Gilgo Beach

911 Calls May Be Released in Potential Serial Killer Case on Long Island

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Distress calls to law enforcement connected to the investigation into a possible serial killer on Long Island may soon be released.

The new Suffolk County Police Commissioner Rodney Harrison said he will release 911 calls that are related to the Gilgo Beach homicides, as long as they don’t negatively affect the ongoing investigation, Newsday reported.

“I listened to the tapes yesterday,” Harrison said at a news conference Friday. “As long as it doesn’t impede the investigation, I will be sharing those audiotapes to the public. But I want to make sure it doesn’t hinder the investigation at all.”

The 2010 disappearance of Shannan Gilbert, 24-year-old sex worker in Jersey City, New Jersey triggered the hunt that exposed the larger mystery. Four other bodies were soon found in the area, and the number had climbed to 10 sets of human remains by spring 2011.

Police are looking for help identifying a woman whose torso washed up on a Mamaroneck beach in 2007, and legs washed up on the north shore of Long Island not long after. The only identifying feature: a tattoo of cherries on her chest — a clue that could potentially link her to the Gilgo Beach Killer. NBC New York’s Ida Siegal reports.

Investigators haven’t been able to determine whether a lone serial killer or several suspects were involved, but they have said over the years they don't believe one person is responsible for all the deaths.

Suffolk County police have long sought to prevent the release of the calls connected to Gilbert's disappearance, claiming it would impede the investigation.

John Ray, an attorney representing Gilbert’s estate, told Newsday he listened to the calls in 2020 but wasn't allowed to release them publicly. He said it is important for the public to hear Gilbert’s 23-minute call and other calls from neighbors.

Harrison, the New York City police department's chief of department, will be the fifth Suffolk police commissioner to oversee the investigation of the deaths.

Police revealed evidence in one of Suffolk County's most notorious criminal cases that they've been holding onto for nine years. Police believe initials were embossed on a black belt found at the crime scene, but offered no details on where it was found or how it may have been used. NBC New York’s Pei-Sze Cheng reports.
Copyright AP - Associated Press
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