Former Suffolk County police chief walks free after indecent exposure case collapses

 May 3, 2026

James Burke, the disgraced former Suffolk County police chief who once ran the Gilgo Beach serial killer investigation and later went to federal prison for beating a handcuffed man, walked out of a Central Islip courtroom Wednesday with his latest criminal charges on track to vanish. A judge granted an adjournment in contemplation of dismissal, an ACOD, on the remaining indecent exposure and public lewdness counts against the 62-year-old, meaning the case will be erased entirely if Burke stays out of trouble until October 28.

The Suffolk County District Attorney's office requested the arrangement after conceding it could not prove the case at trial. The reason: all three park police officers involved in Burke's 2023 arrest had either resigned or been fired amid their own misconduct allegations, gutting the prosecution's witness pool.

For victims' families, Gilgo Beach watchers, and anyone who followed Burke's long trail of scandal, the outcome lands like a punchline nobody asked for. A man whose career implosion exposed deep rot inside Suffolk County law enforcement is, once again, beyond the reach of consequences.

The arrest that started it all, again

On the morning of August 22, 2023, Burke was accused of pulling down his pants in front of an undercover ranger at the Suffolk County Vietnam Veterans Memorial Park in Farmingville. He allegedly displayed his genitals and manipulated them in a sexual manner, then offered to perform a sex act on the male park ranger.

Authorities initially charged Burke with four counts: offering a sex act, criminal solicitation in the fifth degree, indecent exposure, and public lewdness. The first two charges were later dropped. The remaining two were the ones dismissed Wednesday under the ACOD.

Burke's attorney, James O'Rourke, flatly denied the solicitation claim. Speaking outside the courthouse, O'Rourke told the Daily Mail his client faces "no restrictions" and can travel and live normally going forward.

"There's a lot of things that Jimmy Burke is, he is not someone who goes to public places and solicit sex, not his thing."

O'Rourke went further, dismissing the underlying conduct as overblown. "Deviance? I am not too sure it is deviance. He likes women, there were no men. If that is deviance I guess we are all guilty for god's sake," he said. The attorney added that Burke's case conclusion followed Rex Heuermann's guilty plea in the Gilgo Beach murders and declared: "The bottom line is it is over."

Witnesses who couldn't be trusted

The DA's office laid the blame for the collapsed case squarely on the officers who made the arrest. A spokesperson explained the problem in blunt terms, as the New York Post reported:

"Following the arrest of James Burke, three Park Police officers involved in the arrest resigned, including the officer who was alleged to have personally seen the criminal behavior. Based upon disclosures required by New York State law of alleged misconduct, it was determined that the People could not meet the burden at trial. As such, a disposition of an ACOD, Adjournment in Contemplation of Dismissal, is appropriate."

Two of the park rangers were not just dismissed, they were fired and later charged with their own misconduct. The nature of those charges has not been publicly detailed. But the result is clear: the very officers tasked with enforcing the law at the park became liabilities so severe that prosecutors could not put them on a witness stand.

It is a pattern that should trouble anyone who cares about accountability in law enforcement. When the officers who arrest a suspect are themselves too compromised to testify, the system doesn't deliver justice, it delivers a shrug. Cases like the recent indictment of a New Jersey officer for recording a naked woman in a holding cell show just how corrosive individual misconduct can be to the broader credibility of policing.

A career defined by scandal

Burke's name has been synonymous with Suffolk County dysfunction for more than a decade. As police chief, he led the investigation into the Gilgo Beach serial killer case in 2012, the same investigation now widely regarded as a catastrophic failure of leadership. He pushed the FBI out of the case, a decision that critics say delayed justice for years.

The bodies had started turning up in December 2010, when Suffolk County police found four remains along Gilgo Beach. By December 2011, officers were searching marshes near Ocean Parkway for more. Burke was at the helm, and the case went cold.

It wasn't until Rex Heuermann's arrest, and his guilty plea earlier this month to seven murders, with an admission to an eighth killing between 1993 and 2010, that the Gilgo Beach case reached anything resembling closure. Heuermann's own attorney, Michael Brown, had revealed plans last year to present Burke as an alternate suspect at trial, a strategy that underscored how deeply Burke's conduct had muddied the investigative waters.

O'Rourke pushed back on any connection between his client and the killings, saying "the DA conducted an investigation and found that Burke had no connection to the case whatsoever" and calling the suggestion a "misconception." Whether or not Burke had any involvement in the murders, his stewardship of the investigation remains a stain on the department. The pattern of senior police leaders facing corruption probes is not unique to Long Island, but few cases have been as tangled as this one.

The Loeb beating and the cover-up

Burke's first criminal downfall came not from the Gilgo Beach case but from a jailhouse assault. Christopher Loeb broke into Burke's police car and stole pornography and sex toys from inside. Burke responded by beating Loeb, an act his own attorney now characterizes as a slap rather than a beating.

The federal government saw it differently. Burke was convicted and sentenced to 46 months behind bars. He served 40 months before his release in 2018.

The fallout didn't stop with Burke. Thomas Spota, the Suffolk County District Attorney and Burke's longtime mentor, along with Christopher McPartland, the county's top corruption watchdog, were both convicted in 2021 of obstructing a federal civil rights investigation tied to the Loeb case. Each was sentenced to five years in prison. The spectacle of a district attorney and a corruption watchdog going to prison for covering up a police chief's assault on a suspect should have been a watershed moment for Suffolk County. Instead, it became just another chapter in a saga that refuses to end.

The case echoes other recent examples of law enforcement leaders accused of betraying their oaths. A former NYPD school safety commander was indicted for steering an $11 million contract in exchange for cash and luxury trips, and closer to home, a Suffolk County sheriff's deputy was arrested on charges involving a 15-year-old boy. The thread connecting these cases is the same: public servants who treated the badge as a license rather than a responsibility.

What Burke says now

O'Rourke offered a window into his client's state of mind, describing a man burdened by regret, at least over the Loeb incident.

"He beats himself up constantly after a whole chain of events when he went into the precinct that day and slapped, not beat, slapped Loeb. That is a chain of events that led to a host of consequences that he regrets and has deep remorse over."

As for what comes next, O'Rourke said Burke wants to "fade into the general population." While the case was pending, Burke had to complete a "corrective action" program, though the specifics of that program remain unclear. The only condition left is simple: don't get arrested before October 28.

Burke himself said little in court. He answered "yes, sir" to the judge and told a journalist to "have a nice day" on his way out.

A system that keeps failing upward

The collapse of this case is not really about James Burke. It is about a system that repeatedly fails to hold powerful people accountable, and then points to procedural technicalities as the reason. The DA's office didn't say Burke was innocent. It said its own witnesses were too compromised to take the stand. That is not exoneration. That is institutional failure dressed up as legal process.

Burke pushed the FBI out of a serial killer investigation. He beat a suspect in custody. His mentor, the district attorney, went to prison for covering it up. The county's corruption watchdog went to prison alongside him. And now the indecent exposure case falls apart because the arresting officers couldn't keep their own records clean.

At every turn, the system around Burke has been as broken as the man at its center. The officers who arrested him turned out to be unfit witnesses. The prosecutors who charged him couldn't get to trial. The institutions that were supposed to provide oversight were led by people who ended up in federal prison themselves.

Suffolk County voters, taxpayers, and the families of the women found along Gilgo Beach deserved better at every stage of this saga. They got a police chief who obstructed a murder investigation, a district attorney who obstructed a civil rights probe, and a park police force too compromised to make a misdemeanor charge stick.

Burke wants to fade into the general population. Given the wreckage he leaves behind, the general population might prefer he stay visible, where someone can keep an eye on him.

Copyright 2024, Thin Line News LLC