Victim: Megan Waterman, 22, missing June 2010, found Gilgo Beach Dec 2010 *Rex Heuermann charged*

Archived article:
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Megan Waterman, 22, was caught on surveillance video, walking away from a Hauppauge hotel one last time before she was never heard from again in the early morning hours of June 6. Waterman has been missing for five months now, but you probably haven’t heard of her, either. See, Megan also advertised as an escort on Craigslist, and in the 138 days she has been missing, her case has rarely made the news. In fact, like most missing persons cases involving prostitutes, it has hardly gotten any attention at all.

“I think the media attention dying down is just a normal activity that occurs when somebody first goes missing,” says Cynthia Caron, president and founder of LostNMissing, a national nonprofit organization that assists families and law enforcement in missing persons cases. “The media is usually pretty involved the first week or so, but unless there are some major changes to a case then they really don’t continue to report it.”

But even given the natural decline of public interest, many who hear about cases like those of Waterman and Papain dismissively shake their heads, time and time again, believing that these women, by the nature of their lifestyles, somehow “asked for it” or “had it coming.”

Megan Waterman left from Portland on a six-hour bus trip to Long Island on June 5, the week after Memorial Day Weekend, but the only signs of her now are the “missing” posters in storefront windows in the Hauppauge Shopping Center just three miles away from the Holiday Inn Express, where she was last seen leaving alone at 1:30 a.m.

Click Here For More Pictures of Megan Waterman

Summer has come and gone. Now red and orange leaves are blowing in the wind and there are only a handful of posters left, informing passersby that Waterman is 5-feet-5-inches tall, weighs about 145 pounds, has a birthmark inside her left forearm and a mole on the right side of her face; that she has naturally brown hair, but it’s bleached blonde; a tattoo on her upper left arm that says “Liette,” a Capricorn horoscope sign on her lower left arm and a tribal design with a heart in the center of her lower back.

The posters were put there by Waterman’s family, now caring for Waterman’s 3-year-old daughter, Liliana, and assuring her they are doing everything possible to bring her mommy home.

“In the beginning she thought Megan was lost,” says Lorraine Ela, Waterman’s mother. “But as the time goes by she’s finally realizing that Megan is missing and nobody can find her.”
 
Archived article:
…These were all cold cases. Then Megan Waterman disappeared.
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The now faded dot and initials marking where Megan Waterman's body was found off Ocean Parkway in December 2010.

Before her initials were spray painted in hot pink on the side of Ocean Parkway, and before she made international headlines as the victim of a serial killer, Waterman was just another name on the local police blotter. On a Thursday night in October 2009, she was arrested for soliciting an undercover police officer she arranged to meet through Craigslist at an Extended Stay America in Bethpage. She returned home to Maine shortly after, only to come back to Long Island eight months later, when she would solicit an unknown killer instead, who would become the focus of Suffolk County’s homicide squad for the next two years.

But Megan wasn’t a murder victim then. She was a missing person. She had fallen in with the wrong crowd, more specifically the wrong guy, who convinced her it would be a lot easier to support her 3-year-old daughter if she sold her body rather than work two jobs. At the time, a common theory was that Megan was a victim of sex trafficking, and that her pimp boyfriend was somehow involved. At least that was the best-case scenario.

The worst was that Megan was abducted while walking alone, possibly to pick up something at the gas station down the block from the Hauppauge Holiday Inn Express where she was staying in the early hours of June 6, 2010.

The area around the hotel, itself no stranger to illegal activity, is largely industrial or undeveloped land, a dumping ground for everything from chunks of broken concrete to filthy couch cushions. It was here, on surveillance video, Megan was last seen alive walking away from the hotel alone to meet the killer she had connected with on Craigslist, police later determined. Whatever happened after that was out of sight of parking lot cameras. Either Megan was alive or she had to be here, somewhere. At this point, the National Organization of Women and LostNMissing, Inc., a nonprofit organization offering support to the families of the missing, were the only ones besides her family who were making noise about Megan’s disappearance.
 

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