jordan Henderson, who took Bellingham under his wing when he came into the England squad in 2020, believes will give Tuchel’s team the vital “X Factor” at the World Cup?

Former England goalkeeper Paul Robinson, who will be BBC Radio Five Live’s analyst at their games, said: “From what we’ve seen out here and from what we’ve heard from the camp and his team-mates, stuff from behind the scenes, England are getting the Jude Bellingham of old back for the World Cup. He looks as fit and focused as he has for a long time.

“I’d pick him to start. 100%. Morgan Rogers doesn’t deserve to lose his place but Bellingham is a big-game player. I’m not saying Rogers isn’t, but Bellingham has experience at World Cups and Euros and playing in big tournaments for Real Madrid. He’s won the Champions League.”

Robinson added: “He just has that something others don’t have. If his attitude and application is right, you play him. If you get him onside, fit and functioning from day one, that will be a massive factor in this tournament for England.

“Tuchel has made big calls with him, and the relationship between Jude and the coach has been brought into question, but look at Bellingham’s experience. He has got 37 competitive caps. This counts for a lot in a major tournament.”

Bellingham currently has 48 caps and is poised to play in his third major tournament.

Tuchel’s approach with Bellingham may just have got this naturally-gifted player with a fierce competitive edge coming to the boil at the perfect time.

“Thomas Tuchel was brought in to do one job,” says Robinson. “I know he’s extended his contract, but his mission is to win the World Cup, regardless of how he does it. And he clearly doesn’t mind who he upsets along the way.

“Tuchel is not picking players because they have a certain name or reputation. Bellingham has had to earn his place.



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Norway’s crown princess undergoes successful lung transplant, palace says


Høiby, 29, was four when his mother married Crown Prince Haakon and is not himself a royal figure. Ahead of the verdict on Monday, his legal team repeatedly and unsuccessfully sought his release from prison so he could spend time with his mother because of her declining health.



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Israel launches fresh strikes on Lebanon despite Trump criticism



Speaking on Tuesday, Trump said Israel’s PM Benjamin Netanyahu needed “to be more responsible with respect to Lebanon”.



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Glenn Beck claims he got a White House tour so secret Trump made him sign an NDA



Blaze Media CEO Glenn Beck told “Pod Force One” that President Trump once made him sign a non-disclosure agreement after giving him a private tour of the Lincoln Bedroom and telling him “some stuff.”

Following an interview, Trump asked the conservative media tycoon whether he’d ever seen the Lincoln Bedroom and delayed a National Security Council meeting to give him one personally, according to Beck.

“We get up, and we walk, but he doesn’t take me the fast way,” Beck recounted to The Post’s Miranda Devine.

Glenn Beck praised President Trump’s energy during his interview on “Pod Force One.” NYPost

“He’s showing me all of these things about the White House.”

“We go up, he shows me some stuff in the Lincoln Bedroom, he tells me some stuff that I have to sign a non-disclosure on, and it’s all the stuff, I’m walking out of the Lincoln Bedroom,” he went on. “I look at him, I said, ‘Why?’ He said, ‘Nobody needs to know.’”

The Lincoln Bedroom is a guest suite at the White House that once served as Abraham Lincoln’s personal office.

“It wasn’t a secret. It was just him. It was something that I can’t go into,” Beck teased, noting that Trump didn’t want that information publicly because “It’s weak, it shows weakness.”

Beck argued that it actually “shows humanity.”

The Post contacted the White House for comment.


Full Episode


The veteran conservative pundit also opened up about a conversation he had with Trump after the July 13, 2024, Butler, Pa., assassination attempt during a meeting they had at Mar-a-Lago.

Beck had asked Trump about his mindset when he was down on the floor of the stage with multiple Secret Service agents piled on top of him after a bullet came within a quarter inch of killing him.

President Trump loves to show off the White House to guests. Ron Sachs – CNP for NY Post

Every week, Post columnist Miranda Devine sits down for exclusive and candid conversations with the most influential disruptors in Washington on ‘Pod Force One.’ Subscribe here!


“I said, ‘What was going through your mind?’ And he [Trump] said, ‘Get up, get up. You’re pathetic. This is not you; you want to be the President of the United States, you’re not afraid of anything, you’re not afraid of these people. Get up.’”

Trump later got up and defiantly pumped his fist in the air against the wishes of his security detail, which was keen on whisking him out of there as quickly as possible.

Beck, who was once skeptical of Trump in the 2016 campaign cycle, recounted how Trump called him up before launching his campaign and gave him condolences over the death of his father.

“I had been around so many smarmy people that are always angling for stuff, it really bothered me,” Beck recalled. “And I thought, this guy is about to announce he’s going to [run for] president, he hadn’t yet.”

“And I didn’t believe that he was a conservative at all. He’s a New Yorker. … I thought the guy is corrupt, the guy will say and do anything,” he added. “Honestly, I have apologized to him once already about misjudging him on that, and this haunts me probably at least once a month.”



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