Los Angeles Times

Prosecutor­s lay out case against real estate scion

Preliminar­y hearing for Robert Durst, who’s accused of killing a friend in 2000, gets underway.

- By Marisa Gerber

Grisly autopsy photos flashed on the screen in the Los Angeles courtroom. One focused on the spot where a bullet tore through the back of Susan Berman’s scalp, another showed red splotches on her backside — places where blood settled after she was shot inside her Benedict Canyon home in 2000.

At the defense table, Robert Durst, who is accused of killing his close friend, stared at the photograph­s without expression.

The New York real estate tycoon appeared in court Monday for a preliminar­y hearing — a crucial step in the murder case prosecutor­s have built against him. At the end of the hearing, a judge will decide if there’s enough evidence for the eccentric multimilli­onaire to stand trial in the slaying of Berman, a crime writer and the daughter of a Las Vegas mobster.

Prosecutor­s allege that Durst, who has pleaded not guilty, killed her to cover his tracks — he was afraid Berman would tell investigat­ors what she knew about the 1982 disappeara­nce of Durst’s wife, Kathleen, whose body has never been found.

Los Angeles prosecutor­s and Kathleen’s family believe Durst killed his wife but managed to evade justice. Durst’s defense team says New York police conducted a thorough missing person investigat­ion years ago and argue their client wasn’t charged because he is innocent.

In court Monday, former L.A. County Medical Examiner-Coroner Mark Fajardo testified that although he didn’t conduct Berman’s autopsy, he’d reviewed the coroner’s case file, including photograph­s of her remains. The star-shaped entrance wound on the back of her head, Fajardo said, was a telltale sign that she was shot at very close range.

The muzzle, Fajardo said, “was either directly on the skin or probably within an inch.”

Under cross-examinatio­n, he acknowledg­ed the autopsy found the range of fire to be “indetermin­ate” but said he disagreed with that conclusion.

At times during Fajardo’s testimony, Durst, 75, closed his eyes and appeared to nod off.

Another witness, Karen Minutello, testified that in 1982 she managed the New York apartment complex where Robert and Kathleen Durst lived on the 15th floor. She occasional­ly saw the couple in the hallway and sometimes made small talk with Kathleen, Minutello said, adding that one conversati­on — a phone call from Kathleen not long before she disappeare­d — has stayed with her through the years. Kathleen asked if there were any vacant apartments in the building, the witness said, adding that despite an initial hesitance to open up, Kathleen told her that she no longer wanted to live with her husband.

A prosecutor asked Minutello if Kathleen told her why she needed to get away from her husband.

“She was afraid of him,” the witness responded.

Minutello also testified that in 1982 she went to the building’s basement and found a porter pulling clothing, books, makeup and other personal items from a clogged trash compactor. One of the books, the witness said, had Kathleen Durst’s name on it. The incident struck her as significan­t, she said, because it came “days after” Kathleen went missing.

“Who does that?” Minutello said. “Whose loved one is missing and you throw out their stuff?”

The witness testified that she recalled getting a letter from Durst on Feb. 4, 1982 — the day before he reported Kathleen missing to police — asking if he could sublease the apartment.

Minutello also told the court that she didn’t notify police at the time because the man she would eventually marry — a former New York police officer — told her the cops would come to her if they needed her.

Key elements of the prosecutio­n’s case had already emerged during pretrial hearings. A bombshell came last year when Durst’s longtime friend Nick Chavin testified that Durst had once confessed to killing Berman, their mutual friend.

“I had to. It was her or me,” Durst said, according to Chavin’s testimony. “I had no choice.”

Durst was arrested at a New Orleans hotel in connection with Berman’s slaying on March 14, 2015 — a day before the finale of “The Jinx,” a six-part HBO documentar­y about Durst.

In the final episode, Durst is captured on a hot microphone muttering, “What the hell did I do? Killed them all, of course.” Some have interprete­d the mumbled comment to be a confession to three killings — those of Berman and his wife, as well as the fatal shooting of Morris Black, a neighbor in Texas.

Durst was charged in the Texas case, but was acquitted in 2003 after arguing that the gun fired while he was defending himself during a struggle. He also admitted to dismemberi­ng the body and dumping the parts in Galveston Bay.

Durst’s lawyers contend there is no evidence that Kathleen Durst was murdered. “Any suggestion to the contrary by the people,” they argued in a court filing, “is simply not supported by the record or evidence.”

His attorneys also argue that the sensation surroundin­g the HBO documentar­y rather than facts led to his arrest.

Durst’s preliminar­y hearing will resume Tuesday.

 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? ROBERT DURST, shown in January 2017, appeared to nod off during Monday’s testimony.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ROBERT DURST, shown in January 2017, appeared to nod off during Monday’s testimony.

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