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Eccentric Millionaire Robert Durst Murder Trial

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GALVESTON, Texas (AP) -- Pressed by prosecutors, New York real estate heir Robert Durst testified Monday that he could not remember specifics of how he cut up the body of a neighbor he is accused of murdering.

The millionaire said he did not know how long it took or what part of Morris Black's body he cut first. Durst said he used two saws and an ax that belonged to Black after drinking a fifth of Jack Daniels.

"You were drunk while cutting up Morris Black?" prosecutor Kurt Sistrunk asked.

"I hope so, yes, sir," Durst responded.

It was Durst's third day of testimony in his murder trial in the 2001 slaying. Durst, who lived in squalor despite his millions, testified earlier that his neighbor was killed accidentally in a scuffle over a gun. He said he cut up Black in a panic, fearing police would not believe his story, and dumped the body parts in Galveston Bay.

"Did you cry when you were cutting up your best friend?" Sistrunk said. "Do you remember anything about cutting up Morris Black?"

Durst answered: "No, sir."

Durst, who sometimes posed as a mute woman while living on Galveston Island, said earlier that he and Black became good friends but had a falling out. The deadly scuffle, he said, occurred after Durst found Black in his apartment with a gun.

Durst, 60, said Monday that he tried getting help for Black, who was 71, from an upstairs neighbor but knocked on the wrong door.

"It's just another self-serving lie that you knocked on the (wrong) door," Sistrunk said.

"It's not a lie," Durst responded.

During his questioning, Sistrunk asked Durst to describe specifically how he and Black struggled for the gun, asking for details about how close the two men were, where his hand was on the gun and how they fell down.

At one point, Sistrunk and fellow prosecutor Joel Bennett got up and had Durst guide them through a demonstration of the shooting. Defense attorneys objected but prosecutors were allowed to proceed.

"The two of you look like spaghetti," Durst told the two prosecutors. "This is a bad demonstration like my attorneys have been telling you."

Durst, whose family runs The Durst Organization, a privately held $1 billion New York company, faces five to 99 years in prison if convicted.

http://www.cnn.com/2003/LAW/10/27/fugitive.heir.ap/index.html
 
faces five to 99 years in prison if convicted.
Rather a wide timespan.

Wonder how the actual sentence is worked out?
Ten years per lopped-off limb?
 
Durst arrested again.

An eccentric US tycoon linked to two killings has been arrested in connection with a third murder, just a day before the airing of a television documentary in which he says that he "killed them all."

Robert Durst, the scion of a wealthy New York real estate family, was taken into custody on Saturday at a New Orleans hotel at the request of Los Angeles police investigating the 2000 killing of his friend Susan Berman, and was being held on a murder warrant, US media reports said.

The arrest came just one day before the HBO television network broadcast the final in a six-part documentary series about Durst called "The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst." ...

http://www.rte.ie/news/2015/0316/687387-robert-durst/

More info:

“The Jinx,” a six-episode HBO documentary series, the director Andrew Jarecki investigates Robert Durst, multiple-murder suspect, Manhattan real-estate scion, and shark-eyed master of the throwaway epigram, emerging with evidence that might actually put him in jail.

This isn’t the first time Jarecki has suggested that Durst might be guilty: in 2010, he directed “All Good Things,” a feature, in which Ryan Gosling commits every bad act that Durst has been accused of, plus a few bonus ones, like the implied bludgeoning of a lovable husky. “All Good Things” wasn’t much good, maybe because it was inspired by the facts of Durst’s life, few of which seem plausible as fiction. This is a man, after all, who, long after the mysterious disappearance of his first wife, Kathie, fled to Galveston, Texas, disguised himself as a mute woman, and then, while out on bail for the murder of a neighbor—whose corpse Durst dismembered with a bow saw—was arrested for shoplifting a chicken-salad sandwich at a Wegmans. (At the time, Durst had thirty-eight thousand dollars in his car.) ...

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/03/23/what-about-bob
 
“So tired of the same old crud / Sweet baby, I need fresh blood,” go the lyrics to the theme tune of “The Jinx,” Andrew Jarecki’s six-part documentary about Robert Durst, which came to a conclusion on HBO last night. The song, by the rock band the Eels, at first seemed hardly a subtle choice for a series that began by chronicling the investigation of the killing and dismemberment, fifteen years ago, of Morris Black, Durst’s one-time neighbor in Galveston, Texas, and went on to explore Durst’s possible culpability in the disappearance of his first wife, Kathie Durst, in 1981, and the execution of his one-time best friend, Susan Berman, in 2000. Durst, the misanthropic, self-regarding, tic-ridden son of a real-estate tycoon, had sought out Jarecki and offered himself as an interview subject after seeing “All Good Things,” the filmmaker’s fictionalized account of the Dursts’ marriage. He was, the framing of the show suggested, a cold, vampiric psychopath who had yet to be held responsible for his murderous appetites. ...

http://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/robert-dursts-grotesque-confession
 
I don't know if the details of Susan Berman's murder are as well known in the UK as the U.S.. If not,here's a good story about it, from around the time it happened.

Who Killed the Gangster's Daughter?
http://nymag.com/nymetro/news/crimelaw/features/4459/
It mentions Robert Durst a lot, as they were best friends.

I remember the Galveston case very well. Couldn't believe he'd got off for that one.
 
Authorities found nearly 150 grams of marijuana and a revolver in millionaire Robert Durst's hotel room when he was arrested over the weekend, a prosecutor said Tuesday.

Durst appeared before a judge for a second straight day to face the drug and weapons charges. He also is charged with murder in a Los Angeles killing 15 years ago. ...

Durst, 71, was charged Monday in Los Angeles with first-degree murder in the shooting of Berman, the daughter of a prominent Las Vegas mobster. He could face the death penalty under special circumstances that allege he ambushed her and murdered a witness ...

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/robert-durst-back-in-court-for-2nd-straight-day/ar-AA9S4kO
 
For one man, the Robert A. Durst chronicle is not only about unsolved deaths from the distant past.

His younger brother Douglas, 70, believes that Robert, 71, has contemplated killing him for years, and even continued to stalk him last month, as HBO was running “The Jinx,” a documentary series that chronicled the violent deaths or disappearance of three people close to Robert.

“We had information that Bob was five or 10 minutes away from my house in Florida,” Mr. Durst said, in his first interview since the documentary was broadcast.

On the evening of Feb. 22, relatives staying at Douglas Durst’s home in Palm Beach learned that Robert was in Riviera Beach, less than nine miles north, according to Douglas. That night, the third chapter in the documentary was being shown. ...

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime...ngs-a-‘tremendous-sense-of-relief’/ar-AA9XoOm
 
Debrah Lee Charatan, the second wife of accused murderer and former real estate scion Robert Durst, talked with Newsweek through a spokesman on Thursday. Charatan, who appears in HBO’s The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst only in deposition footage, has stayed out of the public eye since her husband was arrested on March 14 for the 2000 execution-style murder of his longtime friend and spokeswoman Susan Berman.

Durst, who was caught on tape in The Jinx saying “ killed them all, of course” has also long been a suspect in the 1982 disappearance of his first wife, Kathleen McCormack, and was acquitted in 2003 for the murder of his neighbor, Morris Black. (Durst admitted that he had dismembered Black, but claimed self-defense. Black’s head was never found.) Durst was once the heir to the Durst Organization’s real estate fortune, but cut ties with the firm in 2006.

Charatan’s spokesman, real estate attorney Adam Leitman Bailey, described the nature of Charatan and Durst’s business dealings in a lengthy interview with Newsweek.Charatan is a founder of BCB Property Management along with her son, Bennat Charatan Berger. Bailey clarified that while Charatan is an investor in the company, she does not oversee day-to-day operations. This responsibility falls to Berger. ...

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime...ins-connection-to-real-estate-firm/ar-AAa2S0Z
 
Fred Durst of Limp Bizkit fame has begun complaining that he shouldn't be mixed up with Robert Durst, as is apparently happening. Or maybe he has new material to promote.
 
Robert Durst will not be sent to California to face first-degree murder charges until prosecutors in Louisiana have exhausted their own case against him, stemming from the recovery of a gun and a marijuana stash from his hotel room following his arrest in New Orleans on 14 March.

The Los Angeles district attorney’s office confirmed to the Guardian on Tuesday that it will not be seeking Durst’s immediate extradition in connection with the murder of his friend Susan Berman, who was shot in the back of the head at her Hollywood Hills home in 2000.

Instead, Durst is expected to stand trial first in New Orleans and could, if convicted, face decades in prison as a felon caught in possession of a firearm – effectively a life sentence for the 71-year-old. One New Orleans defence attorney told the Guardian he expects Durst’s formal indictment could come as soon as Wednesday evening, ahead of a planned Thursday preliminary hearing. ...

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime...ed-to-california-on-murder-charges/ar-AAahotQ
 
The murder trial is underway.

The murder trial of US millionaire Robert Durst, the subject of the documentary The Jinx, has started with the jury viewing clips from the series.

Prosecutors allege that in 2000 the 76-year-old killed Susan Berman to stop police questioning her about the disappearance of his wife, Kathleen. Mr Durst has pleaded not guilty to the murder charge. The real estate heir was the focus of the 2015 series The Jinx, in which he allegedly confessed to the crime. Jurors were played the show's finale, where Mr Durst is captured on a microphone saying to himself: "What the hell did I do? Killed them all, of course."

Hours before this last episode aired, authorities arrested him in New Orleans for Berman's murder.

Mr Durst's lawyer, Dick DeGuerin, objected to jurors also being shown clips from All the Good Things, a 2010 film of his marriage starring Ryan Gosling and Kirsten Dunst. The film was directed by The Jinx's filmmaker Andrew Jarecki and depicts the life of the tycoon and shows him as a murderer.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-51749632
 
Just found guilty:

Robert Durst convicted: US millionaire found guilty of first-degree murder

From the look of him, I doubt he's going to be a burden on the US taxpayer for very long.

HBO's The Jinx is well worth tracking down - an excellent documentary on a truly strange case, with the bizarrely willing participation of the stone cold psychopath at the very heart of its subject.
 
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