Accused Gilgo Beach killer Rex Heuermann’s wife handed care package by cops from neighbors

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The beleaguered family of accused Gilgo Beach killer Rex Heuermann got an unexpected act of kindness from their Long Island neighbors Saturday.

A bag of groceries and a kind note were dropped off at the Massapequa Park home where his estranged wife has been holed up since authorities completed a days-long search for clues.

“Thank you very much for the bag of food you dropped off,” Asa Ellerup, who filed for divorce earlier this month, told a Post photographer when she was spotted after the delivery.

In one photo, her 33-year-old son Christopher Sheridan can be seen taking pasta shells out of a Target bag while standing next to a box wrapped in yellow evidence tape. 

The neighbors included a handwritten note in the delivery offering support for the wife and her son and daughter.


Asa Ellerup, estranged wife of accused Gilgo Beach killer Rex Heuermann, and her son, Christopher Sheridan, outside the family home.
Asa Ellerup and her son, Christopher Sheridan, received a grocery gift package from their neighbors.
Edmund J Coppa

“Dear Neighbors, We are thinking of you through this difficult time,” the note read. “If there’s anything we can do please let us know.” 

The note also included an illegible signature and an apparent phone number.


The handwritten note included in the food delivery.
The groceries were accompanied by a sweet handwritten note.
Edmund J Coppa

On Friday, the wife told photographers she was OK with them taking pictures and then made a confusing statement about depression.

“If you want to take pictures, go ahead. I’m OK with it now,” she told reporters. “If you want to stand up here and wait for something. I have a lot of work to do.”

“The sheer depression of what I saw was enough trauma,” Ellerup continued, without explaining what she meant.

An architect, Heuermann, 59, has been jailed in Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office Riverhead Correctional Facility for the past two weeks.

Heuermann was arrested on July 13 near his office in Manhattan and charged in the deaths of three women — Melissa Barthelemy, 24, Megan Waterman, 22, and Amber Lynn Costello, 27 — found dead along Gilgo Beach some 13 years ago.

Who is Gilgo Beach serial killer suspect Rex Heuermann?

A suspected serial killer has been arrested over the notorious Gilgo Beach murders in Long Island, The Post can confirm.

Rex Heuermann, 59, a married dad of two and architect at a New York City firm, has a home on 1st Avenue in Massapequa Park, sources told The Post.


Rex Heuermann
Rex Heuermann, a Long Island architect who was charged July 14, 2023, with murder in the deaths of three of the 11 victims in a long-unsolved string of killings known as the Gilgo Beach murders.
AP

His arrest is tied to the “Gilgo Four,” four women — Melissa Barthelemy, 24, Megan Waterman, 22, Amber Lynn Costello, 27, and Maureen Brainard-Barnes, 25 — found wrapped in burlap within days of each other in 2010. 

The body of Barthelemy was first found along Ocean Parkway on Dec. 11, 2010, sparking fears of a serial killer in the area.



By spring 2011, the number of bodies had climbed to 10, including eight women as well as an unidentified man and toddler.

Heuermann’s arrest comes after Suffolk County’s new police commissioner created a special Gilgo Beach Homicide Investigation Task Force in February 2022.

He is considered the prime suspect in the death of a fourth woman found on the same beach — 25-year-old Maureen Brainard-Barnes — and is being eyed in other cases where remains were found in the area, officials have said.

Copps arrested him after obtaining his DNA from a pizza crust he threw in the trash outside his Midtown architecture firm.


A police officer delivering food to the home of Gilgo Beach killer.
In the days after his arrest, police in Suffolk County scoured Heuermann’s home inside and out for evidence, walking away with boxes of items.
Edmund J Coppa

Suspected Gilgo Beach killer Rex Heuermann's son walking the family dog.
Police haven’t said if they found any useful evidence in the searches which also included cops ripping a deck out of the backyard and carting away bags containing unknown items.
Edmund J Coppa

In the days after his arrest, police in Suffolk County scoured his home inside and out for evidence, walking away with boxes of items.

Some of the items they removed from the home stood out, including a child-sized doll with blond hair and a red dress encased in a wooden and glass cabinet and a portrait of a woman with a battered face.

Police haven’t said if they found any useful evidence in the searches that also included cops ripping a deck out of the backyard and carting away bags containing unknown items.

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