New York Daily News

Durst’s 2nd wife targeted in lawsuit by Kathie kin

- BY LARRY MCSHANE

Convicted killer Robert Durst’s recent death will bring new life to a lawsuit in the 1982 slaying of his first wife.

A New York attorney representi­ng the family of Kathie McCormack Durst plans a $100 million wrongful death filing against the multimilli­onaire murderer’s estate, with the late real estate heir’s second wife, Debrah Charatan, among his targets in additional planned legal actions.

Lawyer Robert Abrams mentioned the widow and unidentifi­ed others who allegedly helped cover up Kathie’s killing. The first Mrs. Durst disappeare­d 40 years ago and was eventually declared legally dead, although her body was never recovered.

“We’re not about to let Debrah Charatan dissolve the [Durst] trust and get tens of millions of dollars more,” said Abrams. “You don’t get tens of millions of dollars in America for covering up a murder.”

The McCormack family’s prior wrongful death suit in the case was thrown out after missing a legal deadline for filing, but Abrams said New

York law would offer a second chance because Durst (inset) was charged in his missing wife’s death last year.

Two months ago, Westcheste­r County prosecutor­s announced a second-degree murder indictment against Durst for killing Kathie, last seen alive on Jan. 31, 1982. Charatan’s attorney Scott Epstein dismissed the announced court filing as “more suitable for a work of fiction” than a courtroom in the longcold case that received revived public attention after the airing of a damning six-part documentar­y “The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst.”

According to Abrams, Charatan’s 2000 marriage was a ploy to help Durst dodge charges when a new investigat­ion into his first wife’s disappeara­nce was launched.

Durst’s second wife, who met him in 1988, was never charged with any crime connected to Durst, and her attorneys previously argued she had nothing to do with what happened to his first bride.

Durst was convicted last year in the 2000 killing of his best friend, Susan Berman, by a California jury, with lawyers arguing he executed her over fears that she planned to expose his role in Kathie Durst’s slaying by admitting she provided him with a bogus alibi.

Durst, who died last Monday at age 78 in a California hospital, testified at his Los Angeles trial last year that he did not kill his wife or his pal Berman, although the one-time scion of The Durst Organizati­on acknowledg­ed he would have lied about the murders if he had committed them.

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