In a stunning victory for the forces of law, order, and forensic accounting, one Rex Heuermann was this week condemned to rot in a concrete box for the rest of his natural life. The verdict? Premeditated murder of four women, plus the philosophical bonus of a special term for indecency with a corpse. The judge, a man with the gravitas of a granite slab, pronounced sentence with all the excitement of a man reading the terms and conditions for a funeral plan.
The FBI, ever eager to pat themselves on the back, issued a statement praising their own investigative prowess. They described the case as a ‘complex, multi-agency effort.’ Complex? Try ‘spectacularly bungled until a piece of pizza crust on a discarded napkin gave the whole game away.’ Ah, but let us not quibble. They got their man, and that is the important bit. Or as they say in Bureau-speak: ‘We have successfully de-atomised a serial unsub from the Long Island ecosystem.’
Rex, by all accounts a perfectly mediocre architect, was discovered to have been living a double life. By day, sketching shopping malls; by night, allegedly strangling sex workers and burying them on a beach. It sounds like the plot of a mid-tier Netflix documentary. And indeed it will be. Netflix already has a camera crew parked outside the courthouse. They have titled the series ‘The Man Who Drew Cubicles and Killed Prostitutes.’ I am not making that up. I wish I was.
The families of the victims, those brave, hollow-eyed souls, spoke with a dignity that no system of justice could ever confer. They thanked the police. They thanked the prosecutors. They thanked the judge. In a just world, they would have been given the entire national budget for a year. Instead, they get a plaque and a handshake from the District Attorney. The system, as they say, has spoken.
But let us raise a glass to the real heroes of this saga: the media. For years, we speculated, we theorised, we turned over every stone and every salacious rumour. We created the Long Island Serial Killer as a folk monster, a ghost in the machine. And now that he is caught, what do we do? We move on. There will be a new monster tomorrow. Or possibly a cabinet reshuffle. The news cycle spins on its indifferent axis.
As for Rex, he will spend his remaining days in a cell, probably drawing more grids, more rectangles, more straight lines. He will be remembered not as the architect of terror, but as the punchline of a very dark joke: What's the difference between an architect and a serial killer? One designs spaces for life, the other designs spaces for death. Both are very good at drawing straight lines.
The case is closed. The FBI is triumphant. The families are numbed. And I am off to the pub. Because if there is one thing this case has taught us, it is that the world is a mad, mad place, and the only reasonable response is a stiff drink and a deeply sarcastic observation.
Good luck, Long Island. Try not to get murdered.








