US tycoon arrested over 2000 murder
LOS ANGELES—An eccentric US tycoon was charged on Monday over the execution-style killing of a mobster’s daughter and could face death if found guilty, in the latest installment of a TV murder mystery which has captivated America.
Robert Durst, 71, the scion of a New York real estate dynasty worth $4.4 billion, was charged in Los Angeles with murder over the 2000 death of his close friend Susan Berman, after he was arrested in New Orleans on Saturday. He is awaiting extradition to California.
Durst appeared to make an unwitting confession to a catalogue of killings during filming of the final episode of the acclaimed six-part HBO documentary “The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst.” In the finale, broadcast on Sunday, Durst is heard muttering to himself, “What the hell did I do? Killed them all, of course”—apparently unaware that a wireless microphone remained switched on while he used the bathroom.
It was not clear if Durst was sincerely confessing, but authorities in Los Angeles reportedly said the television documentary had played a role in their decision to seek the multimillion- aire’s arrest for Berman’s murder.
Durst’s lawyer Dick DeGuerin said earlier on Monday his client was innocent and ready to face trial in California.
“Bob Durst didn’t kill Susan Berman. He’s ready to end all of the rumor and speculation,” DeGuerin said outside a courthouse in New Orleans after Durst had waived his right to challenge extradition to the western US state.
“We’re ready to go to California and have a trial,” DeGuerin added.
Durst’s extradition may be delayed however by the possibility of authorities in New Orleans filing weapons charges against him.
In Los Angeles, Durst was charged with the murder of Berman, the District Attorney’s Office said, citing special circumstances which make him eligible for the death penalty, although prosecutors will only decide on that later.
Berman was shot in the back of her head at her home in Beverly Hills, a day before she was due to be questioned by police who had reopened an investigation into the 1982 disappearance of the tycoon’s wife, Kathie Durst, in New York.