Serial killer Dennis Rader calls Gilgo Beach suspect Rex Heuermann ‘a clone of me’

EXCLUSIVE: A sloppy digital footprint and DNA evidence led police to capture the BTK serial killer in 2005, decades after his first kill – and now that man says he sees “a clone of me” in last week’s arrest of Rex Heuermann in connection with the Gilgo Beach murders in New York.

Heuermann, a 59-year-old architect and father of two who commuted by train from suburban Massapequa Park, New York, to Manhattan for years, hid in plain sight in a ramshackle home around the corner from the former Nassau County Police Academy.

Dennis Rader, also known as the BTK serial killer, laid out a series of similarities between the two cold case investigations.

“I was arrested age 59. Married, two kids,” Rader wrote in a letter to Fox News Digital. “Husband, dad longtime a serial killer, stalker, used electronic devices, lives in a neighborhood undetected.”

REX HEUERMANN’S WIFE PICTURED FOR FIRST TIME AS SHE FILES FOR DIVORCE FROM GILGO BEACH SERIAL SLAYING SUSPECT

Heuermann pleaded not guilty last week to six murder charges in the deaths of Melissa Barthelemy, 24, Megan Waterman, 22, and Amber Costello, 27. Police also suspect him in the death of Maureen Brainard-Barnes, 25, whose remains they found near the other three.

BTK and Heuermann were taken down similarly, Rader argued – “DNA and electronics his downfall much like me.” The convicted killer claims he predicted the similarities years ago.

“I was correct,” he wrote.

Police arrested Rader in 2005 after years of cat-and-mouse games in which he taunted investigators and the media with messages, ultimately leading police to his doorstep with a trail of digital evidence. He had given himself the nickname “BTK” in reference to his preferred method of murder – “bind, torture, kill.”

WATCH: ‘GRIM TIDE’ ON FOX NATION

Investigators from a Gilgo Beach task force created in early 2022 zeroed in on Heuermann after they linked data from his phone, numerous burner phones and the victims’ phones to the suspect vehicle and cell towers near his home on Long Island and office in New York City.

Also like Rader, Heuermann’s arrest shocked his family.

The lives of his wife and children were turned upside-down the night of his arrest, their lawyer, Bob Macedonio, told Fox News Digital.

Rader’s wife filed for divorce almost immediately after his arrest in 2005. Heuermann’s wife, Asa Ellerup, filed for divorce Wednesday.

GILGO BEACH MURDERS: THE INVESTIGATION IN PHOTOS

“My first question when a long sought suspect in multiple murders is caught is, ‘does he have a family?’” said Kerri Rawson, Rader’s daughter and an advocate for victims. “My family’s life was upended 18 years ago, February 2005, when we got the noon day knock and simple notification from the FBI, ‘Your father is BTK.'”

Her father hid “in plain sight” for more than 30 years and committed 10 brutal murders, she said, including one around the corner from her childhood home.

Heuermann lived about a 25-minute drive from where the bodies were found in the brush north of Ocean Parkway – and there is evidence he could have gotten there just as quickly by boat as well.

Neighbors tell Fox News Digital that Heuermann was quiet and kept to himself. They mostly saw him during his morning commute, when he took the Long Island Rail Road to Manhattan, often in a three-piece suit and carrying a briefcase. Some said he creeped them out, and they avoided him.

Rader worked for years as a compliance officer, boasting to Fox News Digital that he had handed out more than 350 citations and other complaints before his arrest.

“From my own long experience and my own family’s, I ask [Heuermann’s wife and children] be treated with dignity and respect, granted privacy and time to begin to wrap their heads and hearts around what is unfolding,” Rawson told Fox News Digital.

Rader will spend the rest of his life behind bars. He admitted to 10 slayings after his arrest in 2005 – but police are now investigating him in connection with two cold cases.

One is the disappearance of Cynthia “Cyndi” Dawn Kinney, a 16-year-old who was last seen leaving her job at her aunt and uncle’s laundromat on June 23, 1976, in Osage, Oklahoma. The other is the abduction and murder of Shawna Garber, 53, on Halloween in 1990.

Rader has denied involvement in both cases.

Police in South Carolina, Nevada and New York are all looking into whether Heuermann may be connected to other unsolved cases.

He currently faces six murder charges for the deaths of three women and is the prime suspect in the killing of a fourth whose body police found in roughly the same spot.

He is due back in court Aug. 1 and faces up to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole if convicted.