Robert Durst

Robert Durst
Born Robert Alan Durst
(1943-04-12) April 12, 1943
New York City, New York, United States[1]
Other names Bobby Durst
Education Scarsdale High School
Alma mater Lehigh University (B.A. Economics, 1965)
Spouse(s) Kathie Durst (Kathleen McCormack) (m. 1973–90)
Debrah Lee Charatan (m. 2000)
Parent(s) Seymour Durst
Bernice Durst

Robert Alan Durst (born April 12, 1943)[1] is an American real estate heir, the son of New York City mogul Seymour Durst, and the elder brother of Douglas Durst, head of the Durst Organization. He has primarily been known for being the suspect in investigations by local, state, and federal law enforcement authorities for the disappearances and/or murders of three individuals in different states:

On March 14, 2015, Durst was arrested in New Orleans, Louisiana, on a first-degree murder warrant signed by a Los Angeles judge. If convicted in California for the murder of Susan Berman, Durst could face the death penalty with "special circumstances for the murder of a witness and for lying in wait".[2] He was initially held in a mental-health unit outside of New Orleans before being transferred to the St. Charles Parish jail.[3][4][5][6][7][8] Shortly following, Durst was indicted by the state of Louisiana for possession of a handgun by a felon and possession of a weapon while in the possession of an illegal substance, and then by the US Attorney's Office for illegal possession of a firearm by a felon; he pleaded not guilty to both the Louisiana and the federal weapons charges. Louisiana then dropped its charges, deferring to the federal charges, while reserving the right to recharge Durst at a later date.[9][10]

Durst's lawyers early on spurned a 27-month plea deal because they were confident a federal judge would rule the search of his New Orleans hotel room was illegal. They were left with little room to negotiate when prosecutors raised the possibility that additional charges would be filed. Durst then changed his federal weapons plea to guilty on February 3, 2016, per a final agreement with the US Attorney's office, resulting in an 85-month federal prison sentence.[11] He was scheduled to be transferred to a California federal prison by August 18, 2016, to await the Berman murder trial.[11][12][13][14][15] In late August 2016, Durst's lawyer Dick DeGuerin told People Magazine that due to "serious surgery", the US Bureau of Prisons delayed the transfer of his client to California to stand trial for the murder of Susan Berman. DeGuerin also said he expects the trial will commence in late 2017.[16] On Friday, November 4, 2016, Durst was transferred to a California and on the following Monday, November 7, was arraigned in Los Angeles on charges of murdering Susan Berman in 2000. In a wheelchair with a neck brace, Durst pled not guilty and said, "I am not guilty. I did not kill Susan Berman." LA Deputy District Attorney John Lewin said the state would not seek the death penalty against Durst. Both sides agreed to convene again on February 15, 2017, to set the date for a preliminary hearing.[17]

Early life

One of four children, Durst grew up in Scarsdale, New York. He is the son of real estate investor Seymour Durst and his wife Bernice Herstein. His siblings are Douglas, Thomas, and Wendy. Durst's paternal grandfather, Joseph Durst, a penniless Jewish tailor when he emigrated from Austria-Hungary in 1902, eventually became a very successful real estate manager and developer, founding the Durst Organization in 1927. His father, Seymour, became head of the family business in 1974 upon Joseph's death.[18] Durst claimed that at the age of seven his father walked him to a window where he saw his mother on the roof of the family's Scarsdale home prior to her death, which resulted when she fell or jumped. In a March 2015 New York Times interview, his brother Douglas denied this.[19][20] As children, Robert and Douglas underwent counseling for sibling rivalry;[21] a 1953 psychiatrist's report on ten-year-old Robert mentioned "personality decomposition and possibly even schizophrenia".[22] Durst attended Scarsdale High School, where classmates described him as a loner.[23]

He earned a bachelor's degree in Economics in 1965 from Lehigh University, where he was a member of the varsity lacrosse team and the business manager of The Brown and White student newspaper.[24][25] He enrolled in a doctoral program at UCLA later that year, where he met Susan Berman, but eventually withdrew from the school and returned to New York in 1969.[23][26] Durst went on to become a real estate developer in his father's business; however, it was his brother Douglas who was later appointed to run the family business. The appointment in the 1990s caused a rift between Robert and his family, estranging him from them.[27]

Crimes for which Durst has been investigated

Police have directly questioned Durst, and sometimes conducted searches, in connection to the disappearance of his first wife Kathie McCormack, and two homicides, Morris Black and Susan Berman. In one of those homicides, he was tried and acquitted.

Disappearance of Kathleen McCormack Durst

In the fall of 1971, Durst met Kathleen "Kathie" McCormack, a dental hygienist. After two dates, Durst invited McCormack to share his home in Vermont, where Durst had opened a health food store; she moved there in January 1972.[28] However, Durst's father pressured him to move back to New York to work in the family real estate business.[29] Durst and McCormack returned to Manhattan, where they married in April 1973.[28][30]

Kathie Durst was last seen by someone other than Durst the evening of January 31, 1982, at a friend's party in Newtown, Connecticut; she left for South Salem, New York, after a call from her husband.[31][32] Although the couple argued and fought,[30] Durst maintained that he put his wife on a train to New York City, had a drink with a neighbor, and spoke to his wife by telephone later that evening.[33] "That's what I told police," Durst later told documentary filmmakers. "I was hoping that would just make everything go away."[33]

Kathie Durst had been treated at a Bronx hospital for facial bruises three weeks before, telling a friend Durst beat her;[31] she had asked Durst for a $250,000 divorce settlement.[34] Durst had cancelled his wife's credit card, removed her name from a joint bank account, and refused to pay her medical school tuition;[35] she was in her final year at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine and intended to become a pediatrician.[32] At the time his wife disappeared, Durst had been dating Prudence Farrow for three years and living in a separate apartment.[28][34][36] Durst initially offered $100,000 for his wife's return, then reduced the reward to $15,000. Not long afterwards, Durst was seen discarding his wife's possessions.[37]

In 1999, New York State Police quietly re-opened the criminal investigation into Kathie Durst's disappearance, searching Durst's former South Salem residence for the first time.[30] The investigation became public in November 2000.[30][31][36]

Homicide of Susan Berman

On December 24, 2000, Durst's longtime friend, Susan Berman, who had facilitated Durst's public alibi after Kathie's disappearance and who had recently received $50,000 from Durst,[31][38] was found murdered execution-style in her Benedict Canyon house in California. Durst is known to have been in Northern California days before Berman was killed, and to have flown from San Francisco to New York the night before Berman's body was discovered.[30][39] Although Durst confirmed to the Los Angeles Police Department that he had recently sent Berman $25,000, and faxed investigators a copy of Berman's 1982 deposition regarding his missing wife, he declined to be further questioned about Berman's murder.[40]

Durst said in a 2005 deposition that Berman called him shortly before her death and said: "The Los Angeles police contacted me. They wanted to talk about Kathie Durst's disappearance."[41] A study of case notes by The Guardian cast doubt on whether the Los Angeles police had made such a call, or whether then-Westchester County District Attorney Jeanine Pirro had scheduled an interview with Berman at all.[38] Durst moved to Galveston, Texas in 2000, lived in a boarding house, and began posing as a woman to avoid police inquiries.[42] Durst had been tipped off to the re-opened investigation into his wife's disappearance on October 31, 2000, and immediately began planning for life as a fugitive.[38] (Contacted at the time by the New York Daily News, Durst said "I know nothing about it, but I would not have any comment."[36]) Berman biographer Cathy Scott has asserted that Durst killed Berman because she knew too much about his first wife's disappearance.[43]

Killing and dismemberment of Morris Black

On October 9, 2001, Durst was arrested in Galveston shortly after body parts of his elderly neighbor, Morris Black, were found floating in Galveston Bay, but was released on $300,000[44] bail the next day. Durst missed a court hearing on October 16 and a warrant was issued for his arrest on a charge of bail jumping. On November 30, 2001, he was caught in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, at a Wegmans supermarket, after trying to shoplift a chicken salad sandwich, Band-Aids (Durst had removed them from a box and placed one under his nose, attracting the attention of store surveillance), and a newspaper, even though he had $500 cash in his pocket.[31][44] A police search of his rented car yielded $37,000 in cash, two guns, marijuana, Black's driver's license,[45] and directions to the Connecticut home of Gilberte Najamy, confidante of Kathie Durst, who had dogged Durst for years publicizing accusations he had murdered his wife.[31][46][47] Durst also used his time on the run to stalk his brother Douglas, visiting the driveway of his home in Katonah, New York while armed.[47]

Trial

In 2003, Durst went on trial for the murder of Morris Black. He employed defense attorney Dick DeGuerin and claimed self-defense; DeGuerin conducted two mock trials in preparation for the case.[48] During cross-examination, Durst admitted to using a paring knife, two saws, and an axe to dismember Black's body before bagging and dumping his remains in Galveston Bay.[49] A psychiatrist retained by Durst's defense team diagnosed him with Asperger syndrome and testified that this explained his behavior; the judge allowed this evidence, despite skepticism that it was merely a tactic.[48][50] Durst claimed he and Black, a cranky and confrontational loner, struggled for control of Durst's .22-caliber target pistol after Black grabbed it from its hiding place and threatened him with it. During the struggle, the pistol discharged, shooting Black in the face.[49][50] Morris Black's head was never recovered. Prosecutors were unable to present sufficient forensic evidence to dispute Durst's account of the struggle.[48] As a result of lack of forensics, the jury acquitted Durst of murder.[51]

In 2004, Durst pleaded guilty to two counts of bond jumping and one count of evidence tampering. As part of a plea bargain, he received a sentence of five years and was given credit for time served, requiring him to serve about three years in prison.[52] Durst was paroled in 2005. The rules of his release required him to stay near his home; permission was required to travel.[53] That December, Durst made an unauthorized trip to the boarding house where Black had been killed and to a nearby shopping mall. At the mall, he ran into former Galveston trial judge Susan Criss, who had presided over his trial.[48] Due to this incident, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles determined that Durst had violated the terms of his parole and returned him to jail.[53] He was released again from custody on March 1, 2006.[54]

Asked in March 2015 whether she believed Durst murdered Morris Black, Criss commented: "you could see that this person knew what they were doing and that it was not a first time. The body was cut perfectly like a surgeon who knew how to use this tool on this bone and a certain kind of tool on that muscle. It looked like not a first-time job. That was pretty scary."[48]

Legal proceedings

Arrest for Berman murder

A few days after a first-degree murder warrant was signed by a Los Angeles judge, Durst was arrested by FBI agents (who had been investigating Durst since 2012[22]) on March 14, 2015, at the Canal Street Marriott in New Orleans, where he had registered under the false name "Everette Ward".[55][56] Durst, who had been tracked to the hotel after making two calls to check his voicemail,[57] was observed wandering aimlessly in the lobby and mumbling to himself, having driven to New Orleans from Houston four days before.[57][58][59][60] In addition to a .38 Smith & Wesson revolver loaded with four live rounds and one spent shell casing, police recovered five ounces of marijuana, Durst's birth certificate and passport, maps showing Florida, Louisiana, and Cuba,[55][61] a "flesh-toned" latex mask covering the face and neck (with salt-and-pepper hair attached),[57] the fake Texas ID used to check into the hotel, a new cellphone, and $42,631, mostly in $100 bills stuffed into small envelopes.[56][62][63][64] Police discovered a UPS tracking number which led to an additional $117,000 cash, in a package sent to Durst by a woman in New York (not Durst's wife)[41][65] which was seized after his arrest.[55][56] Bank statements found in one of Durst's Houston condominiums revealed cash withdrawals of $315,000 in little more than a month.[64]

Durst's brother Douglas said he was "relieved" and "grateful" in a statement shortly after his brother's arrest. He added, "We hope he will finally be held accountable for all he has done."[59] Douglas Durst later said he was "not confident" his brother would be convicted in Los Angeles.[66]

On March 15, 2015, New York State Police investigator Joseph Becerra, long involved with the Kathie Durst case[31] and said to be working closely in recent months with FBI and Los Angeles detectives,[67] removed some sixty file boxes of Durst's personal papers and effects from the home of Durst's 30+ year friend Susan T. Giordano in Campbell Hall, New York, where they had been sent by Durst's present wife Debrah Lee Charatan three years prior for safekeeping. Also stored there were videotaped depositions of himself, his wife Charatan, and his brother Douglas Durst, from the 2003 Morris Black murder trial.[68]

John Lewin, the LA County deputy district attorney who is in charge of the prosecution, has a long history of trying cold cases. Lewin says he found information uncovered by HBO's "The Jinx" filmmakers compelling and has repeatedly flown to New York to interview witnesses, including friends of Ms. Berman and Durst.[69] The trial was scheduled to begin in LA after Durst was transferred to a California federal prison and arraigned, at some point before August 18, 2016, but Durst's transfer has been delayed by the US Bureau of Prisons due to "serious surgery", according to Durst legal counsel Dick DeGuerin.[16] Durst was transferred to California on November 4, 2016 and on Monday November 7th, was arraigned on charges for the murder of Susan Berman; Durst pled not guilty. Lewin said the state would not seek the death penalty against Durst. Both sides agreed to convene again on Feb. 15 to set the date for a preliminary hearing.[17]

Firearm charge

On March 16, 2015, attorney Dick DeGuerin, who also represented Durst during his 2003 trial for the killing of Morris Black, advised court authorities in New Orleans that his client waived extradition and would voluntarily return to California "to get it on".[70] Late the same day, Louisiana State Police filed charges against Durst for being a felon in possession of a firearm and for possession of a firearm with a controlled substance, forestalling his immediate return to California.[71] Orleans Parish District Attorney Leon Cannizzaro commented that, in light of prior convictions which could influence Durst's sentencing, "[j]ust for those gun charges here in Louisiana, [Durst] could face up to life in prison".[64]

On March 23, 2015, Durst was denied bail by a Louisiana judge after prosecutors argued he was a flight risk.[55] In an effort to hasten Durst's extradition to California and avoid a protracted Louisiana court battle,[72] DeGuerin raised questions about the validity of the New Orleans arrest and hotel room search, pointing out that a local judge did not issue a warrant until hours after his client was detained.[73][74][75] While communicating with Los Angeles police and conducting an inventory of Durst's hotel room possessions, "[t]he FBI ... held him there, incommunicado, for almost eight hours".[73] According to DeGuerin, Durst was questioned extensively, the morning after his arrest, by a Los Angeles prosecutor and detective without a lawyer present.[55][57]

In failing to produce the arresting officers subpoenaed for a probable cause hearing, Louisiana prosecutors engaged in a "misguided attempt to conceal the facts from the court, the defendant, and the public," wrote Durst's lawyers in an April 3, 2015 court filing.[72][76] Peter Mansfield, an Assistant U.S. Attorney, said that his office instructed the two FBI agents and arresting officer not to appear, arguing that DeGuerin's subpoenas were issued in an attempt to conduct "actions against them in their official capacities for the purpose of obtaining testimony, information and material maintained under color of their official duties."[5]

On April 8, 2015, a day after the U.S. Attorney filed an independent federal weapons charge,[4] Durst was formally indicted by a Louisiana grand jury for carrying a weapon with a controlled substance and for the illegal possession of a firearm by a felon.[5][6] "Now everyone is just piling on," commented Dick DeGuerin.[77]

On April 16, 2015, Durst's lawyers requested that more than $161,000 seized by authorities during their searches be returned, saying the cash "is not needed as evidence, is not contraband, and is not subject to forfeiture".[78]

After negotiations with Durst's defense team, Louisiana ultimately dropped its weapons charges against Durst on April 23, 2015. "It makes sense to try this case in federal court because FBI agents arrested Mr. Durst, and there shouldn't be two prosecutions, state and federal, at the same time for the same crime," DeGuerin said.[8] Durst's trial on the federal weapons charge was scheduled for September 21, 2015.[79]

DeGuerin confirmed rumors that Durst was in poor health: he suffers from hydrocephalus and had a stent put into his skull two years before, as well as spinal surgery and a cancerous mass removed from his esophagus.[57][80] "I think that the surgery got it all. You never know," said DeGuerin, adding that his client was eager to go to court. "He's not in good health but he's up for the fight."[80]

In July 2015, Durst's defense attorneys requested a later date for the federal weapons charge trial, saying they'd need more time to prepare after rulings on pending motions. On August 5, 2015, U.S. District Judge Helen Berrigan rescheduled the trial to January 11, 2016.[81]

On November 16, 2015, a federal judge in New Orleans ordered Durst re-arraigned on the weapons charges and scheduled a hearing for December 17. When asked, Durst's attorney said only that Durst did not kill Susan Berman, and he wants to resolve the other charges to expedite Durst's extradition to Los Angeles to face that charge.[82]

On December 16, 2015, prosecutors and defense attorneys told Judge Helen Berrigan in a joint motion that scheduling conflicts rule out all dates before a January 11 trial date. Berrigan ultimately rescheduled the trial for February 3, 2016, and Durst changed his plea to guilty to the federal gun charge and received an 85-month prison sentence.[13][15][83]

Other cases

Days after the Berman murder arrest broke into national headlines, police were reportedly examining connections between Durst and the 1971 disappearance of 17-year-old Lynne Schulze from Middlebury, Vermont,[84] and the 1997 disappearance of 16-year-old Karen Mitchell from Eureka, California.[85][86][87] Investigators are also looking into a possible connection with the disappearance of 18-year-old Kristen Modafferi, last seen in San Francisco in 1997.[88][89]

Schulze, a Middlebury College freshman, patronized Durst's health food shop, All Good Things, on December 10, 1971, the day she disappeared,[87] and was last seen that afternoon near a bus stop across from Durst's store.[90] Durst's lawyer Dick DeGuerin characterized the Schulze investigation as "opportunistic" and said he would not permit his client to be questioned by Vermont police.[91]

Credit card records place Durst in Eureka, California on November 25, 1997, the day Karen Mitchell vanished.[22][92][93] Mitchell may have volunteered in a homeless shelter that Durst frequented;[92] Durst, dressed in women's clothing, had visited the Eureka shoe store owned by Mitchell's aunt.[22][87][92][93] Mitchell was last seen walking to work from her aunt's store and possibly speaking to someone in a stopped car;[92][93] a witness sketch of Mitchell's presumed abductor resembles Durst.[87]

Although the FBI ultimately could not connect Durst to the Long Island Gilgo Beach serial murders (in which some victims were dismembered, bagged, and disposed near the ocean), the Bureau created an informal task force in 2012 to work with investigative agencies in jurisdictions where Durst was known to have lived in past decades, including Vermont, New York, and Northern and Southern California.[22][94] In the wake of Durst's recent arrest, the FBI encouraged such localities to re-examine cold cases.[94] Texas private investigator Bobbi Sue Bacha has also traced Durst operating under stolen identities in Massachusetts, New Jersey, South Carolina, Florida, Texas, Mississippi, and Virginia.[95]

Documentary

In early 2015, a six-part HBO documentary titled The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst described circumstantial evidence linking Durst to the 2000 slaying of Susan Berman, who was believed to have knowledge of Kathie Durst's 1982 disappearance.[58][96] The documentary detailed the disappearance of Kathie Durst, Berman's subsequent death, and the killing of Durst's neighbor Morris Black. Against the advice of his lawyers,[97] and his wife Debrah Lee Charatan, Durst cooperated with filmmakers, giving multiple interviews and unrestricted access to his personal records.[68][98][99]

The Associated Press reported that a March 1999 letter from Durst to Berman, discovered by Berman's stepson and turned over to filmmakers during their research,[100] provided "key new evidence" leading to the filing of murder charges.[101]

Personal life

On his 30th birthday in 1973, Durst married Kathleen McCormack.[30] Durst divorced her in 1990, eight years after her disappearance, claiming spousal abandonment.[30][102] On December 11, 2000,[38] shortly before Susan Berman was murdered in Los Angeles, Durst married Debrah Lee Charatan.[103][104][105] According to The New York Times, the couple briefly shared a Fifth Avenue apartment in 1990 but "have never lived together as husband and wife".[68][103] Durst once told his sister that it was "a marriage of convenience";[38][47] "I wanted Debbie to be able to receive my inheritance, and I intended to kill myself," Durst said in a 2005 deposition.[41] Charatan currently lives with one of Durst's lawyers, Steven I. Holm.[41]

Durst traveled and lived under dozens of aliases over the years,[106] using different identities to buy cars, rent apartments, and open credit card accounts.[107] "He had a scanner, copier and a laminating machine," a former office employee of Durst told Newsweek. "What I didn't realize is that I unwittingly saw what would have allowed Robert Durst to make a fake driver's license."[106] Durst was also "a prolific user of private mailboxes," and apparently conducted business under a number of canine-themed names: Woofing LLC, WoofWoof LLC, and Igor-Fayette Inc.[107]

In the early 1980s, Robert Durst owned a series of seven Alaskan Malamutes each named "Igor", which according to Durst's brother, Douglas, died under mysterious circumstances. In December 2014, prior to the airing of The Jinx, Douglas told The New York Times, "In retrospect, I now believe he was practicing killing and disposing his wife with those dogs."[107][108] Durst was once recorded saying he wanted to "Igor" his brother Douglas.[109] Robert, however, has disputed the notion that he owned seven dogs named "Igor"; he owned three, he said, one that was run over and another that died in surgery after eating an apple core, "before the Igor that lasted forever."[35]

In late 1981 while Durst was married to Kathie McCormack Durst, he was nearing the end of a three-year affair with Mia Farrow's sister Prudence Farrow Bruns, who was also married at the time. A few months before Kathie's disappearance in January 1982, Bruns called Kathie and asked her to give Robert up, as friends said she wanted him all to herself. After Durst's acquittal of murdering Morris Black in 2003, Bruns contacted law enforcement authorities with concerns for her safety, as she said Durst was angry with her for terminating their relationship three days before Kathie disappeared.[110]

Financial status and residences

In mid 2002, Durst signed over a power of attorney to his wife Debrah Lee Charatan, a real estate investor,[103] and it is believed their holdings remain closely intermingled.[111] In 2006, Durst gave Charatan around $20 million of his $65 million trust settlement.[68]

In 2011, Durst purchased a $1.75 million townhouse on Lenox Avenue in Harlem, New York City. A source close to his estranged family confirmed that he was living there at least some of the time, and they were keeping him under surveillance.[107][112][113] Durst also owns three condominiums in a multi-story complex in Houston,[40] and after filing suit, received a $200,000 settlement in 2006 from a Houston developer who refused to let him move into a unit newly purchased by his wife, which she had then immediately resold to Durst for $10.[114][115] At the time of Susan Berman's murder in Los Angeles, Durst had just sold a home in Trinidad, California,[39][92] but maintained an office in Eureka while renting in nearby Big Lagoon.[116]

Media have variously reported Durst's financial status as "real estate baron",[112] "rich scion",[112] "millionaire",[51] "multimillionaire",[117] and "billionaire".[53] The Durst family's real estate holdings are worth more than $4 billion, but his brother Douglas was in control of the company beginning in 1994, shortly before their father's death.[112] From about 1994 to 2006, Robert Durst waged a legal campaign to gain greater control of the trust and family fortune. During that time he received $2 million a year from the family trust. In 2006 the case was settled, with Robert Durst giving up any interest in the Durst family properties and trusts in exchange for a one-time payment of about $65 million.[118] It is unknown how much of that went to legal fees and taxes.[112] Durst was still active in real estate; he reportedly sold two properties in 2014 for $21.15 million after purchasing them in 2011 for $8.65 million.[119] At the time of his 2015 arrest in New Orleans, the FBI estimated Durst's net worth at approximately $100 million;[56][62] The New York Times estimated his net worth at $110 million.[4]

On May 1, 2015, the New York Post reported that Durst's brother Douglas had settled litigation against Jinx filmmaker Andrew Jarecki, having confirmed that Robert Durst was the source of videotaped Durst family depositions which appeared in the documentary. Robert Durst's disclosure apparently violated the terms of his 2006 agreement with the Durst family which dispersed to him a lump sum of family trust assets. Although it was unclear whether Jarecki confirmed Robert Durst as his sourceThe New York Times reported in March 2015 that Jarecki was given "unrestricted access" to Durst's personal records, including the videotaped materialthe settlement paves the way for Douglas Durst to reclaim as much as $74 million of his brother's assets, effectively freezing those assets pending court judgment. This could affect Robert Durst's ability to pay for high-caliber legal representation without tapping into real estate or other investments. The Post reported that Douglas Durst was "mulling his next move".[120][121]

In November 2015, nearly 34 years after her disappearance, several immediate family members of Kathleen McCormack Durst (her three sisters as well as her 101-year-old mother) sued Robert Durst for $100 million, citing Durst's apparent role in her murder and his denial to her family of the "right to sepulcher", a New York law which grants immediate relatives access to a deceased person's body and the opportunity to determine appropriate burial.[122] If successful, the lawsuit could deprive Durst of most or all of his inherited fortune.[122] Another brother, James McCormack, had attempted in October 2015 to file a wrongful death suit against Durst on behalf of his mother, but was challenged by one of his sisters, who holds her mother's power of attorney.[122] Durst's defense attorney Dick DeGuerin commented that "there is no evidence that Robert Durst had anything to do with Kathleen's disappearance. Anybody can file a lawsuit, but eventually they'll have to come with evidence."[122] On Monday December 7, 2015, the same family members filed a suit asking the court to freeze Durst's assets. The family's attorney Robert Abrams called Durst the "poster child" for why courts block defendants from disposing assets while civil lawsuits are pending.[123] In July 2016, the McCormick family asked the Surrogate’s Court in Manhattan to "declare that Kathie died on Jan. 31, 1982, when she was murdered by her husband, Robert Durst" so the sepulcher lawsuit can proceed.[124]

Other legal issues

In 2012 and 2013, Durst's family members sought and received restraining orders against him, claiming they were afraid of him. Durst was charged with trespassing in New York for walking in front of townhouses owned by his brother Douglas and other family members. He went on trial and was acquitted in December 2014. The judge also vacated the thirteen orders of protection his family members had taken out on him.[125][126][127]

In July 2014, Durst was arrested after turning himself in to police following an incident at a Houston CVS drugstore in which he allegedly exposed himself without provocation and urinated on a rack of candy. He then left the store and casually walked down the street. Durst was charged with misdemeanor criminal mischief.[128][129] In December 2014, he pleaded "no contest" and was fined $500. His lawyer described the incident as an "unfortunate medical mishap", as Durst had just been released from a hospital where he had undergone two medical procedures.[130][131][132] The incident was recorded on videotape.[132]

In popular culture

References

  1. 1 2 Collins, Marion (November 18, 2002). Without a Trace. New York: McMillan. ISBN 0-312-98502-9.
  2. John Bacon & William M. Welch (March 17, 2015). "Prosecutors charge Durst with murder; death penalty possible". USA Today. Retrieved March 18, 2015.
  3. "Robert Durst will be transferred to St. Charles Parish jail". NOLA.com.
  4. 1 2 3 Charles V. Bagli (April 8, 2015). "Robert Durst Indicted on Gun Charges in New Orleans". New York Times. Retrieved April 8, 2015.
  5. 1 2 3 K. C. Baker (April 8, 2015). "Robert Durst Indicted on Louisiana Drug and Weapons Charges". People. Retrieved April 8, 2015.
  6. 1 2 Jonathan Kaminsky (April 8, 2015). "Real estate scion Robert Durst indicted on weapons charges in New Orleans". Reuters. Retrieved April 8, 2015.
  7. Janet, McConnaughey (14 April 2015). "Millionaire Robert Durst pleads not guilty to federal charge". Associated Press. Retrieved 14 April 2015.
  8. 1 2 "Louisiana gun case against millionaire Durst dropped, lawyer says". Associated Press (Fox News). April 23, 2015. Retrieved April 23, 2015.
  9. "Robert Durst Indicted on Gun Charges in New Orleans". The New York Times. 9 April 2015.
  10. "Robert Durst's state gun case dropped by New Orleans DA Leon Cannizzaro's office". NOLA.com.
  11. 1 2 Bagli, Charles V. (February 3, 2016). "Robert Durst Pleads Guilty to Gun Charges, Setting Up Possible Murder Trial". The New York Times. Retrieved February 3, 2016.
  12. "Robert Durst to Be Extradited for Murder Charge". The New York Times. 23 December 2015.
  13. 1 2 "Robert Durst won't sign New Orleans plea deal this year". NOLA.com.
  14. Los Angeles Times (22 December 2015). "Robert Durst will return to L.A. to face murder charge in the summer". latimes.com.
  15. 1 2 http://abc13.com/news/robert-durst-to-enter-plea-on-gun-charge-in-february/1174443/
  16. 1 2 http://www.people.com/article/lawyer-says-medical-complications-delaying-robert-dursts-extradition
  17. 1 2 http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/08/nyregion/robert-durst-pleads-not-guilty-to-2000-murder-in-los-angeles.html
  18. Wall Street Journal: "Taking the Helm to Change City Landscape" by Dana Rubinstein December 10, 2011
  19. http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/18/nyregion/a-durst-sibling-recounts-the-violent-ripples-below-a-charming-surface.html?_r=0
  20. Jonathan Bandler (February 7, 2015). "Robert Durst admits lying about wife's disappearance on HBO". The Journal News. Retrieved March 15, 2015. Robert Durst addresses her 1950 suicide at the family's home in Scarsdale when he was 7. Durst claims his father, Seymour, walked him over to a hall window and showed him Bernice Durst standing on the roof. "I waved at Mommy. I don't know if she saw me," he said. "It never went through my mind that, 'What is she doing on the roof in her nightie?'" He didn't see her fall but said he heard the maid shouting, "'She's off the roof.'" "I never forgot it," he said. "It never left me."
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