"Dispatch called me at my house." "It was after hours." "They told me that a young kid had found what they thought was a torso." "No head." "No arms." "No legs." "Just, just the torso." "What's this area here?" "This is Channel View here... and it was right down here... in this corner, was where the torso was at." " Right here?" " Right here." "This is probably the one time" "I can honestly say that I've actually reached down somebody's throat." "Because in order to get the torso out," "I had to take my hand down the throat and put my fingers around the breastbone, and then pull him up out of the water." " Is that with your hand?" " Yeah." "Yeah." "How else am I going to get him out?" "And then we started our kind of a general survey of the rest of the area." "In doing so, that's when we found a bunch of the black plastic trash bags that were floating in the water." "Well, trying to figure out what we had inside the bags, we simply palpated the bags." "We just felt them." "We had what felt like arms and hands, fingers." "A leg, where you could feel the knee, the ankle, and the actual foot itself... and one of the bags containing the legs, there was like small holes that had gotten torn into the bag where we could actually look in," "and I recall seeing a toe." "Dismemberment started with the right leg and went to the left leg, to the left arm, to the neck, and then to the right arm." "The right arm, being the last, was cut but it was only sawn halfway through, and then it apparently broke, either by stepping on it or something, to break the bone." "Getting tired, running out of time..." "Whatever it was." "I'd never had a dismembered headless torso to investigate." "You know, I've investigated my fair share of shootings, homicides..." "A whole array of investigations..." "Thousands!" "But I never had one of these." "So, I knew it was going to be interesting." "I had no idea of what I was fixin' to step into." "If I had of, I'm, I'm not so sure" "I would have stepped in so willingly." "A teenage boy fishing in the shallow waters off Galveston, Texas, stumbled on the gruesome remains of a murder." "Pretty much everything had washed up, with the exception of the head." "That was the focus of several days of searching." "That's the only body part that was never recovered." "One of the most important things that we found initially was a newspaper." "We were able to read an address of 2213 Avenue K." "And the blood that we found on the stair rail, it actually started kind of a trail that came right out here." "And it went in right out to the, to the road." "We found out who owned the building." "It was a guy by the name of Klaus Dillman." "Was able to ascertain that the tenant downstairs was an older man named Morris Black that lived in Apartment Number 1." "And then Apartment Number 2, he said, was rented by a little old lady named Dorothy Ciner, who was a mute female." "Mr. Dillman, did I understand you to say that you were pleased with Mrs. Ciner as a tenant?" "Very much so." "One, you didn't see her very much, and that's one good criteria of a tenant, as you say?" "Yes." "That's what I would consider a good criteria." "Ms. Ciner is paying you in advance for the rent?" "She wanted to pay me for a whole year." "We were able to roll one of the fingerprints from the hand that was in the trash bag." "From that, we were able to identify the victim as Morris Black." "It appeared that in the common hallway, someone had wiped up blood which led into Apartment 2, which helped me to gain a search warrant into Apartment 2." "What we observed then was a pretty pristine apartment." "Very neat." "What was unusual was on the floor of the kitchen were drop cloths." "Once we got the drop cloths pulled up from the floor, we found some real small cuts." "What I wound up doing was to actually take and cut that entire area out." "That's when I found a bloodstain." "We were actually able to match the blood back to Morris Black, so we knew that that's the location where he had been dismembered." "When we first talked to the landlord, he said," ""Well, there's a lady that rents Apartment Number 2, but she's never there because she travels all the time."" "And I'm thinking to myself..." ""Well, if she's got the money to travel all the time," ""and she's gone for months on end, what's she doing living in this dump?"" "Did you think that Mrs. Ciner was attractive?" "If you're asking me, was it in general terms being an attractive woman," "I would say looked like a middle-aged woman with a flat bust." "Wouldn't be my type." "Ha!" "In fact, it was kind of described as a real ugly deaf mute woman." "There was very little personal items in the apartment." "There was nothing to suggest a woman lived there." "But you did see a man who you believed to be Dorothy Ciner's brother-in-law a couple of times, didn't you?" "On the porch from far." "We never stand close together." "I mean eye contact, or anything like this." "It was always from a distance." "Red flags started coming up." "A mute female that travels a lot." "But a guy will be coming around every now and then." "Well, I'm thinking, "Well, there's no Dorothy Ciner," ""that's just a cover." "This guy is renting this place for whatever reason."" "The next step was to go through the trash can in the alley behind the house." "Every piece of trash was taken out, photographed, labeled, catalogued." "What was the first piece of evidence where you poked your partner... and you said, "Ah, we just found something."" "It was an appointment receipt, and on that contained information that gave us a date and time in which some eyeglasses were to be picked up." "Now I'm thinking, "Who's Robert Durst?"" "Still a bunch of question marks." "I take the receipt to the eye clinic." "Ask them if they know who Robert Durst is." "The lady up front said, "Yeah, he was supposed to pick those glasses up on Friday."" "I'm thinking, "Vegas wouldn't touch these odds this guy's going to show up."" "But I said, "If he shows up, here's my card." "Here's my pager number." And I left." "In the trash bags, we also found a price tag from Chalmers Hardware, which was two blocks away from where Morris Black lived." "Among the things that were bought from Chalmers were a 4-inch paring knife and drop cloths with the Chalmers tags on it." "Also bought at Chalmers was a bow saw." "Lo and behold, my pager goes off." "And I'm like..." "and I recognized that number." "But I, I haven't, in my mind I didn't connect the dots yet." "And then they had put in "911." I'm thinking, "Who is that?"" "Then, bam!" ""That's the eye clinic."" "I jump in my car and I'm coming up 21st Street." "And he pulls out of the alleyway parking lot right in front of me, and pulls up to the red light, and I'm right behind him." "Our Motor Division pulls him over, and we detain him." "I recall pulling up to that, and I walked up and glanced down through the back windshield." "And the first thing I saw was a bow saw." "Kind of got that grin." "Saying, "Yeah, we got him."" "Initial impressions when I saw him being brought in was like, "Really?" "This guy?" "Did that?" "Didn't fit."" "God, the guy looks like a librarian!" "He doesn't look like a person that would dismember a human being." "I explained to him he'd been arrested for, you know, homicide." ""Your bond has been set at $250,000."" "And he asked me, he said, "Well, what should I do?"" "And I said, "I don't know." "Do you have $250,000?"" "And he just calmly looked at me and he goes, "Well, not on me."" "Who the hell is this guy to give you that type of an answer?" "Which is not the type of answer you would normally hear." "I get a call from the desk sergeant at the jail." "He goes, "Cody, this Durst guy," ""he made a phone call to somebody named" ""Debrah in New York." ""Told them he was in Galveston, Texas," ""under arrest for murder, and he needed $250,000." "And she said, "No problem, it will be there in the morning."" "And I'm thinking, "What's going on here?"" "Are you the wife of Robert Durst?" "Yes." "When did you marry him?" "December 2000." "Would that have been December 11, 2000?" " Yes." " OK." "When did you first hear that Mr. Durst had rented an apartment in Galveston, Texas?" "Um, I heard that he rented an apartment in Galveston, Texas certainly after October 9, 2001." "OK." "And why are you so definite about that date?" "Because that was the day he called me, after he was arrested." "And I never even heard of Galveston, Texas." "When he called you, where was he calling from?" "Jail." "How long was it from the time that he was arrested until he got out of jail on bail?" " 24 hours." " OK." "When he got out, where did he go?" "I'm in New York." "He's in Galveston." "He probably went to the bail bondsman's office first." "And then he probably went home." "Do I know?" "Was I there?" "I wasn't there." "I'm back at work the next morning about 7:30." "I get to my office." "Usually on my phone there may be one or two messages." "I get to, I get my cup of coffee," "I sit down, my light's blinking." "21 messages." "That's when the information about who Robert Durst really was started coming into play." "We get this tip that a Bob Durst has been arrested in Galveston and he's murdered his, his neighbor or something." "And it was like, "Holy shit!" "Can this be our Bob Durst?"" "The fact that Morris Black had been murdered in Galveston was not something that would have garnered any attention at our end." "It was only when they made the connection to Robert Durst." "You find out that he belongs to one of the richest families in New York City." "But that's not strange enough, the guy's also suspected in his wife's disappearance in New York." "Robert Durst first made headlines after he reported his wife missing in 1982." "And to this day, the case remains unsolved." "The family of Kathleen Durst, from the beginning, had said they believed Robert Durst was responsible." "He had always maintained his innocence." "Family sources tell News Channel 4" "Robert Durst relocated to Galveston, Texas, but they were unsure what he was doing there." "How many office buildings does the Durst Organization currently own?" "Nine." "And can you tell me what those office buildings are?" "655 Third Avenue, 675 Third Avenue, 205 East 42nd Street, 733 Avenue of the Americas," "825 Avenue of the Americas, Four Times Square, 1133 Avenue of the Americas, 1155 Avenue of the Americas, and 114 West 47th Street." "But you went there around the time of his arraignment." "Did you expect him to be there?" "Most defendants charged with murder show up at their arraignment, OK?" "Did I expect him to be there?" "Of course I did." "I wanted to eyeball this guy." "I wanted to size him up." "Robert was due to be in court at 10:00 a.m." "And he was a no-show." "He decided to run." "In the search for Robert Durst, a lawyer is asking him to surrender." "Attorney Michael Kennedy made an appeal to him to turn himself in." "Robert, if you see this or hear this, please come home." "You have loved ones who care about you here in New York." "Your family is solidly, unifiedly behind you." "The Trust has the wherewithal to pay for your legal defense." "The press reported that you had hired a bodyguard to protect yourself against Robert Durst." "Is that true?" " That is true, yes." " Objection." "Did you believe your life was threatened by Robert Durst?" "At that point in time..." "Robert's actions were bizarre, and while I wasn't sure," "I felt that, to protect my family was a reasonable action to take." "And when did you hire the, the bodyguard?" "In, uh, after Robert jumped bail in Texas." "All the wheels started turning." "How do we find this guy?" "Everything from state and local agency notifications to notifications to Interpol." "There's no telling where this guy could have gone." "A private investigator told a Galveston newspaper that Durst has used false names in the past." "He had disguised himself as a woman." "His alias, Dorothy Ciner, is even listed on the FBI's 10 most wanted list." "Dorothy Ciner was somebody he went to" "Scarsdale High School with." "We found a bank account that he had set up as Emilio Vignoni." "He had rented a car from a place in Mobile, Alabama, saying he was Morris Black." "And we know there were probably more." "He's not crazy." "He's diabolical." "When Bob didn't show up at his hearing and we realize he's on the run," "I was as curious as anyone else about where he was." "And so, I was calling places where he had lived." ""When Robert A. Durst returned to" ""South Salem in Westchester County," ""a neighbor noticed him seemingly lost in thought" ""on a dock at Lake Truesdale," ""behind the tree-shrouded stone cottage he once shared with his wife Kathleen."" ""It was his birthday and their wedding anniversary," ""though she had vanished 19 years earlier." ""The State Police and the Westchester District Attorney" ""had been seeking him for a year" ""to go over his account of his last night with his wife..." ""The night she vanished." ""Mr. Durst's reverie on the dock" ""suddenly ended when a neighbor strolled down to the lakefront."" "That neighbor, of course, was the woman that moved into the house that Bob had lived in, and that Kathie had disappeared from." "It was always piecing together these shreds of information." "It was hazy, but it began to tell a story about this guy who, of course, was an enigma." "58-year-old Robert Durst was arrested here at Wegmans Grocery Store in Hanover Township after allegedly trying to steal a hoagie." "I think we were kind of in the same boat as everybody else that had any knowledge of this case whatsoever." "How in the hell could he have been that stupid?" "He just kind of got cold look." "All the color ran out of his face, and he just stared at me, and he said, "I'm not saying another word until I speak to an attorney."" "Police searched his rental car outside..." "And found two loaded guns, some marijuana," "$38,000 in cash, and an I.D. for one "Morris Black."" "Why would a guy with $520 in his pocket and $37,000 in the trunk walk into a Wegmans and steal a sandwich?" "The guy is crying out to be arrested, isn't he?" "On the other hand, he's also a guy that sort of walks through life and thinks he can do whatever he wants to do." "And most of the time, he could." "In shackles and under heavy guard, 58-year-old Robert Durst is led into the courtroom." "Mr. Durst, are you going to fight extradition?" "He has no comment at this time." "Are you competent to stand trial?" "He has no comment." "Where is your wife?" "How long was he in jail in Pennsylvania?" "About two months." "Did you speak to him while he was in jail?" "Sure." "Did you call him?" "It doesn't work that way." "OK." "He called you from jail in Pennsylvania?" " Yes." " OK." "During that time, did he call you regularly?" "Yes." "And in any of those conversations, did he indicate what his plans were in the future?" "Since I'm sure that you know that those conversations were taped, and they probably are public, you could read for yourself, because I don't really remember what conversations we had." "It's very cold in this prison." "Yeah, cold out." "Well, it's cold out, but I feel like it's cold in this prison." "I'm sitting here all covered with a sweatshirt." "Some guys were quote unquote "in paper."" "I know that." "You told me." "Honey, now when you're now sitting in your room, do you wear that thing or not?" "Sometimes I do." "Sometimes I don't." "It's very warm." "It is comfy." "I never wore a jumpsuit until I got here." "It's a very comfy thing." "It's easy to take on and off." "Right now, I'm out here in the thing and I have it on o-o-over my l-l-long johns." "And a sweatshirt." "And it's still cold." "The time now is approximately 10:34 a.m." "We're on record." "I'm going to swear you in, sir, if you raise your right hand, please." "Do you solemnly swear or affirm the testimony you are about to give to be the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help you God?" "Yes, ma'am." "Will you state your full name for the record, please?" "Robert Durst." "Am I correct that from the 1970s until 1994, you worked in the Durst Family business?" "Sort of, yes." "What were your positions there?" " My titles?" " Yes." "I had various important-sounding titles, but I didn't really go there very much." "Can you tell me under what circumstances" "Robert left the Durst Organization in the mid Nineties?" "At some point, Robert stopped showing up for, stopped showing up to the office." "And did you ever make any inquiries why he stopped showing up at the office?" "I, I did, yes." "And what did you find out?" "At that time, he would not talk to me." "Did you quit the family business in 1994 after Douglas Durst was picked to run the family businesses?" "Well, he was pretty much picked in 1989-90, I remember." "Who picked him?" "Uh, the senior generation..." "Seymour Durst, David Durst, Roy Durst." "And Seymour Durst was your father?" "Yes." "In fact, Mr. Durst, you've threatened to kill your brother, haven't you?" " No, sir." " OK." "He screwed you out of everything." "Your birthright." "The entire Durst Organization." "And you forgot?" "Right." "He took over the family business." "No doubt about it." "OK." "He took it from you." "He could have done it with you." "There were a lot of choices he could have done, but no." "He took it from you and his plan was to destroy you and embarrass you." "And he did it." "Quote, "The level of enmity is so great that Douglas Durst" ""even went so far as to hire a bodyguard to protect himself from Robert Durst."" "Close quote." "Do you remember that allegation?" "I remember that that occurred." "Do you know why Douglas Durst hired a bodyguard?" "Because he's a pussy." "Did he hire the bodyguard because he was scared of you?" "I have knowledge that he'd hired a bodyguard." "Why he would be scared of me, I have no idea." "New York real estate heir Robert Durst will be turned over to Texas authorities this week." "He faces charges in the dismemberment murder of a 71-year-old neighbor." "Yesterday in Pennsylvania, the 58-year-old waived his right to contest his extradition to Texas." "It's going to be a media circus there." "I know it is." "I'm trying not to think about it, and I'm trying not to, to plan, what kind of look I should have on my face." " I know." " Am I supposed to be smiling?" "Or am I supposed to be grim?" "If you're thinking of expression," "I would just have like as close to no expression as you can possibly have..." "Yeah." "That's what I keep..." "Bobby, did you kill Kathie 20 years ago?" "The defendant in this case was one who's wanted for a serious crime... murder..." "in the state of Texas." "There was a nationwide manhunt for this individual, and it's thanks to the Pennsylvania authorities that he was picked up, arrested, and kept here." "And so we thank the D.A. Morganelli for this." "And with respect to the New York case and in response to your question, let me just say that the disappearance of Kathleen Durst 20 years ago is a case that we are actively investigating." "We continue to seek the public's cooperation." "And as time goes on, we're finding that more and more people are cooperating with us." "And we will get to the bottom of what happened to Kathleen Durst, one way or the other." "Now Jeanine Pirro can go to the grand jury and say, "This person is going to be tried for murder in Galveston."" "That's going to make it much more likely that they're going to want to indict me for Kathie." "Bob, she hasn't arrested you because she doesn't have anything." "You're going to be all right." "I promise." " OK." " All right." "You got to chin up." "You'll be OK." " Thank you." " I love you, honey." "I love you." " Bye." " Bye." "Have your investigators been able to talk to Robert Durst?" "No, they have not." "He's represented by an attorney." "As D.A. Morganelli has said, it's the attorneys that we speak to." "Do you have any comment on what happened today with your client?" "Well, it's very straightforward." "Mr. Durst is anxious to get to Texas to defend himself on the charges pending there." "He has a viable defense, and he wants to raise it." "Therefore, he chose to voluntarily waive extradition and not seek to fight extradition." "And we expect that he'll be moved forthwith to Texas where, with two of my colleagues down there, we'll begin further to prepare his defense." "And that defense would be an insanity defense?" "No." "I'm not going to comment on the defense." "I have to tell you something." "I have a real problem." "You keep going deeper and deeper and deeper into Kennedy and I hate him!" "And I don't think you get it." "I will give him..." "Everything that comes from Kennedy is a cancer!" "And you don't get it!" "And I'm not going to stand here and watch this..." "I can't handle it." "Did you at any time tell Mr. Durst that you'd divorce him if he retained Michael Kennedy?" "Yes." "Why did you say that to him?" "Because I didn't trust Michael Kennedy." "I didn't like Michael Kennedy." "Michael Kennedy's allegiance is to Douglas." "You must understand that." "First he was going to say you are incompetent." "Then he was going to say you are insane." "That would mean, okay, that your decisions, like giving me a power of attorney... if you were incompetent at the time, so that it's not good." "And wait, let me finish, no interrupt." "What he doesn't want is me to get any of the trust money later on." "Since I'm not your wife, because you were incompetent at the time... ok, means that they are the only ones who can make your decisions." "So they would take all of your money, and they would become the guardians of it." "It's too risky." "I'm quoting again from the tapes." "Do you recall your wife threatening" ""I won't stand by you anymore," close quote, if Michael Kennedy wasn't fired as your lawyer?" "Yes." "Michael Kennedy was the one who was hired by Douglas to represent me." "And I had no intention of hiring Michael Kennedy anyway." "Robert Durst returned to Texas tonight." "The heir to a Manhattan skyscraper fortune is charged with murdering and dismembering his Galveston neighbor." "Well, I'm Dick DeGuerin." "I've been practicing law since 1965." "Almost all of that time in criminal law." "Either as a prosecutor, where I started, or as a criminal defense lawyer once I saw the light." "DeGuerin is the top Texas guy." "No, he's not." "Ramsey is." "Well, now wait a minute." "DeGuerin is not, wait a minute." "And then she says, "I will fight for what I want and I will fight you hard," close quote." "Well, that's Debbie." "Do you remember that conversation?" "I don't remember that one specifically, but the big argument then was that I wanted to hire" "Dick DeGuerin to represent me, and she wanted me to hire Mike Ramsey." "Durst couldn't decide between Ramsey and me, so, he hired both of us." "In addition to the six hundred for each of DeGuerin and Ramsey, another three hundred." "Okay." "So that'll be $1,500,000, plus this three hundred is $1,800,000." "And God, I hope it gets me acquitted." "All Good Things, a new feature film, premiered at the SVA Cinema in Chelsea." "The film was inspired by one of the most notorious missing persons cases in New York City history." "Andrew, what brought you to this film?" "Well, I'm always interested in, interested in these sort of monster stories." "You know, you find out that somebody is described as a maniac or a crazy person or a, a serial killer, and I always think that those people started out somewhere." "You know, they started out as people, and they had hopes and dreams." "He was an unusual person." "So, he did unusual things." "Stranger than fiction, in a lot of ways." "I remember this case because it's based on one of the great murder mysteries." "There was a man named Robert Durst who came from a very wealthy real estate family." "He married a beautiful woman named Kathie." "Played by you, and then in 1982, khht, she was gone." "Nobody has ever found the body." "He was never charged with the murder." "He's still alive." "I remember saying to my partner," ""I would like to make a movie" ""that Robert Durst himself could" ""sit and watch, and have an emotional reaction to."" "A call comes through." "And I pick it up." "And a sort of smaller voice on the line says, "Hello." "I-I-Is this Eamonn Bowles?"" "So I said, "Yes."" "He goes, "Oh, this is Bob Durst."" "My blood froze." "I went like, "Um, oh, hello, excuse me." "Who is this?" "I thought this was someone else." "Who's calling?"" "And he's like, "This is Bob Durst." "I'm looking for Andrew Jarecki." And I'm like, "Oh!"" "Hello?" "Hi." "Mr. Durst?" "Hi, Mr. Jarecki." "How are you?" "I'm good." "How are you?" "Good." "I just saw the movie." "So, I h-h-have an idea." "I've no idea if it makes any sense." "But, but you're the one to talk to about it." " Sure." " Would it make sense for as in some capacity there to be an interview with me related to what's in the movie?" "Yeah, I think that's a fascinating idea." "I'll be in touch soon." "I'm glad that we had a chance to talk." "All righty." "Bye-bye." "Nice to talk to you." "Mr. Jarecki." " How are you?" " Good." "How are you?" "Good." "I think you should feel free to call me "Andrew," by the way." "Andrew, how are you?" "I have over the years been approached by all the various interview shows." "And I'm not interested in doing a "True Crime" kind of stuff." "Right." "You know more about Robert Durst than any of those people do." "I guess the question is, you know, has anybody really done a piece on you where they didn't walk into it with a very strong assumption?" "One possibility is to have me interview you after having made this film." "I would tend to cooperate with you with whatever it was you're going to do." "You, you've got all my phone numbers." "I look forward to hearing from you." "Sounds good." "Talk to you soon." "Bye-bye." "As a criminal defense lawyer, you don't always get the truth." "I'm not naive enough to think that you do." "But you try to make a judgment of whether you're getting the truth." "When you only have a murderer's word for what happened, why believe anything that comes out of the man's mouth?" "What I need to say to you is that I believe Bob, and I believed him from the very beginning." "I don't think Bob Durst is the kind of man that kills for the thrill of the kill." "I don't think he takes any particular pleasure in killing." "But if you back him in a corner, if you threaten his freedom, he'll kill ya."