Gilgo Beach suspect Rex Heuermann stalked ex-cop after train altercation, rider says

Long Island serial killer suspect allegedly waited for ex-cop at Manhattan train station

The hulking serial murder suspect blamed for at least three bodies found in the marsh behind Long Island's Gilgo Beach allegedly lost it on a former police officer on the train just days before his arrest, then waited for him after their ride for a second confrontation, according to a new podcast.

The former officer, who asked not to be named, said his encounter with Rex Heuermann, a 59-year-old suspected serial killer, was "like a road rage without the car" on "The Ops Desk" podcast Monday.

Heuermann thought he owned the train, and anybody who disagreed was going to hear it from him – loudly – according to the former officer.

"It was my impression he felt it was almost his kind of right to be able to confront people and voice his opinion on whatever was going on around him — unsolicited," he said.

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Rex Heuermann was charged with murder on Friday. (Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office via AP)

The former officer said Heuermann began jawing at him on the train for some reason about two weeks ago, and he stood his ground, leading to a minor verbal altercation that he thought ended there. 

However, he said, after their train from Massapequa Park arrived at Penn Station in Manhattan, he found the 6-foot-4-inch suspected serial killer waiting for him at the top of the escalator – where he allegedly renewed the verbal assault. He did not go into specifics about what Heuermann said but claimed it was "off-color." 

"I kind of thought he was a bully and seemed to be the kind of person who felt he could get away with doing things because he was big, and people weren’t going to say anything," he said.

WATCH: Police in New York search suspected Gilgo Beach killer Rex Heuermann's home in Massapequa Park

Additionally, he was getting away with things, allegedly, Paul Mauro, a retired NYPD inspector, a lawyer and the host of "The Ops Desk" podcast, noted.

The former officer said the encounter has nothing to do with the Gilgo case but said, "It would give you an insight into a mindset."

Mauro asked his interviewee how he knew he was dealing with Heuermann.

A road sign directing drivers to Gilgo Beach off Ocean Parkway, about 45 miles east of New York City. (Michael Ruiz/Fox News)

It was Heuermann's imposing size, paired with the release of his mugshot and audio on an interview from last year that featured the architect that went viral on YouTube Friday. It has since been taken down.

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"He’s actually missing his left front tooth, so that was pretty obvious," he said. "His voice is very distinctive, and when I saw the picture in the media today I immediately recognized him as the person I had this confrontation with two weeks ago."

A sign welcoming visitors to Gilgo Beach outside the tunnel that connects the parking lot to the beach underneath Ocean Parkway. (Michael Ruiz/Fox News)

The former officer said he decided to walk away because "discretion [is] the better part of valor."

"It was a bit odd," he concluded. "But listen, this is New York."

New York State Police remove evidence from the home of Rex Heuermann in Massapequa Park, New York, Saturday, July 15, 2023. Heuermann is charged with six counts of murder related to the bodies found on Gilgo Beach in 2010-2011. (Dario Alequin for Fox News Digital)

Suffolk County Police Commissioner Rodney Harrison described Heuermann as both a "demon" and an "ogre" who is accused of killing three young women, tying them up and dumping their bodies along a desolate highway 45 miles east of Manhattan.

He told Fox News Monday that a search of the suspect’s Massapequa Park home uncovered "an arsenal" of more than 200 firearms.

Rex Heuermann, an architect who lived a 20-minute drive from Gilgo Beach in Massapequa Park, New York, appears in what investigators describe as "selfie" photographs taken from the fictitious Springfieldman9 AOL account, as part of a bail application by the Suffolk County District Attorney's office July 14, 2023. ( Suffolk County Court/Handout via REUTERS)

Police were also seen searching toolboxes on drone video taken from above his backyard, and they were also searching a storage facility in nearby Amityville Monday. 

Gilgo Beach murders victims Amber Costello, top left, Maureen Brainard-Barnes, top right, Melissa Barthelemy, bottom left, and Megan Waterman. (Suffolk County Police Department)

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Police have been tracking him for months and finally nabbed him on Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue Thursday night, swarming him on the sidewalk around 8:39 p.m.

On Friday, Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney announced a half-dozen charges against Heuermann, first- and second-degree murder each for three of the Gilgo victims – Melissa Barthelemy, 24, Megan Waterman, 22, and Amber Costello, 27.

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He remains the prime suspect in the death of a fourth victim, Maureen Brainard-Barnes, 25, and investigators have recovered another seven bodies in the surrounding area.

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The murders remained unsolved more than a decade after the search for missing escort Shannan Gilbert, 24, first led police to the bodies of sex workers and other victims along Ocean Parkway, a largely unpopulated stretch of the waterfront east of New York City. 

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