Lawyer claims link between ex-NY police chief and unsolved Long Island murders
By Cristina Corbin
The lawyer for the family of a
prostitute whose body was found near a suspected serial killer's dumping ground
claimed Thursday that a disgraced former New York police chief regularly hired
women for sex in a home near the scene.
Attorney John Ray held a press
conference Thursday with a prostitute, identified only as "Leanne,"
who claims she was paid to have sex with former Suffolk County Police Chief
James Burke in 2011.
The remains of four prostitutes,
each covered in burlap and dumped in thick bramble on the south shore of Long
Island, N.Y., along the edge of Ocean Parkway in Gilgo Beach, were discovered
five years ago in a case that remains unsolved. Ray represents the family of
Shannan Gilbert, a New Jersey escort whose body was found near the other women
and whose death may also have been a homicide.
Burke, who reportedly blocked the
FBI from investigating key evidence in the murders, is currently serving time
in federal prison in a separate case. Burke was sentenced to 46 months for
beating up a man who stole sex toys and other items from his car and then later
orchestrating a cover-up.
Burke has not been named a
suspect or person of interest in the Long Island serial murders.
"The allegations against my
client don’t warrant a comment," Burke's attorney, John Meringolo, told
FoxNews.com Thursday.
On Thursday, "Leanne,"
told reporters she met Burke at a party in Oak Beach in June 2011. According to
the woman, Burke paid her $400 for "rough sex" at the home, a few
miles from where the murdered prostitutes were found. The woman claims Burke
hired her again for sex two months later.
According to an affidavit, the
woman claims she observed Burke "roughly pull a young woman by her hair to
the ground" at the party, which included cocaine. She said in read sworn
affidavit that Burke was introduced to her as a "a high police
official."
In August 2011, the woman said
she met Burke for sex a second time in a bathroom at an undisclosed location.
"He insisted upon oral sex, which was given," the affidavit states.
She described Burke as
"aggressive" to reporters and said he called her a "whore"
before throwing $300 or $400 in cash at her.
"I was a little
dehumanized," she said.
A law enforcement source with
knowledge of the Long Island serial killer investigation told FoxNews.com last
month that Burke was being eyed as a person of interest in the murders, though
the FBI declined to comment on the case. The source, who spoke on condition of
anonymity, said federal investigators were questioning Burke's former
girlfriends after learning he had a "violent past."
This is not the first time Burke
-- once Suffolk County's top cop -- has been linked to prostitution.
A 1995 internal affairs report by
the Suffolk County Police Department shows Burke -- then a sergeant -- had a
months-long relationship with a convicted prostitute and drug dealer named
Lowrita Rickenbacker, according to Newsday, which obtained a copy of the
report.
The report claimed Burke once
left Rickenbacker alone in his car with his gun belt and service weapon resting
on the backseat. The report also said Burke engaged in a sexual act with
Rickenbacker at least once inside his patrol car.
Despite the report, Burke
continued to rise through the ranks of the Suffolk County Police Department --
one of the highest paid police departments in the country. In 2000, Burke was
promoted to lieutenant. In 2002, he was named chief of detectives by Suffolk
County District Attorney Thomas Spota and, in 2012, he became the Suffolk
County police chief.
It was the search for Shannan
Gilbert that led to the discovery of four other women's remains -- the work of
a suspected serial killer.
Gilbert, 23, of Jersey City,
N.J., disappeared May 1, 2010, after visiting a client in the gated community
of Oak Beach on a barrier island off Long Island's south shore.
On December 10, 2010, a police
dog and his officer stumbled across the first set of remains. In the following
days, police found three more women in varying states of decomposition.
The women were identified as
Maureen Brainard-Barnes, Melissa Barthelemy, Megan Waterman, and Amber Lynn
Costello. They were all sex workers in their 20s found stuffed inside burlap
bags along Ocean Parkway, a 15-mile road that spans Jones Beach, roughly a mile
from where they would later find Gilbert's body, in December 2011.
After the discovery of Gilbert's
remains, the medical examiner ruled her cause of death
"undetermined," and police theorized she drowned while running
through a marsh in a drug-induced state -- calling her death unrelated to the
four other victims.
But that finding was called into
question in March 2015, when Dr. Michael Baden, former chief medical examiner
of New York City, and a Fox News contributor, examined Gilbert's skeletal
remains inside a Nassau County funeral home at the request of her family.
Baden observed the hyoid bone --
a small horseshoe-shaped bone in the neck -- had a "rough edge" on
one side, suggesting a fracture. A fracture to the hyoid bone is a hallmark
sign of a strangulation.
"The hyoid shows some
breakage," Baden said at the time. "If it is a fracture, that would
be strong evidence Ms. Gilbert was strangled to death by neck
compression."
Ex-police officer accused of sexually assaulting teen boy
HAMPTON, N.J. (AP) — Authorities
say a former police officer accused of exposing himself to at least five young
men during traffic stops is now facing allegations he sexually assaulted a
16-year-old boy in a restaurant bathroom.
NJ.com (http://bit.ly/2i0TV3Q)
reports Jason Miller faces charges of sexual assault, criminal sexual contact,
criminal restraint and two counts of child endangerment stemming from
Thursday's incident in Hampton.
Authorities say the 39-year-old
Hampton man allegedly followed the boy into the bathroom and touched him
inappropriately. He then allegedly tried to make the teen perform a sex act.
Miller has denied the
allegations.
He resigned from the Newton
police force last year after pleading guilty to tampering with records in the
traffic stops matter. He was sentenced to two years of probation in that case.
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