Boston Herald

Robert Durst guilty of best friend’s murder

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INGLEWOOD, Calif. — A Los Angeles jury convicted Robert Durst on Friday of murdering his best friend 20 years ago, a case that took on new life after the New York real estate heir participat­ed in a documentar­y that connected him to the slaying that was linked to his wife’s 1982 disappeara­nce.

Durst, 78, was not in court for the verdict from the jury that deliberate­d about seven hours over three days. He was in isolation at a jail because he was exposed to someone with coronaviru­s.

Durst, who faces a mandatory term of life in prison without parole when sentenced Oct. 18, was convicted of the first-degree murder of Susan Berman. She was shot at point-blank range in the back of the head in her Los Angeles home in December 2000 as she was prepared to tell police how she helped cover up his wife’s killing.

Berman, the daughter of a Las Vegas mobster, was Durst’s longtime confidante who told friends she provided a phony alibi for him after his wife vanished.

Prosecutor­s painted a portrait of a rich narcissist who didn’t think the laws applied to him and ruthlessly disposed of people who stood in his way.

They interlaced evidence of Berman’s killing with Kathie Durst’s suspected death and the 2001 killing of a tenant in a Texas flophouse where Robert Durst holed up while on the run from New York authoritie­s.

Durst was arrested in 2015 while hiding out in a New Orleans hotel on the eve of the airing of the final episode of “The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst,” in which he was confronted with incriminat­ing evidence and made what prosecutor­s said was a confession.

Durst could be heard muttering to himself on a live microphone in a bathroom: “There it is. You’re caught.”

Durst’s decision to testify in his own defense — hoping for a repeat of his acquittal in the Texas killing — backfired, as he was forced to admit lying under oath, made damning admissions and had his credibilit­y destroyed when questioned by the prosecutor.

The conviction marks a victory for authoritie­s who have sought to put Durst behind bars for murder in three states. Durst was never charged in the disappeara­nce of his wife, who has never been found, and he was acquitted of murder in Galveston, TX, where he admitted dismemberi­ng the victim’s body and tossing it out to sea.

The story of Durst, the estranged scion of a New York real estate developer, has been fodder for New York tabloids since his wife vanished. He provided plot twists so numerous that Hollywood couldn’t resist making a feature film about his life that eventually led to the documentar­y and discovery of new evidence in Berman’s slaying.

Durst ran from the law multiple times, disguised as a mute woman in Texas and staying under an alias at a New Orleans hotel with a shoulders-to-head latex mask for a presumed getaway.

He jumped bail in Texas and was arrested after shopliftin­g a chicken sandwich in Pennsylvan­ia, despite having $37,000 in cash — along with two handguns — in his rental car.

He later quipped that he was “the worst fugitive the world has ever met.”

 ?? Getty ImaGes ?? MASKED UP: Deputy District Attorney Habib A. Balian holds a rubber latex mask, donned by Robert Durst when police arrested him.
Getty ImaGes MASKED UP: Deputy District Attorney Habib A. Balian holds a rubber latex mask, donned by Robert Durst when police arrested him.
 ?? Getty ImaGes ?? ‘THE WORST FUGITIVE’: New York real estate heir Robert Durst has reportedly been found guilty of first-degree murder in the killing of Susan Berman.
Getty ImaGes ‘THE WORST FUGITIVE’: New York real estate heir Robert Durst has reportedly been found guilty of first-degree murder in the killing of Susan Berman.

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