![]() ![]() “The evidence is clear that these adoptive admissions by Defendant were freely, knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently made. Tuesday’s paperwork contends that Durst’s comments amount to “adoptive admissions.” “When Defendant was asked on camera about his feelings about a film which had alleged that he had murdered three people and a dog, he responded, not with denials, but by stating, ‘I felt the movie was very, very, very close in much of the ways about what, pretty much, happened.'” Instead, he contacted the director and expressed how much he had enjoyed the film and agreed to sit for a series of interviews, including the DVD commentary for the movie,” the paperwork reads.Īlso Read: 'The Jinx' Star Robert Durst Appears in Court Ahead of Murder Trial ![]() ![]() “After reading the script and watching this movie, Defendant did not sue the production company for slander, nor did he object to how the movie portrayed him. However, the paperwork says, despite all that, Durst complimented director Andrew Jarecki’s film, which starred Gosling as the Durst-like “David Marks” and Kirsten Dunst as David’s murdered wife, Katie. The movie further alleged that Defendant’s spree of violence had begun years earlier with the senseless killing of his dog.” “The movie pulled no punches it made clear that the character based on Defendant had personally killed his wife in New York, planned and directed the murder of his best friend in California, and personally murdered his neighbor in Texas. “All Good Things, although a ‘fictional’ movie, was specifically based and marketed as the story of the disappearance and death of defendant Robert Durst’s (‘Defendant’) wife, the subsequent murder of his best friend, and the killing of his neighbor and confidante in Texas,” the paperwork reads. Prosecutors contend that the film, while fictional, was based on Durst’s case, and that Durst told filmmakers on camera that he felt the drama “was very, very, very close in much of the ways about what, pretty much, happened.”Īlso Read: Robert Durst Says He Regrets Doing HBO's 'The Jinx' In paperwork filed in Los Angeles Superior Court on Tuesday, district attorney Jackie Lacey and others have asked that the commentary be admitted as evidence of “adoptive admission.” Prosecutors in Los Angeles are seeking to admit real estate scion Robert Durst’s DVD commentary for the 2010 Ryan Gosling film “All Good Things” into evidence at Durst’s upcoming murder trial. ![]()
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