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Audio of Durst in bathroom could play 2 ways in murder case

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The whispered words of Robert Durst recorded in an unguarded moment in a bathroom could come back to haunt him - or help him - as he faces a murder charge.

A possible move by prosecutors to introduce the incriminating material from a six-part documentary on his strange life and connection to three killings could backfire as interview footage did in the Michael Jackson molestation trial and the Robert Blake murder case.

In both cases, the defense was allowed under the "doctrine of completeness" to provide segments of interviews that presented their clients favorably without subjecting them to tough cross-examination.

"I submit that Blake didn't have to testify and Michael Jackson didn't have to testify because the prosecution foolishly wanted to introduce portions of their interviews," said attorney Thomas Mesereau Jr., who represented both men. "They just got greedy. They were mesmerized by portions they thought could help them."

In the Jackson case, the defense used unaired footage to counter damage done by "Living With Michael Jackson," a damning documentary in which Jackson held hands with his accuser and spoke of letting children into his bed.

"I'd slit my wrists before I'd hurt a child," Jackson said in one outtake shown by the defense, according to Mesereau, who won the performer's acquittal 10 years ago.

In the Durst case, prosecutors could seek to play portions from "The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst," that concluded with the eccentric millionaire off camera talking to himself in a bathroom with his wireless microphone still live.

"There it is. You're caught!" Durst whispered before the sound of water running can be heard. "What the hell did I do? Killed them all, of course."

Durst was arrested in New Orleans on Saturday, the day before the final episode aired.

He has been charged in Los Angeles with first-degree murder in the 2000 killing Susan Berman, the daughter a mobster and a close friend who acted as his spokeswoman after his wife disappeared in New York in 1982.

Durst, 71, who is estranged from a family that has a real estate empire worth an estimated $4 billion, has long denied killing Berman and Kathleen Durst, who was declared dead even though her body was never found. Investigators had reopened that case and planned to speak with Berman when she was shot once in the back of her head at her home near Beverly Hills.

After the killing, Durst disguised himself as a mute woman and moved into a cheap Galveston, Texas, boarding house where he killed an elderly neighbor in 2001. He claimed self-defense and was acquitted of murder but convicted of unlawfully disposing of the man's body, which was found chopped up and floating in Galveston Bay.

While legal experts said Durst's remarks off-camera and to filmmakers during the production will most likely be admissible, prosecutors will have to decide if they outweigh the possibility that the defense would play other portions of interviews showing him denying any killing.

"I would see this moment of unguarded truth as worth a lot of those denials," said George Fisher, a former prosecutor and professor at Stanford Law School. "The flat out meaning of the statement is very clear on its face."

In the case of Blake, prosecutors sought to introduce a portion of a jailhouse interview of the actor discussing his family with Barbara Walters because it contradicted other evidence. The defense then successfully pushed to bring in the rest of the interview.

"It did a great deal both to humanize him and so he wasn't just seen as a celebrity," said M. Gerald Schwartzbach, who won Blake's acquittal on a murder charge involving the killing of his wife. "There was an image projected that a lot of people had about Robert as a difficult person. In this video, he came across as a very sympathetic person."

Prosecutors are not commenting on the Berman case while Durst is still held in Louisiana, where he also faces firearms charges. A lawyer for Durst did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

FILE - In this Tuesday, March 17, 2015, file photo, Robert Durst is escorted into Orleans Parish Prison after his arraignment in Orleans Parish Criminal District Court in New Orleans. The whispered words of Durst recorded in an unguarded moment in a bathroom could come back to haunt him - or help him - as he faces a murder charge. A possible move by prosecutors to introduce the incriminating material from a six-part documentary on his strange life and connection to three killings could back fire as interview footage did in the Michael Jackson molestation trial and the Robert Blake murder case. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this May 20, 2005 file photo, Michael Jackson, left, and lead defense attorney Thomas Mesereau Jr. leave Jackson's child molestation trial at the Santa Barbara County Courthouse in Santa Maria, Calif. The whispered words of real estate heir Robert Durst recorded in an unguarded moment in a bathroom could come back to haunt him - or help him - as he faces a murder charge. A possible move by prosecutors to introduce the incriminating material from a six-part documentary on his strange life and connection to three killings could back fire as interview footage did in the Jackson molestation trial and the Robert Blake murder case. (AP Photo/ Damian Dovarganes, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this June 13, 2005 file pool photo, Michael Jackson goes through security as he arrives at Santa Barbara County Superior Court in Santa Maria, Calif., with his attorney Thomas Mesereau Jr, behind Jackson. The whispered words of real estate heir Robert Durst recorded in an unguarded moment in a bathroom could come back to haunt him - or help him - as he faces a murder charge. A possible move by prosecutors to introduce the incriminating material from a six-part documentary on his strange life and connection to three killings could back fire as interview footage did in the Jackson molestation trial and the Robert Blake murder case. (AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this April 7, 2006, file photo, actor Robert Blake, left, talks with his attorney, M. Gerald Schwartzbach, after a hearing at the Los Angeles County Superior court in Burbank, Calif. The whispered words of real estate heir Robert Durst recorded in an unguarded moment in a bathroom could come back to haunt him - or help him - as he faces a murder charge. A possible move by prosecutors to introduce the incriminating material from a six-part documentary on his strange life and connection to three killings could back fire as interview footage did in the Michael Jackson molestation trial and the Blake murder case. (AP Photo/Nick Ut, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 16, 2005, file photo, Robert Blake, right, kisses his attorney M. Gerald Schwartzbach as Schwartzbach holds up Blake's ankle monitor, after Blake was found not guilty in his murder trial for the death of his wife Bonny Lee Bakley from Los Angeles. The whispered words of real estate heir Robert Durst recorded in an unguarded moment in a bathroom could come back to haunt him - or help him - as he faces a murder charge. A possible move by prosecutors to introduce the incriminating material from a six-part documentary on his strange life and connection to three killings could back fire as interview footage did in the Michael Jackson molestation trial and the Blake murder case. (AP Photo/Nick Ut, File) The Associated Press
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