LOS ANGELES -- It took nearly 15 years for police to arrest New York real estate heir Robert Durst in the killing of his best friend and another five to bring him to trial. After just two days of testimony, jurors were sent home when the coronavirus closed courthouses.
Today, more than 14 months later, the jury is returning to Los Angeles County Superior Court to see if they can complete their assignment. If so, it could be a first for the U.S. legal system.
The length of the stoppage is unprecedented, and it's the highest-profile U.S. case postponed because of the pandemic, Durst's lawyers say. They have repeatedly -- and unsuccessfully -- sought a mistrial because they argued the delay harmed his chance of a fair trial.
Durst, 78, has pleaded innocent to murdering his friend Susan Berman, who was shot in the back of the head in her LA home in December 2000. Prosecutors say he silenced Berman before she could tell police she helped him cover up the killing of his wife, Kathie, in New York in 1982.
Judge Mark Windham has called back the panel of 23 jurors, including 11 alternates, and plans to question them today to see if they can go forward with the case.
The defense has submitted a list of proposed questions, including whether jurors read or heard about the case during the break and remain impartial, and if covid-19 altered their lives in a way that prevents them from serving another four to five months.
The pandemic has disrupted courts nationwide, leading to delays and video rather than in-person proceedings in many instances. Many defendants awaiting trial were freed because of concerns they would get the virus in jail.
What makes the Durst case so unusual is that it was halted after the jury -- winnowed from over 400 people -- was sworn in and heard four days of opening statements and two days of testimony.
Defense lawyer Chip Lewis said Durst's legal team had done extensive research and couldn't find case delays even close to this long.
Durst, an eccentric worth more than an estimated $100 million, is being held without bail. He is only charged with Berman's killing, but prosecutors are using his wife's disappearance and neighbor's slaying in Texas to build their case against him.
He has long been suspected of killing his wife, whose body has never been found, though he's never been charged and has denied any role in her disappearance.
Berman, a Las Vegas mobster's daughter who met Durst at the University of California, Los Angeles, served as his unofficial spokeswoman when Kathie Durst vanished.
After New York investigators announced they reopened the case in fall 2000, authorities say Berman told Durst she was going to speak with them about what she knew. She was dead two months later.
Nine months after Berman was killed, Durst fatally shot his neighbor Morris Black in a Galveston, Texas, boarding house, where he had gone into hiding as a mute woman.
Prosecutors say he killed Black because the neighbor discovered his real identity.
Durst was acquitted after testifying Black pulled a pistol on him and was shot as they struggled for the weapon. He said he panicked and butchered the man's body and tossed it into Galveston Bay.
During opening statements in LA, defense lawyer Dick DeGuerin, who defended Durst in Texas, said Durst didn't kill Berman and doesn't know who did. But he said his client had found her body, panicked and bolted.
Durst sent police a cryptic note alerting them to a "cadaver" in the house only to ensure she would be found, DeGuerin said. Durst had long denied penning the note.
He was arrested in New Orleans in 2015 on the eve of the final episode of "The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst," an HBO documentary in which he was confronted with the cadaver note and a letter he once sent Berman with similar block print handwriting and the city of Beverly Hills misspelled "Beverley."