The location where Tiffany Bresciani was murdered
This is the parking lot where serial killer Joel Rifkin murdered Tiffany Bresciani.
It is located at 210 South Street in Manhattan, New York.
At the time of the murder, the building was home to the New York Post newspaper. These days, it is owned by a self-storage company called Manhattan Mini-Storage.

Bresciani moved to New York to become an actress
Bresciani was a "sweet goth girl" from Metairie, Louisiana.
Initially, the 22-year-old had moved to New York with hopes of becoming an actress on Broadway.
However, those dreams failed to materialize, and she eventually ended up dancing at strip clubs.
After moving to the Big Apple, Bresciani started hanging around the punk rock scene and abusing drugs.
Once Bresciani began taking heroin, she found herself in a seemingly inescapable downward spiral.
For a short period of time, she dated Rick Wilder, who founded the hardcore punk band The Mau-Mau's. However, their relationship ended due to her worsening addiction.

To fund her habit, she made the transition from dancing in strip clubs to working as a sex worker on Allen Street in Manhattan. Although she made several attempts to get clean, they ultimately ended in failure.
Relationship with Dave Rubinstein
Not long after, she started seeing another punk musician named Dave Rubinstein (Dave Insurgent), who had co-founded the band Reagan Youth in 1980.
By the time Bresciani met Rubinstein, he was a disheveled shell of his former self. The washed-up singer was heavily addicted to heroin, his rock career was over, and he was now living an isolated existence on the streets of Manhattan.

During their relationship, Bresciani continued operating as a sex worker to fund both of their drug habits.
Rubinstein would wait on the street whenever his girlfriend left with a client. Then, when she arrived back with some cash, the couple would walk off together to buy some heroin.

Joel Rifkin
In the early hours of June 24th, 1993, Bresciani and Rubinstein were standing on Allen Street when an unemployed 34-year-old named Joel Rifkin pulled up beside them.
At the time, they probably felt somewhat excited that they were now within touching distance of their next score. All Bresciani had to do was spend 20 minutes with the man. After that, they'd be on their way.
Unbeknownst to them, this "client" also had an addiction that he felt incapable of controlling.
When Bresciani casually jumped in the vehicle and told Rubinstein that she'd be back soon, the couple had no idea that it was the last time they would ever see each other.
Rifkin was a serial killer who had started murdering sex workers four years prior. By June 1993, he had already claimed the lives of at least 16 women.
On that fateful night, he was cruising around Manhattan in his mother's blue Toyota sedan when he noticed Bresciani standing on Allen Street.

Following a quick discussion about the price, she jumped into his vehicle, and the pair drove southward to the New York Post parking lot at 210 South Street.
At the time, the area around the northern side of the Manhattan Bridge was a popular place for sex workers and their clients to conduct business.
Bresciani's murder
Rifkin said that he strangled Bresciani to death in his car at around 5.30 a.m.
Following the murder, he drove back to his home on Long Island. Along the way, he stopped at a store to purchase rope and a blue plastic tarp, which he used to wrap up her remains.
While all of this was unfolding, Rubinstein stood on Allen Street, waiting for his girlfriend to return. After some time had passed, he grew anxious. Fearing that something was wrong, he contacted the police and provided a description of the vehicle. He also searched for Bresciani at local hospitals and at some of the clubs where she danced.
When Rifkin arrived back at his house in East Meadow, he didn't have time to remove the body from the trunk. By that stage, it was long past sunrise, and his mother was eager to use her Toyota to run some morning errands.
After taking her car keys, she drove to a local supermarket, completely unaware that there was a dead body in the back of her vehicle.
Fortunately for Rifkin, his mother never opened the trunk. Later that day, he was able to move the tarp containing Bresciani's remains to a wheelbarrow in his garage.
The body reportedly lay in the garage for three days while Rifkin worked on his Mazda pickup truck. He didn't get rid of it until the growing, overpowering smell forced him into action.
Aftermath
At around 3 a.m. on June 28th, 1993, he loaded his victim's remains into the back of his truck and drove eastward towards Republic Airport in Farmingdale. However, as he was driving along, a state police patrol car noticed that his truck was missing a rear license plate.
Although the officers turned on their flashers and ordered him to pull over, "Joel the Ripper" sped up and kept going.
This led to a 20-mile-long car chase, which eventually culminated in Rifkin's arrest and the discovery of Bresciani's body.

Rubinstein was heartbroken when he learned that his girlfriend had been found dead in such horrific circumstances.
As he grappled with this loss, another unimaginable tragedy struck.
Just two days later, Rubinstein's father accidentally killed his mother in a freak vehicle accident at their home in Queens.
Depressed and guilt-ridden by such an unfathomable chain of events, he decided to take his own life.
On July 3rd, 1993, Rubinstein committed suicide by overdosing on heroin.
Location
The address and GPS coordinates for the parking lot are as follows:
Address
210 South Street, Manhattan, New York, NY 10002, USA
GPS Coordinates
40.709787, -73.994526
40°42'35.23"N 73°59'40.29"W
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Area Information
📍 The parking lot sits on the corner of Market Slip and South Street in the Lower East Side of Manhattan. It is across the road from the Murry Bergtraum Softball Field.
Private Property Warning
This is private property, not a public space. Please respect the owners and do not enter without permission. Entry without permission is trespassing and may be met with legal or other serious consequences.
Comment: The parking lot is no longer open to members of the general public.
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