Essential viewing. 10/10. But be warned—you will never look at a bowl of chicken wings or a burping sound the same way again.
The producers, listening in the control room, sit in stunned silence. They know they have just recorded a confession that will send him to prison. They call the FBI. The Jinx aired its finale on March 15, 2015. That very morning, Robert Durst was arrested at a New Orleans Marriott hotel, a .38 revolver and a mask in his room. The FBI had been waiting. The Jinx- The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst -...
The documentary directly led to his arrest. The new evidence (the "cadaver" letter) and the bathroom confession were used to re-charge him with the first-degree murder of Susan Berman. Essential viewing
When confronted with this, Durst doesn't confess. He confirms it. He says, "I can’t say it’s not my handwriting." He then proceeds to claim that only the killer could have written the letter—meaning, by his own logic, he is the killer. It’s a breathtaking moment of psychological slippage. The finale, What the Hell Did I Do? , is a masterpiece of tension. After the handwriting revelation, Durst is clearly agitated. He asks to use the bathroom before the final interview segment. The producers, listening in the control room, sit
He says, clear as day: "There it is. You’re caught." [Long pause] "What a disaster." [He runs the water, splashes his face] "He was right. I was wrong. And the burping." [More mumbling] "What the hell did I do? Killed them all, of course." He doesn't say "allegedly." He doesn't say "if I had." He says
Durst’s legal team tried everything—including arguing that the HBO microphone recording was illegal under wiretapping laws. The judge disagreed.
Years later, Jarecki’s team unearths a letter Durst wrote to Berman years before her death. The handwriting—specifically the spelling of "Beverley" (with an extra 'e') and the blocky, tilted 'd'—is an identical match.