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SAT · 2026-04-11 · 01:19 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0411-63142
News/This idyllic US town was full of police families - and a ser…
NSR-2026-0411-63142News Report·EN·Human Interest

This idyllic US town was full of police families - and a serial killer in their midst

A serial killer was arrested in Manhattan in July 2023 after authorities obtained his DNA from a discarded piece of pizza outside his office. The suspect, Heuermann, is believed to have committed eight murders on Long Island, specifically at Gilgo Beach.

BBC News - WorldFiled 2026-04-11 · 01:19 GMTLean · CenterRead · 5 min
This idyllic US town was full of police families - and a serial killer in their midst
BBC News - WorldFIG 01
Reading time
5min
Word count
1 097words
Sources cited
5cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

A serial killer was arrested in Manhattan in July 2023 after authorities obtained his DNA from a discarded piece of pizza outside his office. The suspect, Heuermann, is believed to have committed eight murders on Long Island, specifically at Gilgo Beach. The police department and local community were shocked by the discovery, as many officers had families with ties to law enforcement. The area around Massapequa Park is particularly densely populated with police families, with some residents having multiple generations of law enforcement members. Heuermann's arrest was a significant development in the case, which had been ongoing for an extended period. Authorities have not yet disclosed any possible connections between Heuermann and the police department or local first responders.

Confidence 0.90Sources 5Claims 5Entities 12
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Human Interest
Legal & Judicial
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.80 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
5
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Suffolk County Police Chief Jimmy Burke was arrested in 2013 on charges involving sex toys, pornography, coercion of witnesses and a cover-up.

factualArticle
Confidence
1.00
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Massapequa is home to many firefighters, medics and officers from other agencies.

factualArticle
Confidence
1.00
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Serial killer admits to eight murders in Long Island case

factualArticle
Confidence
1.00
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Heuermann was arrested in July 2023 in Manhattan after authorities obtained his DNA from discarded pizza.

factualArticle
Confidence
1.00
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There are probably more cops that live in the Massapequa, Massapequa Park area than any other part of Long Island.

quoteBob Livoti, president of the Association of Retired Police Officers
Confidence
0.90
§ 04

Full report

5 min read · 1 097 words
Heuermann, a 62-year-old married father-of-two, was arrested in July 2023 in Manhattan after authorities obtained his DNA from a discarded piece of pizza outside his mid-town office.Serial killer admits to eight murders in Long Island caseHis daily commute from Massapequa-park" class="entity-link entity-location" data-entity-id="104263" data-entity-type="location">Massapequa Park to New York City took him right past the local police bar Johnny McGorey's, a popular pub directly next to a rail station where officers drank and discussed the hunt for the murderer as Heuermann made his way to and from his unkempt house just a few streets away.When bodies started being discovered, members of the homicide unit "were our Friday night regular guys", said McGorey's owner Joanne Fountain, describing them as "shook" after the gruesome finds."They would come in, and we would be like, 'What the hell is going on down at the beach, at Ocean Parkway?'"Then it was all day, every day, on the news."As her regulars socialised and theorised, however, they had no idea just how close the killer was. Neither did the multi-generational police families, even as some officers began to question whether the killer was one of their own."He's covering his tracks so well and, you know, is there a possibility it could be a cop?" Garland recalled people would speculate. "Listen, there's always a possibility it could be anybody."Getty ImagesInvestigators comb Heuermann's home for evidenceScandal hits the police departmentThere are "probably more cops that live in [the] Massapequa, Massapequa-park" class="entity-link entity-location" data-entity-id="104263" data-entity-type="location">Massapequa Park area than any other part of Long Island", said Bob Livoti, president of the Association of Retired Police Officers. He called the area "the hub" of Long Island's already police-heavy population.Fountain uses one of her own bar staff as an example of a familiar family pattern in Massapequa."His dad was a cop, his grandpa was a cop and he just got hired onto NYPD too," she said.Massapequa police families "eat, sleep and breathe it", she added.And that legacy extends across other first-responder jobs: Massapequa is home to many firefighters, medics and officers from other agencies. It was particularly hard-hit on 9/11, with the surrounding Nassau County losing around 350 people, including many first responders.But the case of Gilgo Beach plagued law enforcement in more ways than one."As an administrator and someone who was a cop, it was very frustrating that it took so long to discover... [who's] responsible for these murders," said John Azzata, Nassau County's retired head of homicide.The situation wasn't helped when Suffolk County Police Chief Jimmy Burke, then in charge of the Gilgo Beach investigation, was arrested in 2013 on sensational charges involving sex toys, pornography, coercion of witnesses and a cover-up.Burke entered the home of Christopher Loeb, a man arrested for probation violations, to retrieve a bag of sex toys and pornography that Loeb had stolen from Burke's department-issued SUV, according to the US Attorney's Office. He then beat Loeb while in police custody and tried to get others to cover it up.He pleaded guilty in 2016 to reduced charges and was sentenced to 46 months in prison.Getty ImagesIn 2010, remains were found on Gilgo Beach, triggering an investigation that would take over a decade to solveThe debacle also led to related charges and five-year prison sentences for former Suffolk County District Attorney Thomas J Spota and Christopher McPartland, the former chief of investigations for the District Attorney's Office and, ironically, chief of the government corruption bureau.These allegations of corruption – amongst the same Suffolk officials tasked with investigating the murders of sex workers – only added fuel to the conspiracy theories around law enforcement connections to the serial killer. So did the fact that Burke had ended co-operation with the FBI into the investigation, much to the ire of many Long Island officers."There was a lot of disgust," said ARPO president Livoti. "When I was reading about it, I said: 'I can't believe the stuff that this guy got away with.' Unbelievable. There were so many red flags and nobody did anything."But the scandal was perfect fodder for armchair sleuths and conspiracy theorists, and the Long Island serial killer mystery persisted until Heuermann's arrest on 13 July 2023.As police breathed sighs of relief that he was an architect, those living in Massapequa were "astonished", Livoti said. "Whoever thought this guy was living next door to anyone?""I think everybody was in shock," said Garland, who realised Heuermann's child had participated in one of the Little League programmes he helped organise. "For anybody that came in contact with this individual, it was a shock."'There's no closure for victims'At Massapequa's St Rose of Lima Roman Catholic Church, which has a high percentage of police and first responder parishioners, Rev Gerard Gentleman noted how the community moved quickly from shock to generosity and empathy."People reached out, saying: 'What are we doing for [Heuermann's] family? Can we do anything?'" the pastor said. "And we did. We had some offerings to them and... one of our staff members did actually go and sit with his wife for a little while."Obviously, there was also concern: 'My goodness, this was happening right here in our town. He was among us,'" Gentleman said, adding that he believed there was "great relief that this is going to be in the past" as well as "deep sadness"."People do look at Massapequa as a close-knit community, and this was very disruptive and shattering," he said.The parish has repeatedly seen first-hand the outpouring of support from the law enforcement community. For example, when Massapequa resident and NYPD detective Jonathan Diller was killed in the line of duty two years ago, thousands turned out for the funeral at St Rose of Lima and lined the streets."It's a community that responds to sadness, to tragedy, finds their strength in being with one another and that identity," he said. "It's a middle-class, working community – lots of cops and firemen – and that's the, I think, ethos of the community."And that ethos will likely be relied upon heavily since Heuermann's guilty pleas."It brings great closure to everybody that this individual is behind bars," Garland said. "It's the right guy, and it's nothing that anybody has to be concerned with moving forward."Azzata, for his part, feels "happy that this individual was arrested and hopefully will plead guilty and put this whole thing to rest".While police may feel vindicated, however, and while Massapequa – and wider Long Island – might feel safer, Azzata pointed out that even a guilty plea will only do so much for the loved ones of the murdered women."People say they get closure - there's no closure," he said. "You may get justice, but victims' families never get closure."
§ 05

Entities

12 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

9 terms
serial killer
1.00
police families
0.90
long island
0.80
homicide investigation
0.70
massapequa park
0.70
dna evidence
0.60
police officers
0.50
gilgo beach
0.50
first responders
0.40
§ 07

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