Robert Durst murder trial resumes May 17 after COVID delay - Los Angeles Times
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Robert Durst’s murder trial to resume May 17 after coronavirus delay

Robert Durst sits in court
Real estate heir Robert Durst at his murder trial in Los Angeles in March 2020.
(Alex Gallardo / Pool Photo)
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The murder trial of eccentric New York real estate heir Robert Durst will resume next month after more than a yearlong hiatus because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Superior Court Judge Mark Windham on Monday denied a renewed motion by Durst’s lawyers for a mistrial because of the “extreme delay” and ongoing concerns of coronavirus variants that could pose a health threat to jurors and trial participants.

Jurors will be called back to court in Inglewood on May 17 for informal questioning. A new round of opening statements will tentatively be held a day or two later.

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A panel of 23 jurors, including 11 alternates, had heard six days of testimony in the lengthy case before it was postponed March 12, 2020, as the coronavirus outbreak worsened and led to court closures and a statewide stay-home order.

Durst, who turned 78 on Monday, is charged with murder in the killing of his best friend, Susan Berman, in her Los Angeles home in December 2000.

Prosecutors allege that Durst shot Berman in the back of the head to prevent her from telling police what she knew about the 1982 disappearance of his wife in New York.

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Five years after HBO’s ‘The Jinx,’ Durst will stand trial in the 2000 killing of Susan Berman at her Benedict Canyon home.

Feb. 19, 2020

The body of Kathleen Durst has never been found, and she has been legally declared deceased. Durst has never been charged with any crime related to her disappearance and has denied any role in her death.

Durst, whose family owns the Durst Organization, a Manhattan commercial and residential real estate developer, has been in jail since his arrest in New Orleans in 2015. He has pleaded not guilty to Berman’s killing.

Durst was acquitted of murder in the shooting death of an elderly neighbor in a rooming house in Galveston, Texas, in 2001. He said he shot Morris Black in self-defense and then panicked and dismembered the body and tossed it out to sea in garbage bags.

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All three killings were documented in “The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst,” an HBO documentary series that helped lead to his arrest.

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