Did doctor get last call from missing woman or someone else?
LOS ANGELES — The California murder case against New York real estate heir Robert Durst took a trip back in time Tuesday to the mysterious disappearance of his first wife in 1982.
Prosecutors seeking to get testimony on the record from elderly witnesses and those who fear Durst could have them whacked began calling witnesses in Los Angeles Superior Court even before a judge rules whether the aging mogul goes to trial in the 2000 killing of Susan Berman, his best friend.
Dr. Albert Kuperman, 85, a retired associate dean at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, testified that Durst’s wife, Kathleen, was a bright, attractive, smartly dressed medical student.
On Feb. 1, 1982, Kuperman got a call from a woman who identified herself as Kathie Durst and said she was sick with diarrhea and a headache and wouldn’t make it to her first day of a pediatrics clerkship in her final year of medical school.


