Real estate scion Robert Durst made his
wife fear him: witness
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[October 16, 2018]
By Caroline Anderson and Alex Dobuzinskis
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Robert Durst, a
real estate scion charged with murder who was profiled in the HBO
television documentary "The Jinx," struck fear in his wife in the early
1980s before she disappeared, a witness testified in court on Monday in
Los Angeles.
Durst, a 75-year-old multimillionaire, was arrested in 2015 and charged
with murder in the 2000 shooting death of his longtime friend and
confidante Susan Berman.
Durst was in court on Monday for the first day of what is expected to be
a two-week preliminary hearing that is to determine if the prosecution
has presented enough evidence to require him to stand trial in Berman's
murder.
Berman, 55, was found dead at her home in Los Angeles shortly after it
was revealed that police had reopened an investigation into the 1982
disappearance of Durst's wife, Kathleen Durst. Prosecutors have said
that Durst shot Berman because of what she knew about the fate of his
spouse, whom authorities have said they presume was slain by Durst.
Durst, a grandson of New York real estate titan Joseph Durst, has
pleaded not guilty to Berman's murder.
Durst has never been charged and has denied having anything to do with
the disappearance of his wife. Her body has never been found.
The first witness to testify at Monday's hearing was Peter Halperin, who
attended medical school with Kathleen Durst in the early 1980s, when the
Dursts lived in New York. Halperin said he spoke to Kathleen Durst by
phone in December 1981, a few weeks before her disappearance.
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Robert Durst attends a motions hearing on capital murder charges in
the death of Susan Berman in Los Angeles, California, U.S. January
6, 2017. REUTERS/Mark Boster/Pool/File Photo
"Kathie said she was very frightened because she thought her husband
might hurt her," Halperin, 66, testified. "She said that there were
problems in her marriage and that things had escalated to the point
she felt unsafe."
Durst's ties to Berman's death, his wife's disappearance and a Texas
slaying for which he was acquitted by a jury were explored in "The
Jinx." In the series' dramatic finale, which aired in 2015, Durst
was caught on microphone muttering to himself, "What the hell did I
do? Killed them all, of course."
The evidence presented to date in Los Angeles includes the pre-trial
testimony of witnesses at a series of court hearings in 2017 and
earlier this year.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Mark Windham, who is overseeing the
preliminary hearing, invoked a rare judicial procedure to allow them
to testify in case they die or become incapacitated before a trial.
(Reporting by Caroline Anderson and Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by
Bill Tarrant and Leslie Adler)\
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