Morbid - Episode 670: The Crimes of Robert Durst (Part 2)
Episode Date: May 8, 2025In October 2001, the dismembered remains of seventy-one-year-old Morris Black were found floating in Galveston Bay. A few days later, Black’s neighbor, Robert Durst, was arrested on suspici...on of murder and released on $250,000 bail. After posting bail, Durst jumped bail and disappeared for six weeks, before being arrested by Pennsylvania authorities at the end of November.In the years that followed, investigators and prosecutors began combing through Durst’s life, discovering disturbing connections between the excentric millionaire and the mysterious disappearances and deaths of several people who were once close to Durst. Robert Durst had been a suspect in the murder of Morris Black, but was it possible he was in fact a multiple murderer who’d evaded detection for decades?Thank you to the Incredible Dave White of Bring Me the Axe Podcast for research and Writing support!ReferencesAssociated Press. 2001. "Fugitive is arrested in Galveston man's death." Fort Worth Star-Telegram, December 1: 26.Babineck, Mark. 2001. "A mysterious trail left in Galveston." Austin American-Statesman, October 20: 25.Bagli, Charles. 2020. "4 decades of Durst's past are traced as trial begins." New York Times, March 11.—. 2021. "Durst faces new charge for murder of his wife." New York Times, October 23.—. 2021. "Durst is convicted of murder after 2 decades of suspicion." New York Times, September 18.—. 2021. "Durst is sentenced to life in prison for 2000 murder of friend." New York Times, October 15.—. 2020. "Real estate scion admits he wrote note in case profiled in 'The Jinx'." New York Times, January 1.—. 2014. "Stranger than fiction? Try fact." New York Times, December 2.Bagli, Charles V., and Kevin Flynn. 2001. "A two-decade spiral into suspicion." New York Times, October 21: A33.Bagli, Charles, and Kevin Flynn. 2001. "On the run with a fugitive: tales of aliases and disguises." New York Times, December 7: D1.Bagli, Charles, and Vivian Yee. 2015. "Straight from TV to jail: Durt is charged in killing." New York Times, March 16.Cartwright, Gary. 2002. "Durst case scenarios." Texas Monthly, February: 87-112.Collins, Marion. 2002. Without a Trace: Inside the Robert Durst Case. New York, NY: St. Martin's Press.Forbes. 2020. Durst family. December December. Accessed March 28, 2025. https://www.forbes.com/profile/durst/.Gerber, Marisa. 2021. "The Hollywood ‘Mafia princess’ was Robert Durst’s best friend. Did loyalty lead to murder?" Los Angeles Times, May 21.Hale, Mike. 2024. "Conversations on murder." New York Times, April 24.2015. The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst. Directed by Andrew Jarecki. Performed by Andrew Jarecki.Lozano, Juan. 2003. "Juey to see Galveston case evidence." Austin American-Statesman, August 14: 21.—. 2003. "Officer testifies there's no direct evidence against heir." Austin American-Statesman, October 21: 17.—. 2003. "Murder trial gets under way for multimillionaire Robert Durst." Fort Worth Star-Telegram, September 23: 21.Miller, Julie. 2015. "Robert Durst may have had a Mission Impossible-style plan to flee the country." Vanity Fair, March 18.Palmer, Alex. 2015. The Creepiest Things Robert Durst Says in His All Good Things DVD Commentary. April 15. Accessed April 1, 2025. https://www.vulture.com/2015/04/robert-dursts-all-good-things-dvd-commentary.html.Reporter-Dispatch. 1950. "Durst death in Scarsdale ruled an accident." Reporter-Dispatch (New York, NY), November 10: 9.Stewart, Richard, and Kevin Moran. 2003. "Millionaire is acquitted of murder." Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Nevember 12: 1.Streeter, Kurt. 2001. "N.Y. police had sought to quiz slain author." Los Angeles Times, January 9: 28.Zeman, Ned. 2020. "He also decided to kill her." Vanity Fair, April 23.—. 2015. "The fugitive heir." Vanity Fair, March 16.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey weirdos, it's Ash. Before we dive into today's twisted tale, let me tell you about
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Lamont Jones is shattered when his cousin dies just weeks after entering prison. The
official report says natural causes, but bruises and missing teeth tell a different story.
Wondery presents Death County PA, a chilling true story of corruption and cover-ups. Follow Hey, Weirdos. I'm Ash. This is morbid and we've had a good day.
I know it's been a hectic good day.
Yeah, it's a creative day, a very fun day.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's been a blast.
I figured out a technical issue.
She did. I watched her do it.
I never figure out technical issues,
and this is big for me.
She figured, the only reason you're hearing our voices right now
is because Ash figured it out.
You know when that's ever happened?
Not before this.
None.
None, as your youngest would say, none times.
They have none done that.
Yeah, so we're feeling good.
And yeah, I'm trying to think if there's anything really exciting happening.
Really exciting?
I feel like there's so many exciting things happening that we can't talk about.
I know, but we will.
Don't worry.
We're not being one of those people who are like, we can't talk about it.
We just have so many things happening. I just can't tell you.
But you will absolutely find out about these things.
What was fun the other night going to Ronnie and Ben's live show.
That was so much fun.
And by the time you hear this, that will have been approximately 32 months ago.
But it was just no, we had a great time.
We did.
We had a great time.
Ronnie and Ben from Watch What Crappens came to Boston
for a show.
I laughed so hard during that show that my jaw hurt.
Oh my god.
If you love reality television, specifically Bravo,
and you're not listening to Watch What Crappens,
Ronnie and Ben, for anybody out there that doesn't know,
they recap these shows.
But they do it in such a magical way.
They do the voices of every- Yeah, they impersonate all the housewives. Yeah, they recap these shows, but they do it in such a magical way. They like do the voices.
Yeah, they impersonate all the housewives. Yeah, they impersonate everything like summer house,
housewives. They even do their Patreon. They do white lotus recaps, which are so much fun.
It's very worth it. They're very, they're hilarious. They put out insane amounts of content.
Truly. And they're just like the loveliest human beings.
We love them.
Yeah, they're great.
So that was a lot of fun.
We got to meet a lot of weirdos there.
I know that was so fun.
So that was a lot of fun.
If we ran into you, it was lovely and we were very happy to run into you.
Yeah.
We met a lot of Massachusetts girlies.
Yeah.
We met a lot of Boston girlies around the town.
It was fun.
In town sisters, if you will.
It was fun. It was. We loved it. Yeah. And it made us really want to like, we were like, Ooh,
looks like fun at the Wilba.
We might've texted our touring manager.
We might.
Not for a tour.
Not for a tour.
Not for a tour. Let's be clear.
Yeah.
We have a touring manager, even though we don't tour.
He's often sad.
He is often sad. In fact, he didn't believe us that we wanted. We. He's often sad.
He is often sad.
In fact, he didn't believe us that we wanted.
We were like, what if we did like one show on like this date?
And he was like, I don't believe you.
He was like, yeah, sure.
He's like, I'll look into dates, but I don't believe you.
So you know what?
Maybe that's in the future.
Maybe.
The future is bright, everybody.
Oh, I was trying.
I have to wear shades, it's so bright. I was about to go, future. Oh, I was trying. I was like, where shades it's so bright.
I was about to go future.
And then I didn't know why.
And it's that it's the Sabrina.
Yes. It's like season three or something.
Yeah. Sabrina, the teenage witch's intro gets you chair.
Is it saying future? Is it?
Probably not.
Everybody knows I sing the wrong lyrics.
Is it not? No, because now you got me in my head.
Hold on, I'm going to Google it.
That one I think is future.
No, it's saying...
It's not?
It's not future. It doesn't even sound like that at all.
Do you know how many times this happened to me in my lifetime?
It happens so much.
Guys, it doesn't say future.
No, it's a secret.
It's a secret.
I knew it.
I was like, future, I know it's not, but then all I had was future in my head, so I couldn't
go to it.
No, what it is is that I'm so compelling.
You are.
You're very compelling.
You compelled future into my head.
Wow.
Yeah.
Now I feel like I'm singing that for like another purpose. Like future. Very compelling. You compelled future into my head. Wow. Yeah.
Now I feel like I'm singing that for like another purpose.
That like future.
Maybe you are.
I don't know.
You just connected it to the wrong nostalgia bomb.
I don't know. Let me know in the comments.
But either way, the main part of that
was the future is bright.
Yeah, I was wondering how we even-
Lots of fun plans for the future.
How we even got there.
The near future, so.
So let's get into it.
I'm ready for part two.
Let's get into part two of Robert Durst
because this guy sucks.
Yeah.
That's accurate.
Yeah, he sucks a lot.
I wanna rewatch the drinks though.
You should.
It has an amazing theme song.
I know, we talked about that last time.
Fresh Blood by The Eels.
I think that theme song was actually in Yellow Jackets,
the last episode I watched, and I said,
-"Oh, I love this song." -"Yeah, that song goes fucking hard."
It goes hard, and the actual documentary is wild.
Sorry, I'm already getting us off course,
but that's my role in life.
I am rewatching The Staircase right now.
Oh, yeah, I remember that one.
Which I actually never finished.
I started it a long, long, long time ago.
That's a crazy one.
It's interesting.
It's on Netflix right now.
I don't think I watched the whole thing.
It's long.
I think it's like 13 episodes or something.
And it's a very differently done documentary.
Like you're seeing step by step.
Yeah, you're seeing a lot.
So I watched like the first four or five episodes
last weekend.
I wanna finish that one.
Like I'm into it. And I don't know what happens in finish that one. Like, I'm into it.
And I don't know what happens in that case,
so maybe afterwards I'll cover it.
Yeah, it's definitely a good one to cover, I would say.
For sure.
Anyway.
When we last left you guys with part one,
Robert Dyrs' wife, Kathy, has disappeared.
Yeah, and he's not being normal about it.
He doesn't seem like he...
Like, after a few months, he kind of, like,
retreated out of the spotlight.
He wouldn't give another interview.
And he also stopped returning the detective's calls,
which definitely made the detective suspicious, for sure.
Yeah, usually when you want to find your wife,
you return all the police's phone calls.
Yeah, and we have, like, certain witnesses
were now coming back and saying,
actually, I don't know if I saw her when I said
I thought I saw her because I saw her from the back.
I just saw a lady with brown hair from behind.
Things are crumbling a little bit.
So, well, Robert Durst seemed pretty uninterested
in trying to find his wife,
which in and of itself is very concerning.
Kathy's friends, Gilbert Najimy and Eleanor Schwank, had gone into way higher gear.
He's retreating back. They're going into higher gear trying to find Kathy because this is their
friend. So Najimy and Schwank, more than anyone else, knew the extent of the abuse that was
happening in this relationship at Robert's hands. And they knew the fear that Kathy had felt a lot.
And neither of them had trusted Robert Dyrs' timeline
of events or explanation of what happened.
They just both were like, no, doesn't add up.
Which when your friends are already thinking that
your husband is the reason you're missing,
there was a problem.
Like there was a problem in that we should take these people seriously.
So the problem was though, they couldn't find any actual solid evidence to prove he was
lying or that he had anything to do with the disappearance.
It was just kind of like, we know what was happening and we think this is suspicious.
In that way, they were like, detective struck.
All of them were hitting dead ends.
At the same time, Robert had dropped off the map completely at this point. In that way, they were like detective struck. All of them were hitting dead ends.
At the same time, Robert had dropped off the map completely at this point.
He stopped going to work, stopped returning phone calls, and stopped talking to friends.
What the fuck?
Where'd he go?
Apparently, his friend Doug Oliver said he retreated into himself and any messages he
had for the outside world were conveyed only through his closest
friend Susan Berman.
Durst finally returned to work the following year and continued making-
The following year?
Yeah, the next year.
This is when he continued making major real estate deals.
So he just jumped right back in all around the city and they were both on behalf of the
Durst organization
and himself as an individual.
Oh, wow, okay.
So detectives struck in the NYPD,
they continued following any new leads on Cathy's case.
But again, they were getting few and far between,
and soon the case just went cold.
Yeah.
Now in the years that followed Cathy's disappearance,
because it's so sad, she just disappeared.
Robert Durst settled into being a single guy, a wealthy Manhattan real estate developer,
really tough role to fall back into, I suppose.
So hard, I bet.
But behind the scenes, things were anything but good.
Robert's lack of enthusiasm for the business, because remember, he never really wanted to
enter that business.
Yeah, he wanted like a health food store.
He wanted to open a shop.
Yeah, it just worked out.
So like he never really wanted to do this,
but it's just like that was the family business
and it paid a lot of money.
Yeah.
So he just went with it.
So his lack of enthusiasm for the business
and his reckless and very scandalous personal life
led his father to skip over Robert
and leave the company to his younger brother, Douglas.
Oh, that's a bad hit.
Douglas had shown like a lot of enthusiasm
for the business, a lot of passion for this world.
So he was the obvious choice.
Yeah, it's very fair.
It's very succession.
It is.
It is.
Douglas and Robert had always had
a very difficult relationship and Douglas's promotion to the
head of the Durst Organization only made things worse.
Which I can imagine.
That would be a tense family dinner.
Yeah, I feel like it's very like Connor and Kendall Roy.
Yeah.
You know, in succession.
Go watch Succession.
If you haven't watched that yet, you're missing out on fucking great television.
Succession is one of the best shows
I've ever seen in my life.
I can say that with full confidence,
it is in my top three shows of all time.
And I love Roman more than life.
Yeah, the characters are so good.
Yeah, so you hate them all too at the same time,
but they're wonderful. Just to be clear.
Yeah, they're the worst.
But by the end of the 1980s,
Robert stopped going to work at the Durst Organization and
cut off communication with his family.
Again.
Again.
Okay.
Not long after, he stopped communicating again with his friends altogether.
One friend said, he separated from everyone in New York.
It was a loss of face in his mind.
So him losing that was like a big reputation blow, an ego blow.
But everybody knew that you didn't give a shit about it anyway.
Yeah, that's the thing.
Work a little harder.
Hard work, my friends.
So this is the thing, it's like he, Kathy disappears, he retreats.
He retreats even further.
Then he just suddenly reappears again, tries to go hard at everything, gets this blow to
his ego, retreats back again.
Like he can't handle any disruption in the path.
So Durst spent most of the 1990s drifting back and forth
between Connecticut, Texas, and Manhattan.
Random.
In 1995, he showed up at his father's hospital
at his bedside when Seymour Durst was dying,
but only after his brother and sister agreed
to leave the hospital so he wouldn't
have to see or talk to either of them.
When your dad is dying, you got to put your petty differences aside.
Well, it's like I just like I would be if the differences are that like, which like,
obviously no one knows what goes on in any one family.
Yeah, the interpersonal relationships.
It's difficult to tell what was happening.
If the if the issue the beef is just that you got skipped over for the...
That's what I mean.
The business, then you gotta put it aside.
You know what I mean?
That's just, what are you doing?
Right.
That's petty as hell.
That's trivial at a time when someone's dying.
It is.
It's just one of those things.
Obviously, there are other scenarios where...
Well, you just never know.
It's hard to tell.
But he also refused to go to the funeral. Wow. That's really shitty. I mean, it's, it's
gnarly. I mean, there's a statement. There are funerals I might skip. So, yeah. So I
mean, like, I can't, I, again, I didn't live his life in his house. Thank goodness. So
through all of his, you know, tumult, essentially, like he just couldn't get it together.
The only constant in Dierth's life has been who?
Susan.
Susan Berman.
Susan.
However, Berman's life in the 80s and 90s hadn't been the easiest.
She had written a few novels and even optioned some of them for films, but they all kind
of fell through.
Oh.
And the novels she did publish didn't sell nearly as well
as she had expected them to.
Despite the financial disappointments,
Berman had purchased a large house in Brentwood,
one of California's wealthiest neighborhoods.
At the time, she'd grown really, really paranoid
of the world around her.
Like she was just retreating.
She nailed the windows of her house shut
and bolted all the doors whenever she was at retreating. She nailed the windows of her house shut and bolted
all the doors whenever she was at home. Which is like really sad. Yeah, that's like straight up
agoraphobia. Yeah. By the late 1990s, Berman had moved to a much smaller house in Benedict Canyon,
just north of Beverly Hills. Again, she hadn't seen much financial success, but she managed to
make enough money to get by selling a few novels, producing a series for cable TV. She was doing some things. By that time, her marriage had fallen
apart and she divorced her husband. So she was living alone. She was driving a 1984 car
that would occasionally catch fire. Oh, you know, and constantly borrowing money from
friends. So she was struggling. I'm just a little stuck on her car occasionally catching fire.
You got to end with that. You can't really stuff that in the middle.
Yeah. I really liked putting that in the middle.
I'm sorry for Susan for everything she was experiencing, but specifically her car
occasionally catching fire. Yeah. For like just from time to time.
Every once in a while, you know. What? Yeah.
She's going through it.
Yeah, she is going through it.
She's got a lot going on, the divorce, the move,
the not selling the novels like she was hoping to,
she's borrowing money from friends,
the car is catching on fire, like there's a lot.
That's a lot on your mental health.
The one thing Susan did have
and knew she always would have was Robert Durst.
Which I don't know if that's a prize.
Yeah, I would say no.
In the late 90s, Durst had been difficult to get a hold of and the two hadn't spoken
in months.
Okay.
So that must've been tough.
Finally, in August 2000, Susan sent a letter to Robert, care of the Durst organization,
asking him to get in touch.
She had needed to borrow $7,000 to buy a new car.
Because it caught on fire too many times.
Susan Cate Or 1984 one is catching on fire. But more than that,
she missed her best friend and needed some support. She was just like, I miss you. I just need
somebody who I think cares about me. Nicole Sarris
Yeah, or at least did at some point. Susan Cate
Months passed and no word came. Nicole Sarris
Oh, that must have really hurt. Susan Cate
Then in November, a check for $25,000 arrived in the mail.
That's a little more than she asked for.
With a note that read, it's not a loan, it's a gift, and you can always count on me.
I want a friend like that.
Which like, damn.
Not in this scenario, but damn.
Yeah.
$25,000, it's not a loan, it's a gift.
Yeah, it was literally a miracle for her.
Like this was- Of course it was.
It allowed her to pay off some debt, buy a car.
Like she was really, it allowed her to climb out
of a little bit of the hole she was in.
But less than two weeks later, Susan Berman was dead.
Oh.
Yeah.
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On December 24th, Berman's next door neighbors noticed that the back door to her house had
been slightly open for some time and one of her dogs had gotten loose.
Given how paranoid Susan had been about safety, the situation seemed very unusual to this
couple, so they called the police.
When officers arrived at Susan Berman's home, they found Susan inside on the floor, lying
in a pool of dried blood, a single bullet hole to the back of her head.
Oh, geez.
To investigators, the murder appeared
to be a professional execution.
Like one might expect to see out of like a mafia hit,
essentially, and given Susan's family background,
because remember where Susan comes from, from part one.
Yes.
A mob hit wouldn't have been completely
out of the question.
And she just came into this like money as well.
A little bit of money here.
Oh wow.
Also there didn't appear to be any sign of struggle
in the house and Berman's purse was lying
in plain view with nothing missing.
Holy shit.
So it wasn't like it was a robbery.
Right.
It's so funny.
Like I have seen this documentary,
but I forgot a lot of this.
It's been a while since that came out.
Yeah, I mean, I think I saw that like 10 years ago.
The idea that Susan Berman had been killed by a member of an organized crime family may
not have been entirely unrealistic, but it also wasn't very likely.
Yeah, because like mob hits are happening like all over the place.
Well, and a lot of times it like women aren't involved.
Yeah.
So after all, you know, by 2000, the US government had almost completely eradicated the original
crime families.
And it seemed kind of impossible that her murder could have anything to do with her
father's criminal activity.
Yeah.
Because he had died decades earlier.
So it's not like he was like out and about doing some shady shit.
Yeah.
But as investigators soon learned, Susan's father wasn't the only connection she had
to criminal activity.
Okay.
In fact, nearly 20 years earlier, the wife of Susan's best friend, Robert Durst, had
gone missing and he had been the prime suspect in her disappearance.
This is true.
Connection.
There it is.
So based on the crime scene, investigators theorized that Berman had known her attacker.
There was no sign of struggle, no sign of forced entry.
And remember, she's like Fort Knox.
She's locked in there.
She would have let somebody in there that she trusted.
She had to let somebody in if somebody came in.
And she'd obviously turned her back on them long enough for the killer to aim and fire
the gun.
Something she wasn't gonna do for most people.
There was also the unusual letter
Beverly Hills Police received a few days
after Berman's body was found.
It was dated December 23rd, the day before she was discovered.
And the letter was addressed to the Beverly Hills Police,
it was also spelled wrong,
it had an extra E in Beverly, L E Y, and contained
an anonymous note with Berman's address and the word cadaver.
Oh, yeah. That's chilling. Yeah. And just like that. Not long after the note was received,
someone pointed out that the misspelling of the word Beverly on the envelope was a typo that Durst was known to commonly make.
He commonly spelled Beverly wrong this way.
However, when he was confronted with the letter,
he of course vehemently denied having written or sent it.
But that is a strange coincidence
that he just happens to misspell this word.
Yeah, that's real specific.
Yeah, it's worth noting that this was Durst's position
on the matter for nearly 20 years.
Damn.
Until 2019 when his legal team acknowledged that Durst had in fact sent the letter.
But that quote didn't change the fact that Bob Durst did not kill Susan Berman.
Oh, so he just sent the letter and knew that there was a dead body in her home?
That's his cadaver.
Like, come on.
He just sent that?
Sometimes with shit like that, I'm like,
I know you gotta do what you gotta do,
but are you guys fucking for real right now?
Are you really arguing that?
I mean, you gotta do it, I guess.
I don't know how judges just don't say,
are you fucking for real right now?
I'd be so for real right now.
Be so fucking for real.
Let's be straight up here.
Come on.
So when friends learned of Berman's death, some thought of her father and his connection to the mob Like, be so fucking for real. Let's be straight up here. Like, come on.
So when friends learned of Berman's death, some thought of her father and his connection
to the mob.
Because for much of her young life, Susan had known very little about her father's business.
And it was only when she was an adult and he was long dead that she kind of started
learning about his brutal, murderous past.
Oh, so maybe people are thinking like she's diving into this.
She's going too close.
Yeah.
Others though, thought of Robert Durst.
Yeah, I can see why.
Berman's friend, Christian Clark said,
it has bothered me and haunted me virtually every day
for 20 years.
Oh, I can't imagine that.
Yeah.
When Clark learned of Morris Black's death
and Durst's arrest, she immediately thought of Susan
and was more convinced than ever that he was involved.
It turned out that Christianne Clark wasn't the only one who suspected Durst could have
been responsible for Susan Berman's murder.
Detectives in California also found his connection to the victim to be very suspicious.
It turned out that just weeks before she was discovered, investigators in New York had
been trying to get in touch with Susan Berman to discuss the recently reopened case in the disappearance of Kathy
Durst.
Oh, shit.
Isn't that strange?
Yup.
That they were going to be contacting her and now she's murdered.
Oh, man.
And like, that's your best friend.
That's your best friend.
Like, obviously you don't have feelings, clearly.
Clearly. But like, that's your best friend. That's your best friend. Like obviously you don't have feelings clearly.
Clearly.
But like, damn.
Fuck.
Yeah.
Gilbert and Jimmy told a reporter, I find it hard to believe there's not a connection
between the Durst and Berman cases.
Yet as far as the LAPD was concerned, the LAPD, they were unwilling to publicly declare
Robert Durst a suspect.
Strange stance. At least until they had more information and evidence connecting him to the crime.
In the meantime, Robert was free to move about the country,
which is when he chose to relocate to Galveston, Texas, where he met Morris Black.
While he was in custody for the murder of Morris Black.
So in the future of it.
Yeah. So we had a little future trip. Now he's got off to Texas.
That's when the Morris Black bit happened.
That's also when he was impersonating someone else.
Yes.
Which tells you like a little bit about the headspace season.
While he was in custody for the murder of Morris Black, Robert Durst said nothing to
police and was freed on $250,000 bond pending arraignment, which was scheduled for the following
week on October 16th. It's like, obviously that's a high number, which was scheduled for the following week on October
16th.
It's like, obviously that's a high number, but also he's a rich person.
Exactly.
He can do that in a second.
That's not great.
Unfortunately for investigators, October 16th arrived and Robert Durst was nowhere to be
found.
Yeah.
You guys shocked?
Yeah.
When he failed to show up for his hearing, he was labeled a fugitive and law enforcement
agents were dispatched from Texas to hunt him down. Yeah.
At the same time, the judge revoked Durst's bail and tripled it to 750,000.
Even, I feel like if you're being held in question of a murder like that,
like that's a-
It should be a mill.
That's a brutal murder.
It should be a mill.
Morris Black was dismembered.
Yeah.
It should be a mill.
Or it should just be-
Baseline.
None.
Yeah.
No, but no option.
Yeah.
Like obviously, I don't know how all of that, like the intricacies of that, but still. It should just be fine. None. Yeah, no, but no option Yeah, like I don't know how that like the intricacies of that but still doesn't feel right
No now when asked about Durst fleeing, Texas authorities speculated that Robert Durst knew his chances with a jury
We're not going to be very good. Yeah, probably not
Lieutenant Mike Putnall said as much as there is about this case
We still do not know the one thing we're really confident in is the strength of the evidence.
While Durst's flight from Galveston wasn't necessarily evidence of his guilt, the evidence
against him definitely didn't look good.
And when they continued looking into his background, things only got stranger.
It turned out that the woman who paid Durst's bond a few weeks earlier, Deborah Lee Sheraton,
wasn't just an acquaintance, but his wife, who he'd married a few weeks before moving to Galveston.
The fuck?
For 45 days, investigators fielded calls with tips about potential Durst sightings.
So he's married now, by the way. His wife has now paid his bond.
But she didn't live in the apartment where he lived?
It's so messy.
There were rumors about his having fled to Mexico or other parts of Texas and reports
of sightings up and down the East Coast from New Orleans to New York.
Lead detective Cody Casales told reporters with his money, he could be anywhere.
If investigators were expecting to find Robert Durst in some far off country or tropical island somewhere, they were surely shocked when Durst was finally
arrested on November 30th after being caught stealing a sandwich from a Wegmans grocery
store in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. That is one detail of this story that I will never
forget as long as I live. Endless amounts of cash.
Steals a Sammy.
And he stole a goddamn sandwich.
Stole a Sammy.
From a Wegmans.
You stole it from a Weggies?
What's wrong with you?
Don't be stealing from Wegmans.
Don't you steal from a Weggies.
It's a great family, I think.
We love Wegmans.
I fuck so heavy with Wegmans.
Wegmans for life.
And the fact that you are a fucking fugitive on the run
with endless cash and you choose
to commit the stupidest crime.
Dumb.
Or just make your own goddamn sandwich.
You don't even have to buy one.
A man like that doesn't make his own sandwich.
Goddamn.
More bizarre than the shoplifting itself.
All the sammy.
Was the fact that when he was taken into custody, Durst had several hundred dollars in cash
on him and could have paid for that
sandwich or anything else he wanted in that store for that. He probably could have paid
for the store.
Also, what's the, like, I understand that like, like, uh, people who steal get some
kind of thrill. The fuck kind of thrill do you get from stealing a sandwich? It's going
to be gone in a minute.
That thrill is not worth, you're a fugitive thing.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm glad that you made that choice. That's not good. But still, like a sandwich that you're just gonna eat?
Yeah, it's like, what do you get out of that? What's the thrill there? Now, when asked about
Durst's demeanor following his arrest, store manager Kevin Strickles described Durst as
nervous from the standpoint that he got caught stealing. When he was asked why he'd risk shoplifting at a time like
that, because everybody wanted to know what I want to know, Durst replied, I don't know why I did it.
I guess I'm just an asshole. Self-aware, self-aware, period. The most valid statement.
To say, I guess I'm just an asshole. He is just an asshole. I mean, he's fully up front about it.
Just like, yeah, I guess I just suck.
I guess I'm just, but it's also kind of annoying
because it's like self-flagellating.
Oh, it's totally swarmy and like shitty.
No, not flagellating. What is it?
I always say self-flagellating.
You love to say farting.
It's flagellating.
It's so self-flagellating.
Well, it's very like, it's very like,
yeah, I guess I'm just an asshole and you all have to deal
with it.
Whatever.
Like the world has to accept that I'm an asshole.
Yeah, I should work on that or anything.
Yeah.
I shouldn't stop farting all over myself.
Start farting all over yourself.
Robert.
Robert.
A few months later, investigators released the details of the manhunt for Robert Durst,
which included tracking the millionaire across several states. According to those closest to the case, during his six
weeks on the run, he quote, used at least six aliases, many of them names drawn from
his past, like those of former classmates or a handyman he employed.
So weird. I couldn't keep track of all that.
That's what I don't understand about pathological liars.
Oh, I could absolutely not.
I can't lie like that.
No, I just get too confused.
I'd be overwhelmed.
He also posed as a woman at least twice
and he would dress as a woman and wore a wig
to really sell it.
I mean, he was doing that for years in that apartment.
Yep.
During the manhunt, Mike Putnall told reporters, we really don't have any idea where he was.
He wasn't accessing the bank accounts or using the credit cards we know of.
He took elaborate measures to avoid capture, but then he makes mistakes like stealing a
hoagie.
Not a hoagie.
We don't have those here.
We call them subs.
Oh, is that what that is?
I never really knew what a hoagie was.
Yeah, hoagie is not over here.
Oh, it's a sub.
That's a sub.
Ders wife.
Oh yeah.
Oh yeah.
Everyone remember he's married.
She attempted to withdraw a cool $1.8 million from the bank before investigators froze the
account.
I mean, she probably knew that shit was coming.
Just a quick yoink.
You need some spending money.
It's not going to freeze your assets.
A quick casual 1.8 million dollars.
Take two.
Yeah.
It's not great.
So the investigators froze the account.
Durst had also rented a car using Morris Black's identification.
But otherwise his trip was a series of motels and truck stops as he made his way from Texas
to the Northeast.
But I'd call that a smoking gun.
I would say so.
In September 2003, Robert Durst finally went on trial for the murder of Morris Black after
several failed attempts by his lawyer to get the trial delayed even further.
So they could come up with a fucking reason.
Try to come up with something. Several times Durst's defense attorney, Chip Lewis, argued that investigators had violated
his client's rights when they went through the trash cans outside the apartment building
in Galveston, where much of the evidence linking Durst to the murder was found.
Once your trash is outside, it's done.
Yeah, it's on the street, man.
Well, what are you talking about?
Lewis argued, the police officer tried to gain what he could not do by legal
means. He's the landlord as a pawn. The judge disagreed,
noting that the trash cans were the property of the city.
Exactly. And the full scope of the evidence was admitted.
I always thought trash was fair game. Yeah. If they're those trash cans belong to
the city, man. Yeah, you're just renting them. Described by the press as a quote, eccentric,
and this is by the press, this is not me.
He was described as a eccentric, cross-dressing
New York real estate heir.
Wolf.
Yeah, that's the press.
Wolf press.
Yeah, wolf press indeed.
Also stop, describe him as a murderer. Yeah, he's press indeed. Also, stop. Describe him as a murderer.
Yeah, he's a murderer, exactly.
Robert Durst's trial drew considerable attention
from news outlets around this country.
In his opening statement, the prosecutor, Kurt Sistrunk,
told the jury the case was a straightforward murder.
He said, this was no killing in self-defense.
There was no justified action in killing Morris Black.
It was nothing but a cold-blooded murder, all done without hesitation.
The prosecutor theorized that Durst, who was clearly hiding out in Texas,
had killed Black in order to assume his identity.
Oh, shit.
Which makes a lot of sense.
Yeah.
He's been on the run basically from everybody.
The defense, on the other hand, argued that Black's death was the result of an accidental shooting that occurred when in self-defense, Robert Durst grappled with Black over the
gun.
Defense attorney Dick DeGaron said, how he died will not be an issue.
Morris Black died as a result of a life and death struggle over a gun that Morris Black
had threatened Bob Durst with.
So how do you explain the dismemberment?
That's what I'm wondering.
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Lamont Jones' world is shattered when his cousin dies in custody just weeks after entering
prison. The official report says natural causes, but bruises and missing teeth tell a different
story. From Wondery comes Death County PA, a chilling true story of corruption and cover-ups
that begins as one man's search for answers, but soon reveals a disturbing pattern.
Lamont's cousin's death is just one of many, and powerful forces are working to keep
the truth buried.
With never-before-heard interviews and shocking revelations, Death County PA pulls back the
curtain on one of America's darkest institutional secrets.
This isn't just another true crime story.
It's happening right now. The defense acknowledged that there were sensational and, like you just stated, grotesque aspects
to the case, but reminded the jury that while Durst may have been involved, the prosecution
had no evidence to support the claim that he had intentionally murdered Morris Black.
Okay. But he definitely very intentionally dismembered his body with a paring knife.
And they're not, they're not arguing that they're saying it was self-defense and he
had to, you know.
I was, yeah.
We cross certain lines and we get to different places.
As for Durst's behavior after Black's death,
like you are discussing, Degarin said,
Durst was susceptible to panic
and has a personality that quote, runs from trouble.
I would say that's like a little bit different
than like running from trouble.
They're not arguing that he did that.
They're just like, well, he got upset.
Yeah.
You know, he kind of freaked out.
Panicked.
He panics.
He has a panic thing.
Bitch, I panic all the time.
I'm like, bitch, we're all panicking.
We can't be saying that that's okay.
This entire country is in a state of panic.
You can't be telling me that that's okay after you panic.
That's not the response.
All of this, they argued, was the result of Durst's fears
that Black was a violent man and had targeted Durst
in the weeks before his death.
Okay.
Going into the trial, investigators
in the prosecutor's office felt pretty confident
that they had everything they needed
to secure an easy conviction for murder.
Yeah.
After all, Durst didn't just shoot Morris Black to death.
He also skillfully dismembered and disposed of his body.
Then when he was arrested for the crime, he skipped bail and fled the state while using
Morris Black's identification.
Hello.
Still, they couldn't get around the fact that the defense was right.
The only thing they didn't have was direct evidence to prove that the shooting was intentional.
When he was cross-examined by the defense, Cody Kozalis was asked directly whether they
had anything to disprove Durst's claim of self-defense, and the detective simply answered,
no, sir.
Because they didn't.
Yeah.
On November 5th, 2003, the jury entered the deliberation phase, which dragged into the
following day and then into the next day.
On the third day of the deliberationation the jury requested the court reporter read back
to her statement about the fight over the gun which is like not great like you're just like oh
I ask him for that yeah finally after nearly a full week of deliberations the jury emerged
and they returned an acquittal stating they didn't feel the prosecution had offered enough
evidence to prove the shooting had been intentional and thus left room for our favorite thing, reasonable doubt.
I think I would struggle so much on a journey.
This would be a hard one.
I would struggle immensely.
Because you know, but you are also being told you need to look at the evidence.
Right.
Did they prove, do you have any reasonable doubt that this is not an intentional?
Yeah.
And it's like, oh, oh.
So the verdict came as a shock to the prosecution
who despite lacking irrefutable evidence
of an intentional shooting,
felt the circumstantial evidence had been enough
to secure a conviction, which I get why they felt that.
I agree, yeah.
When asked whether he felt Durst was still a threat
to the community, Kurt Sistrunk told
reporters, Mr. Durst is not going to be invited into my house.
I love that answer.
The acquittal may have resolved the question of murder, but Durst was still on the hook
for two counts of bail jumping and one count of tampering with evidence, the latter for
the dismemberment of Black's body.
In December 2004, Durst accepted an offer from the DA's office
in which he would plead guilty to both in exchange for a five-year sentence.
That's bullshit.
With two years credit for time served.
For dismembering an entire man.
Yeah.
That's so fucked up.
Robert Durst was paroled on July 15th, 2005 with the understanding that he would remain in
the area and avoid certain locations like the apartment building where Morris Black's
death occurred. However, less than two weeks after being paroled, Durst visited the apartment
building thus violating his parole. Why the fuck did he have to go back there?
Just to be a dick. And as a result, he was sent back to jail
to finish out his sentence and was released from prison
in a year in March, 2006.
What the fuck?
He was out free.
Why would you go back there?
And they were like, don't go to the place
where you murdered that guy that you have no business
going to and that you literally have no reason
to go back to.
And he was like, got it.
And at that point it's like,
is that even your apartment anymore?
No.
Right.
It's not, he has no reason to go back there. That's literally wild. He's so like, stupid, stupid.
And like, what is the, he's self sabotaging and he's reckless. He's all of these things.
He's so an asshole. And he's an asshole. It's like, it's like he has to like, he's compulsive.
Yes, that's the word. Thank you. Jesus. So for months before, during, and after the trial,
the news about Robert Durst and the murder of Morris Black
spread around the country.
And those reports almost always referenced
the disappearance of Kathy Durst
and the recent murder of Susan Berman.
And given how sensational those stories were,
and Durst's life in general was pretty sensational and wild.
I'd say so.
It was only a matter of time before the Robert Durst story became the subject of a film.
Now in 2008, documentarians and screenwriters Marcus Hinchy and Mark Smerling began working
on a screenplay based loosely on Durst's earlier years and Cathy's disappearance.
A few years earlier, Smerling and his filmmaking partner, Andrew Jurecki, had scored a big
indie hit with Capturing the Freedmans.
It was a documentary about a child sex abuse scandal in Great Neck, New York, and how the
trial affected the family of the perpetrator.
Hoping to parlay that success into the world of dramatic feature films, Hinchy and Smerling
wrote a dramatization of Kathy's disappearance with
Jurecki attached to direct. The script was quickly bought by the Weinstein company.
Shutters.
And in 2010, the company released All Good Things starring Ryan Gosling,
who was playing David Marks in the film that was supposed to be Robert Dyrst.
Okay.
And then Kirsten Dunst was playing this that David Marks character's wife, Katie McCarthy.
Who's supposed to be Cathy.
I haven't seen that.
The title was a reference to the health food store that Robert opened in Vermont in the
seventies and the store traced the couple's relationship from their meeting in the early
seventies to her disappearance in 1982. Oh.
However, the fictional version of the story fills in the ending where the real account remained unresolved, including the Manhattan DA's reopening of the case after reading a
novel from David Mark's best friend.
That's like in that film.
The film stopped short of implying that the fictional Durst killed his wife,
leaving that for the audience to decide.
Which is probably the best way to go about it.
Yes, right.
All Good Things received mixed reviews from critics. It did pretty poorly at the box office.
With most critics noting the film's inspiration offered considerably more drama than the fictional
account actually did. They were like, the real thing is way more interesting to watch.
That's gotta be tough though with legality.
Well, you can't, and you don't want to be like sensational while retelling it. Yeah. That's gotta be tough though with legality.
And you don't wanna be like sensational while retelling it.
Yeah.
You know, like that's a hard one.
Yeah, that's a tough line to toe.
But there was one viewer who was particularly impressed
with the movie and called Andrew Gerecki
to tell him as much.
According to Gerecki, after seeing the film,
Robert Durst called the director to share his appreciation
of what he believed
was an even-handed account of his life. Christ Almighty. Also, Durst, who had famously avoided
the press for decades, offered to participate in the commentary for the DVD release of All
Good Things. Throughout the commentary, Durst can be heard verifying the accuracy of some
of the film's more violent scenes, including one in which he dismembers the fictional version of Morris
Black.
He says in the flattest, eeriest tone while watching that, this is more or less accurate.
What the fuck?
The fact that we have this man on audio so many times, basically admitting to everything
he did in those horrific ways.
In the process of recording the commentary, Giurecchi and Durst spent a lot of hours together
talking, getting to know each other.
At the time, Durst was still being investigated by authorities in LA for the murder of Susan
Berman and by the Manhattan District Attorney's Office for the
disappearance of Kathy, who had been declared legally dead by a New York court several years
earlier.
Okay.
Under the circumstances, it would seem odd that Durst would want to attract any attention
or scrutiny, but that's exactly what he did.
In fact, Durst was downright enthusiastic in his acceptance of Durecki's offer to work
on a project together
about his life and legal troubles.
The Jinx.
He's in the middle of this shit and he was like, let's go girls.
Attention.
Yeah.
The result of their collab was 2015's The Jinx.
The life and deaths of Robert Durst.
It was a six episode mini series on HBO and it covered, among other things, the disappearance of Kathy
Durst, the murder of Susan Berman, the death of Morris Black. Assembled from more than
25 hours of interview footage, the Jinx also tells the story of Durst's troubled relationship
with his own family and includes extensive and mostly unflattering interviews with his
brother Douglas, who offers a counter narrative to that of
Durst himself.
Jurecki said, certainly the things he's been accused of are tabloid worthy.
But what's clear about Bob, if you spend five minutes with him, is that he's a deeply complicated
person who cannot be summarized in a simple way.
I guess you could say that.
When the Jinx premiered in February 2015, it was an immediate hit.
I was one of those viewers.
Not only because of the sensational story, but also because of Durst being so fucking
bizarre.
He's a weird guy.
There was never any question as to whether Durst was directly involved in the making
of the series.
He was.
Yeah.
Which is why his comments throughout the film are surprising and at times even suspicious.
Cause it's almost like he forgets that he's directly
Absolutely.
Involved.
Yeah.
In fact, throughout the six episodes,
Durst seems both aware of how his quirks
and personality ticks are perceived
and yet completely oblivious to the fact that much
of what comes out of his mouth could be interpreted
as thinly veiled admissions of guilt.
Yup. Like you're just like, what's going on? Some be interpreted as thinly veiled admissions of guilt.
Like you're just like, what's going on?
Some of them not even veiled at all.
Throughout the series, Robert Durst maintains that he didn't kill his wife or Susan Berman,
despite what people think.
And Jurekky does little to question or challenge him on it.
Then the series concludes with what appears to be nothing short of a fucking bombshell admission.
A full-blown confession.
I remember watching this on my couch in our apartment.
Yep.
And John and I were like, what the fuck?
I watched it right after you because I'm pretty sure you texted me
and you were like, you need to watch this.
Like, holy shit.
See, this is before we started the podcast
and that's the kind of shit we used to be like, holy shit. I was like, you need to watch this. See, this is before we started the podcast, and that's the kind of shit we used to be
like, holy shit.
I was like, you gotta see this.
So in the sixth episode's final moments, Jurekky and Durst finish an interview, during which
Durst seemed to have trouble controlling his burping.
Yeah, he's burping a lot.
And Durst excuses himself to go to the bathroom.
Alone in the bathroom, still miked, seemingly unaware that he is still miked and he's still
being recorded, Durst begins talking to himself.
He was known to do that since childhood.
This was not something new.
It's so unsettling though.
There's some of what he says you can't understand.
It's unintelligible.
He can very clearly be heard saying, what the hell did I do?
Killed them all, of course.
And that's where my of course comes from.
Every time Ash says, of course, I just think of of course.
It's just the way he says, he says, what the hell did I do?
Killed them all, of course.
This is similar to the motherfucking sandwich that he didn't need to go steal
in the apartment that he didn't need to go back to?
Why the fuck are you saying this out loud to yourself
during filming of a fucking documentary?
He just can't help himself.
He literally is compulsive.
He has to do these things. It's insane.
It's like he can't fight it.
It's the same kind of... He has a pattern of this shit.'s insane. It's like he can't fight it. It's the same kind of, but he has a pattern of this shit.
He does. It's a pathology.
That he has every reason to not do that thing.
And that there's no, nothing compelling him to do it.
Like you do not need to do that.
That's just yester.
Easy peasy, lemon squeezy.
Don't go to a Wegmans and steal that sandwich.
Just pay for it.
To not go back to that apartment.
You don't live there?
To not say out loud, I killed them all, of course.
And also, how do you defend that?
I'm glad he did.
Yeah.
I'm glad he did.
Of course.
But I'm just saying like, whoa.
I'm like, also, like, how do you get a lawyer after that?
So this confession shocked all of us.
Sure did.
In part because just one day before the episode aired, Robert Durst was arrested in connection
with Susan Berman's death.
The arrest seemed to confirm what viewers heard on the tape, that Robert Durst killed
Kathy Durst and Susan Berman.
However, the timing raised more than a few questions.
More importantly, the interview footage for the series had been recorded over a period
of years leading up to the release of the movie or the series. In that case, Andrew Giurecchi and the producers of The Jinx would have known
about the confession and had said nothing to investigators. Oh. Yeah. There was also the
matter of some evidence that Giurecchi had been given by Susan Berman's friend, including a letter to Susan
from Durst in which the handwriting appears identical
to that of the cadaver letter sent to the police
right down to the misspelling of Beverly.
So it got a little messy.
I didn't realize that was a part of this all.
Yeah, like this whole thing didn't make,
just make the team behind the jinx look bad.
It made them look slightly complicit,
which is like not good at all.
Yeah.
Like you can't hold that stuff
just to get audience reactions.
And you would have gotten it either way.
That's what it made it look like.
So the truth was a little more complicated, to be fair.
According to Smurling, Jureki and the producers
were seriously conflicted when they received
the evidence.
For one thing, their lawyers informed them if they turn the evidence over too soon, its
validity could easily be challenged in court and jeopardize any trial.
Okay.
So they didn't want to fuck anything up.
It was also the matter of their journalistic integrity, which is a thing.
Yes, that is.
If they went directly to the police, they would not only be disclosing several sources,
which is really bad, but they would also be very likely be called to testify in court,
which would surely affect their reputations as trusted journalists.
That's really tough.
In the end, humanity did win out.
Smerling told a reporter, we had a moral obligation and an obligation to the families of the dead to see that justice was done.
In fact, it turned out that the producers
behind the mini series had been cooperated
with investigators since 2013,
two years before the Jinx premiered.
Okay, so it was like a whole.
It was a whole thing.
At first I remember it being a thing
where everyone was like, oh my God,
like you held this shit.
But in the end, they not really,
they did what they could do.
Yeah, within their parameters.
["The Little Mermaid"]
Last year, long crime brought you the trial
that captivated the nation.
She's accused of hitting her boyfriend, Boston police officer John O'Keefe with her car.
Karen Reed is arrested and charged with second degree murder.
The six-week trial resulted in anything but resolution.
We continue to find ourselves at an impasse.
I'm declaring a mistrial in this case.
But now the case is back in the spotlight.
And one question still lingers.
Did Karen Reed kill John O'Keefe? The evidence is overwhelming that Karen Reed is innocent.
How does it feel to be a cop killer, Karen? I'm Kristin Thorn, investigative reporter with
Law and Crime and host of the podcast, Karen, The Retrial. This isn't just a retrial. It's a second chance at the truth.
I have nothing to hide.
My life is in the balance, and it shouldn't be.
I just want people to go back to who the victim is in this.
It's not her.
Listen to episodes of Karen, The Retrial,
exclusively and ad-free on Wondery+.
-♪
There was also the matter of the supposed confession, like the whole matter of the confession
itself, which it turned out was also a little more complicated than it appeared.
Like many aspects of filmmaking in real life, things weren't exactly as they appeared to
be on screen.
Their statement about having killed them all was real, but the audio recording of him captured
in the bathroom was actually a lot longer and like a little stranger.
The full recording of Dyrs smothering is this.
Oh, there it is.
You're caught.
You're right, of course, but you can't imagine.
They want to talk to him.
That's good.
I find them very frightening and I do not want to talk to them.
I don't know.
The washer.
Well, I don't know what you expected to get, but and then it says the rest of and you can't
hear.
Don't know what's in the house.
Oh, I want this.
Killed them all, of course.
I want to do something new.
There's nothing new about that.
What a disaster.
He was right.
I was wrong.
And the burping. I'm having difficulty with the questions. What a disaster. He was right. I was wrong. And the burping.
I'm having difficulty with the questions.
What the hell did I do?
The burping.
And the burping.
Sorry.
I'm a child.
He's a strange fellow.
What the fuck?
And the burping.
So to me, that's a man who knows he's caught, knows what he's done.
And he's like, fuck.
Knows he's pretty much given himself, like he's like, fuck.
To me that literally translates into fuck.
That's fuck.
Period.
Yeah.
So the producers of The Jinx had used some slightly deceptive editing to present an incoherent
and, you know, kind of unintelligible statement as though it were just a very clear cut confession
of murder. I mean, it were just a very clear cut confession of murder.
I mean, you're making a film.
Well, that's it. So it's like, I understand.
So when the dust had settled and Jurekky was able
to address viewers and critics' concerns
and accusations of complicity,
things look far less damning than they had previously appeared.
It's still pretty damning.
I think he's still pretty damning,
but luckily it didn't look as damning on the filmmakers.
Oh yeah, and that's what I mean.
Yeah, you mean Robert Durst.
Yeah. That said, Robert Durst had been arrested for Berman's murder.
And as it turned out, that arrest wasn't entirely unconnected to his appearance in The Jinx.
Yeah.
So based on the information provided to them by the producers of The Jinx,
investigators were able to get an arrest warrant for Durst's
arrest and he was picked up a few days later at a hotel in New Orleans, Louisiana, where
he'd registered under the name Everett Ward.
Around this time, local authorities had received complaints about Durst after he was seen confusedly
wandering around the hotel lobby and talking to himself. Turned out that was only the latest
in a series of very
strange incidents involving Robert Dyrs. No checks. A few years earlier, he was tried and
acquitted of violating restraining orders taken out by his family members. Oh shit. Just a few
months after the acquittal, he was arrested at a drug store in Houston after he was witnessed
urinating on a candy rack. That's a dick move.
Real dick move.
A charge to which he pleaded no contest and an incident his lawyer successfully argued
was a medical incident.
Nothing's medical about that, babe.
I'm just confused how you whip your dick out during a medical emergency.
I don't know.
And on the candy.
Yeah.
That's fucked up.
At the time of his arrest in New Orleans on the murder charge, federal agents found a
large amount of circumstantial evidence suggesting he was planning to flee the country.
Among other things, items found in his possession included a loaded 38 caliber pistol.
Jesus Christ.
Robert's passport and birth certificate, a fake driver's license, maps of the Southern
US and Cuba.
Oh, fuck.
A large amount of cash and and flesh-colored latex masks.
At the time of the arrest, the cash had been divided up into smaller quantities and placed
in envelopes, which investigators believe were going to be sent to whichever location
Durst planned to flee to, a belief that Robert didn't deny.
What a life.
Yeah.
Given the confused state he was in at the time,
Robert was transferred to a secure facility
where he would be treated for mental health issues
before being processed by the courts.
Though following that announcement,
Durst's lawyer refuted the claims that his client had mental health issues,
stating, quote, he is not suicidal.
And it's like, yeah, I don't think that's what we're really worried about here.
I think there's a few other things on the list.
Robert Durst had always been a peculiar quirky man.
But at the time of his arrest in 2015,
questions about his mental health had become common
whenever his name came up.
Just a few months earlier, Douglas Durst, his brother,
gave an interview to the New York Post
in which he detailed some of his brother's
bizarre behavior over the years.
He said, before the disappearance of my sister-in-law,
Bob had a series of Alaskan Malamutes,
which is like a husky.
He had seven of them and they all died mysteriously
of different things within six months of his owning them.
All of them named Igor.
We don't know how they died or what happened to their bodies.
What the fuck?
That's so fucked up and scary.
On so many different levels.
He has Ceres, seven of them.
Seven Alaskan Malamutes, beautiful huskies,
all named Igor.
I'm really stuck on that piece. I'm really all named Igor. I'm really stuck on that piece.
I'm really stuck on that piece.
And they all died within six months of him having them and they were never seen again.
You don't know what happened to them.
What the fuck did he do to those dogs?
That's horrifying.
It's so scary.
And why were they all named Igor?
And Douglas Durst made it clear in that interview and others that he believed Robert killed
the dogs as practice for when he eventually killed Kathy.
His brother said that.
While Robert was awaiting trial for the murder of Susan Berman, investigators in New York
were ramping up their reopened investigation into Kathy's disappearance, based in part
on the statements and evidence collected during the making of the Jinx.
In addition to working cooperatively with the FBI and detectives in LA, detectives in
New York received a warrant for Durst's apartment, where they confiscated a large number of documents
and other items.
Ultimately, it took two years before Durst was deemed healthy and stable enough to participate
in a trial.
In that time, he had been treated for cancerous tumors in his throat, as well as several other
health and mental health related issues.
Investigators used the delay to gather more evidence against him and round up witnesses
for the prosecution, many of whom, at least the wealthier among them,
put up serious legal battles
to keep themselves out of the courtroom,
though none were able to successfully avoid subpoena.
Good.
When Durst's trial finally began in 2020.
Damn. Yeah.
It was only, wow, that's crazy.
For some reason, it feels like that was like way longer.
I know.
The prosecution presented a very simple theory
as to the motive for Berman's murder.
According to Deputy DA John Lewin, Durst eliminated Berman because she'd agreed to cooperate with
investigators re-examining the Cathy Durst case.
Yeah.
Pretty simple.
I hate that, eliminated.
Yeah.
It's so real.
That is what people do, but it is so scary.
The prosecution believed that Berman had known Durst killed Kathy in 1982 and had even helped
him cover up the crime.
That's what the prosecution stated.
Berman's friend, Nick Chaven, told the jury in a pre-trial hearing, Susan said to me specifically
that Bob killed Kathy.
According to Chaven, Susan loved Durst and had wanted to protect him, so she agreed to
help him cover up the crime, specifically by, among other things, calling the school
and pretending to be Cathy.
Oh, that's so fucked up, dude.
And that's something Susan had disclosed to friends in the years after Cathy disappeared.
So that one lingering thing that we were talking about, like who called?
Who was that?
Susan.
That's really fucked up.
The problem, according to Lewin, was that while Susan Berman may have been an incredibly
loyal friend to Durst, she had a reputation as someone who wasn't very good at keeping
secrets.
Also revealed in pre-trial hearings was Berman's statement to friends that, quote, if anything
ever happens to me, Bobby did it.
Another person saying that.
Yep. Lewin didn't provide details into what exactly they believe prompted Durst to kill
Berman at the time, but it's not incumbent upon the prosecution to provide motive. Instead,
they offered the evidence and that's it. Durst was known to be in California at the time
of the death. Based on the testimony of Berman's friends, he had a reason to kill Susan and they had the cadaver slash Beverly Hills letter that an independent analyst believed was a
match for Durst's handwriting. Given the extent of the evidence and the fact that the story
was so well known by then because of the mini series, Durst's lawyers encouraged him to
own up to having written the letter to the LAPD a few years before, a few days before
Berman's death. Cause at this point he hadn't admitted it yet.
This was a big turnaround for the man who so long had denied having anything to do with
that note, which he claimed was an indication of something that only the killer could have
known.
He himself said that.
Still, while Daris' lawyers were willing to admit he was in the area and even in Berman's
home around the time of her death, and he wrote the note, they steadfastly denied that
he had anything to do with the murder.
They said, sure, he was in the area, he was in her home, around the time of her death,
he wrote a note that said cadaver at this address, but he did not do it.
Totally didn't kill her.
Nick Degarin told the court, what the note demonstrates is that the person who mailed
it was aware there was a body at the house, not that the individual murdered Susan Berman.
That's a wild ass argument.
That's a wild ass argument.
I hope he stretched before he made that.
For real.
Durst's trial dragged on for nearly seven months during which jurors and spectators
heard a thorough overview of his personal history and the full extent
of his criminal activities.
The defense claimed that he had nothing to do with the Berman murder and that the prosecution
was simply trying to capitalize on the popularity of an HBO miniseries.
Defense attorney David Chesnoff said, we believe the absence of evidence is evidence that Bob
is not guilty.
I don't think there's an absence of evidence is evidence that Bob is not guilty. I don't think there's an absence of evidence.
The prosecutor, John Lewin, acknowledged the lack of conclusive physical evidence, but
stressed that while the evidence may have been largely circumstantial, there was a lot
of it.
That's the thing.
And from very reputable sources, including the defendant himself.
Well, circumstantial evidence is evidence nonetheless.
Yeah.
In his opening statement, he said, it's a long and complicated story because Mr. Durst
committed a lot of crimes.
As you're listening, some of the most damaging aspects
of this case are going to come from him.
Lewin reminded the jury, Durst wasn't just in the area
when Berman died, he was in her house, which he admitted.
He somehow also appeared to know there would be a body
in Susan Berman's home before she
was even dead.
She wasn't dead yet.
Which they knew because he had confessed to writing and sending the note, which was post-dated
before her death.
Medically they found that out.
In the end, the jury sided with the DA and on September 18th, 2021, after more than seven hours of
deliberation Robert Durst was found guilty of the murder of his best friend Susan Berman
more than two decades earlier. Additionally, the jury found that the prosecution had successfully
proved the claim of special circumstances, specifically that Durst had been quote, lying
in wait for Berman and that killing her effectively amounted to, quote,
killing a witness.
Yeah.
Which is a pretty big deal.
The following month, on October 15th,
Durst was back in court for sentencing
and victim impact statements.
Denny Marcus, one of Berman's cousins,
said, I was robbed and my beautiful son was robbed
of an absolutely extraordinary, brilliant
person whose life was tragically and savagely taken.
Before passing sentencing, Judge Mark Windham had his own statement he wanted to make, calling
the murder a, quote, witness killing and a horrific crime, as well as a, quote, denial
of justice.
Also, Judge Windham strongly rejected the defense's request for a new trial, citing
the quote, overwhelming evidence of guilt as one of the reasons.
So he's like, I don't need the physical evidence.
Like there's enough.
Yeah.
Finally, with all the statements out of the way, Judge Wyndham handed down his sentence,
life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Bye.
So the case against Robert Durst had been built on the theory that he killed Susan Berman
in order to prevent her from sharing what she knew about the disappearance of Kathy
Durst. Given that it had been a successful strategy, police in New York filed second
degree murder charges against Durst, alleging he murdered his wife in 1982.
I wonder why second degree.
I don't know. It's always confusing.
They might be claiming it was during like a fight.
Okay.
According to the lead detective on the case, Joseph Becerra, the verdict in the Berman case
was only one of the factors that prompted this new filing.
In addition to Becerra's discussions with the LA district attorney, he also cited quote
conversations with numerous witnesses and observations of defendants recorded interviews
and court testimony and
related proceedings. So basically he bucked himself over. Unfortunately, Robert Durst
would never see a trial for the murder of Kathy Durst. On January 10th, 2022, he died
from cardiac arrest at San Joaquin Hospital in California at the age of 78.
His death in 2022 brought an end to the story of one of New York's wealthiest and most
bizarre criminals. But after decades of public interest in the saga, Andrew Jurecki felt
the public was entitled to their own kind of closure.
In late April 2024, nine years after The Jinx aired on HBO, the cable channel aired the six episodes,
second season of the show,
which focused on Durst's life
after the original series aired until his death.
Oh.
In his assessment of the second season,
New York Times critic Mike Hale concluded,
everyone has seen The Jinx.
Everyone knows how it contributed to Durst's downfall.
Everyone is in on the joke.
And the wholesale intrusion
of the show into its own narrative is not in these episodes dramatic or moving. It's not a great,
huh? Great end. Oof. But that is the story. It's such an interesting case. So fucking bizarre.
Such a weird guy. It is such a twisty tourney.
It is.
He is bizarre.
Well, because it goes on for so many decades too.
It took forever.
Yeah.
And so many places and just, I didn't realize that there was a follow up though.
Have you watched any of it?
I haven't watched the follow up.
I'd like to now.
I was thinking, well, when you first started covering this, I want to rewatch the first
season, but I'll definitely check out the second now. Yeah, definitely want to rewatch the first season. But yeah, I'll definitely check out the second now.
Yeah, definitely. Definitely check out that first season.
Yeah, if you haven't seen the first, you gotta see it.
Because it did contribute to getting him finally where they needed him to be.
It bumps me out that there was never true justice for Cathy's murder.
I know that's the thing that kills you because also...
That's his wife.
Where is Cathy?
I know.
That's the thing that bothers me the most is like,
where is she?
And he just died never telling anyone.
That's really fucked up.
And killed the only other person that might know.
Mm-hmm.
Like that sucks.
It's really sad.
All I can think of those is, I mean, people said Susan Berman was not a good secret keeper.
She would've told someone.
Does someone know?
If someone knows, you gotta say it, man. You to tell someone. Someone knows you gotta say it man.
You gotta tell someone.
You can't let Cathy Durst just go into.
No, she has family.
You know, not finding out where she is.
Yeah, that's awful.
Or what happened.
I know everybody deserves to be found.
Like actually laid to real rest.
Yeah, exactly.
What an interesting case though.
It is.
And go check out the Jinx. And we hope out the Jinx and we hope you keep listening.
And we hope you keep it weird.
But not so weird that as Robert Dyrsk, because he's awesome.
Don't be that weird.
Don't be that weird. So I'm going to go to bed. If you like morbid, you can listen early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts.
Prime members can listen ad-free on Amazon Music. Before you go, tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey at Wondery.com slash survey.
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