Fugitive real estate heir Robert Durst pleads guilty on gun charge

Real-estate heir Robert Durst pleaded guilty Wednesday to a federal gun charge in New Orleans, paving the way for a transfer to California to stand trial for the 2000 murder of a confidante.

"It was a good result," Assistant U.S. Attorney Mike McMahon said of the plea deal, which calls for an 85-month sentence on the gun rap.

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Under the agreement, Durst will be moved to a federal prison near Los Angeles by mid-August and will continue serving the sentence there while he awaits trial in the death of Susan Berman.

Durst denies killing Berman, a Las Vegas mobster's daughter who was so close to him that he walked her down the aisle at her wedding.

Prosecutors believe that Berman, 54, was executed because she knew something about the disappearance of Durst's wife, Kathleen, who went missing in 1982 and is presumed dead.

Durst has been locked up in Louisiana without bail since March when FBI agents, acting on the murder warrant out of Los Angeles, nabbed him with a .38-caliber Smith & Wesson that was illegal for him to have as a convicted felon, along with stacks of cash and marijuana.

His arrest coincided with the airing of HBO's documentary series, "The Jinx," which explored his links to his wife's disappearance, Berman's murder and the 2003 dismemberment of a neighbor in Texas.

During the show, Durst was confronted with two handwriting samples — an anonymous letter that had been sent to police alerted them to a "cadaver" at Berman's house and another letter he sent to Berman — that appeared to be a match.

Afterward, he blurted into a hot microphone: "There it is. You're caught," and "What the hell did I do? Killed them all, of course."

It's unclear whether any of the material from "The Jinx" will play a role in the Los Angeles murder trial. No trial date has been set, and asked when one might start, one of Durst's attorneys, Chip Lewis, said, "Your guess is as good as mine."


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