N.Y. Report - An architect accused of a series of Long Island murders has a history of tax and legal issues, according to suspicions. Rex Heuermann, who the police believe killed at least three women, lived in the same house where he grew up - just a few miles from the bay where bodies were discovered over a decade ago, according to a 2018 report by CNN.
Between 2014 and 2022, Heuermann filed four lawsuits against drivers in New York courts, claiming that they had hit him with their cars and caused him "serious and permanent "injuries."" 3 of the cases were closed / dismissed, "the most recent one is still ongoing on."
In a filing for one of the cases in April 2018, Heuermann talked about his life and work, stating that he lived with his 22-year-old wife, daughter, and stepson in his childhood home in the suburbs of Massapequa Park, Long Island.
At one point in the records, when asked if he participated in sports, he said, "I actually only had the rifle I competed with."
Apparently Heuermann had charge instalment issues for more than 10 years. As per Nassau Province records, Heuermann had six expense liens documented by the IRS in Nassau District somewhere in the range of 2010 and 2021. The liens showed that Heuermann owed more than $425,000 in charges that he had not paid beginning around 2005.
The IRS later documented a duty lien discharge, showing that Heuermann had reimbursed or as of now not owed roughly $215,078 of the obligation. The latest records were documented in October 2022.
As per the New York State Division of Tax collection and Money, Heuermann and his significant other, presently owe more than $81,500 in private annual expenses to the state, with the duty bills amassing since November 2020.
Other court records shed light on Heuermann's work as an architect and occasional mundane jobs. In a letter to an attorney, he mentioned examining water damage in a Manhattan building last year and suggested an analysis for proposed waterproofing. In another case, email correspondences showed that he sent emails while coordinating a renovation project in the Bronx in 2017.
During a civil court hearing in 2018, Heuermann described his work as "general architecture" and said that he worked with clients to resolve issues with the State Department of Buildings. A colleague described the work as "not a pleasant process. In that regard, I wouldn't want to be Mr. Heuermann for a minute."
In September 2007, a Harlem tenement building that Heuermann was hired to renovate was deemed unsafe by firefighters, leading to the evacuation of two dozen families - as reported by the New York Daily News at the time. The Commissioner of the New York City Department of Buildings stated that the agency was investigating whether Heuermann falsely identified the building as vacant - according to the Daily News report.
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