Heuermann's Plea Was Strategy — The Wrongful Death Suit Tests What Comes Next
Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary
True Crime Today
3.3 • 907 Ratings
🗓️ 19 April 2026
⏱️ 37 minutes
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Summary
Every pre-trial motion denied. Whole genome sequencing ruled admissible. All charges consolidated into a single trial. Rex Heuermann's legal team had nothing left. So on day one thousand after his arrest, the man who spent decades planning how to avoid getting caught planned his exit from the justice system the same way.
During a confidential proffer session, Heuermann raised Karen Vergata — a woman he had never been charged with killing. Her death was folded into the plea. No separate prosecution. No public presentation of the evidence. The deal bars further charges related to all eight named victims and includes an FBI Behavioral Analysis Unit cooperation agreement that reportedly carries no consequences if Heuermann refuses to participate or lies. His defense attorney called it a calculated pivot. The families packed the courtroom and wept as Heuermann described how he met, strangled, and disposed of each victim. The Suffolk County DA's office has acknowledged it is reviewing hundreds of cold cases. Heuermann's attorney insists there are no additional victims. Sentencing is set for June.
But for Benjamin Torres — the son of victim Valerie Mack, who was six years old when his mother vanished — the guilty plea opened a new front. Torres has filed a wrongful death lawsuit naming not only Heuermann but his ex-wife Asa Ellerup and their daughter Victoria. The complaint alleges they knew about the murders, concealed what was happening in their home, and then profited by collecting over a million dollars from a Peacock documentary.
The defense calls the claims reckless. Victoria was approximately three when Mack was killed. Prosecutors have publicly stated the family was out of town during the killings. Neither woman has been charged. But hair evidence linked to both Ellerup and Victoria was recovered from victims' remains. Prosecutors attribute that to ordinary household transference. The plaintiff's attorney frames it as evidence of proximity to the crimes. Ellerup publicly called Heuermann her hero and said he wasn't capable of violence. Victoria later said she believes her father most likely committed the killings. The complaint alleges the family's public positioning and documentary earnings constitute unjust enrichment and an effort to mislead. Whether a wrongful death claim can survive expired statutes of limitation, and whether documentary money can be clawed back — those are the legal questions this case is built to test.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is the big breakdown. |
| 0:02.2 | A long look back at some of the biggest stories we're covering for you at the Hidden Killers podcast and true crime today. |
| 0:10.4 | This is Hidden Killers Live with Tony Bruske and Robin Dree. |
| 0:16.9 | Obviously the other part of the Rex Heerman story is Rex Heurman. |
| 0:20.8 | He spent nearly three years fighting every single charge that was being brought against him and then living more than 20 in incognito, if you will. |
| 0:31.8 | His defense team lost every motion, DNA, separate trials, the entire framework challenge. |
| 0:37.2 | Then in a 30-minute hearing, |
| 0:39.0 | the man who swore he didn't do it pled guilty to seven murders and admitted to an eighth |
| 0:44.3 | victim nobody knew was coming. His attorney called it a calculated pivot. But what did |
| 0:50.1 | Heerman actually gain by making it? And is he accepting responsibility or managing the narrative |
| 0:55.5 | one final time? Bob Mott, a defense attorney host of the podcast Defense Diaries, is with Robin |
| 1:01.9 | and myself as we break all this down. Let's talk about that. The calculated pivot. Every pretrial |
| 1:08.0 | motion was denied. The DNA challenge, the motion to separate the cases, |
| 1:11.7 | all of it. When a defense attorney loses every legal avenue that they have, what does the |
| 1:19.4 | calculus actually look like behind the closed doors? And how much of this decision do you think |
| 1:24.4 | was Herman saying, okay, it's time to come clean versus his attorney going, |
| 1:30.5 | we ain't got no roads to go down here, my friend. |
| 1:33.6 | I think it was a combination of both. |
| 1:35.3 | Yeah. |
| 1:35.8 | You know, ultimately whether or not he's going to plea is completely Huberman's decision. |
| 1:40.9 | Sure. |
| 1:41.6 | All his attorney could do is advise them. |
... |
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