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New murder charge for suspected Long Island serial killer

Rex Heuermann, 59, the suspected Long Island serial killer, was indicted on January 16 on a fourth murder charge for murders in Gilgo Beach, Long Island.

Rex Heuermann is now officially charged with the murder of Maureen Brainard Barnes, a 25-year-old mother of two who disappeared in 2007 and whose remains were found along an abandoned stretch of highway on Long Island, three years after her disappearance.

This is a new chapter in the sad story of the discovery of human remains near Gilgo Beach, in an investigation that has been going on for several years, when 4 victims, nicknamed the Gilgo Four, had been associated with the same killer profile, and the latter who had still not been arrested until Heuermann’s surprise arrest last July.

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Investigative work by the police, aided by the latest technological advances, helped solve this case, but it was Heuermann’s DNA found on a pizza that established his involvement, since the DNA matched hair found on the victims.

Other murder victims in the area over the years could also be linked to the suspect.

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Heuermann is still being held in jail without bail.

The judge has set a new hearing date of February 6 in the case as the Gilgo Beach community and the victims’ families await justice…

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Cottage Life

Have you ever had a medical emergency while you are alone at the lake?

In episode 5 of the Cottage Life Podcast Season 3, we’ll listen to an essay about dealing with a medical emergency when you are alone at the lake, which first appeared in our June 1998 issue. Listen here or visit cottagelife.com for access to all of the episodes.

It was 1:30 in the morning of August 13 and I was alone and awake at the cottage. A thunderstorm was tailing off, soft lighting glimmering on the lake, the wind fading, rain easing.

I was alone, awake, and ill. My lower abdomen was sore, a dull pain deep inside. I hoped it was something I had eaten and I poured a glass of Bromo Seltzer and tried to sleep. But an hour later I was fully awake again, damp with sweat, the pain sharper, reminding me of my burst appendix two decades ago.

I paced the cottage and looked at the phone. Who would I call, alone on an island in the dying storm? Who would come and get me? What should I do? 

I dressed. Slowly. Bending over was beyond me. And I couldn’t even think of tying my shoes. The night air was soft and fair when I stepped outside to go to the bathroom. With scant success. I wondered if my colon had tied itself in a knot. 

Create the ultimate cottage first aid kit 

I had to get off the island. I put on a poncho and headed over the little hill towards the boathouse, walking slowly, cradling my pain. I started my boat, backed carefully into the narrow dark channel—this was no time to hit a rock—and headed into the main channel of the lake, aiming for my car at the marina. 

The pain was bad; each small wave hurt. Alone in the dark in the boat, I now knew this was serious. I eased into the marina dock, tied the boat loosely and, doubled over, protecting my pain, walked to the car. Briefly I thought of asking for help, but there were no lights. Besides, cottagers solve their own problems.

I drove to the nearest hospital 50 km away in Peterborough, foot to the floor except for the periods of pain when I had to slow to a crawl. Passing the few cars of morning, blowing through the stops. I followed those blue-and-white hospital signs, parked at Emergency, and crept in. They put me on a gurney, asked me questions, took my blood pressure, touched my stomach, and drew off a litre of fluid. The relief was wonderful, the prognosis of a prostate operation less so. I thanked them effusively and returned to my car, relieved, although not completely at ease. Shaken but alive, driving into the soft light of morning.

I’ve had several life-threatening emergencies before but, like most cottagers, it never occurred to me one would strike while I was alone on an island in the dark. Nor, I supposed, does it occur to most of us what can happen far from telephones or friends down that long and torturous cottage road. Yet I should know better.

10 tips for avoiding an upset stomach during hibernation season

One June at my former cottage in Haliburton, alone in the gathering dusk, I had been relocating an interior wall. I dropped off a stepladder and drove my left foot onto a pair of four-inch nails protruding from the floor. I pulled free, painfully, and limped into the living room, trailing blood. I drew the boot off, got a basin of warm water with a little salt, and soaked my foot. It hurt. I phoned the Haliburton Hospital and they told me to come in. The doctor looked at my foot, the nurse put a bandage on it and gave me a tetanus shot, and they turned me loose.

That twilight drive back to the cottage was similar to the early morning drive back from Peterborough: I was elated that I had my pain relieved and in shock. The car wandered on the road.

And now as I headed back to my boat at the marina I thought of my ancient grandmother at the family cottage in Bala. She was often struck by heart pains and we children would be sent into town on foot to ask for the doctor or to get a supply of her pills. We had several alarms a summer, but illness never kept my grandmother from the Muskoka she loved. 

Nor will it keep me, nor, I am sure, most cottagers from the way of life we cherish. 

I parked at the marina, climbed into my boat in the rain-fresh sunlight, and drove into the tranquility of morning. And into the uncertainty of life.

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Cottage Life

The historically significant, small Southern Ontario island you’ve probably never heard of

If you are from Southern Ontario or have family who lived in the area, there’s a good chance that you know about Bob-Lo Island. However, for others, learning about this small island on the Detroit River might offer new and interesting insights into the region’s history. 

drone shot of Bob-Lo Island
Photo by Bob-Lo Island via Facebook

Historically, Bob-Lo Island (officially known as Bois Blanc Island) served as an important strategic and navigational point in the area where the Detroit River reaches Lake Erie. Set across from Fort Malden and the town of Amherstburg, Ont., it was known as a crossing point, meeting place, and important military site. Before Europeans arrived, it was home to the Three Fires Confederacy First Nations, comprised of the Ojibway, Odawa, and Potawatomie peoples, who inhabited the region. The island played a prominent role during the War of 1812 and was the site of activities during the Rebellion of 1838. It also acted as a crossing point on the Underground Railroad. 

Many current and former residents and visitors will also recall Bob-Lo Island for being home to an amusement park that operated from 1898 until its closure in 1993. Ask those who grew up in the area, and it seems many have stories about summer days spent at the Bob-Lo Island Amusement Park. Those who experienced the park may recall a favourite ride or seeing the iconic Bob-Lo Boats travelling the river carrying visitors from Detroit to the island. It’s clear that the park left a lasting impression, although not always a positive one; segregation and racism are a part of the history as well. After the Bob-Lo steamship company denied passage to Sarah Elizabeth Ray, a Black secretarial graduate (and future civil rights activist) planning to go to the island with her classmates, Ray filed a criminal complaint alongside the NAACP. The courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, ruled in her favour, which became a significant precedent for future civil rights cases.  

old photo of Boblo Island amusement park and ferry service
Photo by Bob-Lo Island via Facebook

Evidence of Bob-Lo’s past can still be found on the island today. The Bois Blanc Island Lighthouse and Blockhouse National Historic Site of Canada have been designated as federal heritage sites, and the blockhouse underwent restorations by the island’s private owner in 2010. The dance hall from the amusement park days also remains. 

old photo of the dancehall at Boblo island
Photo by Bob-Lo Island via Facebook

Today, Bob-Lo Island is privately owned and is being developed into a residential community. The island is accessible via a short ferry ride from Amherstburg, but it’s currently only open to residents and guests.  There’s a marina, wooded areas, beaches and the historical sites, which makes Bob-Lo Island an appealing destination. If the island reopens to the public, which seems to be the plan, it will become a fun day trip location once again.

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Musique

Jermaine Dupri No Longer at Island Records

According to Variety, the contract between the record label and the music producer has come to an abrupt halt.

Last September, the label released an album for Dupri’s girlfriend, Janet Jackson.  Her Discipline disc was a big disappointment, only selling 500 000 copies.  Dupri was partly blamed for the album’s failure.

In 2006, Dupri left Virgin Urban Music when Jackson announced that her contract with Virgin was ending.  Dupri has been the president of Island Records Urban Music division since 2007.

Categories
Cinéma

Leonardo DiCaprio Reunited With His Favourite Director

The famous director will be working with DiCaprio for the fourth time in this movie adaptation of the movel by Dennis Lehane, Shutter Island.

This production, which is by Paramount Pictures and Columbia Pictures will be filmed in Massachusetts, Connecticut or Nova Scotia at the beginning of next year.  Mike Medavoy, Arnold Messer, Brad Fischer and Scorsese will be the producers.

Laeta Kalogridis wrote the screenplay for the drama that takes place in 1954. DiCaprio will be playing Teddy Daniels, an American police officer that is investigating the disappearance of a murderer that escaped a psychiatric hospital where she was detained.

Scorsese and DiCaprio are working on new projects including the adaptation of The Wolf of Wall Street.