WinkerAugusta, I really like your post, you invested a lot of time thinking about this case.
I do not know if Durst bathroom ramblings mean anything. It seems as though Durst does show human emotion when it comes to the murder of his best friend. He requests that picture of her.
He doesn't seem like the type who gets off on murder. I believe that he suffers from extreme paranoia, this article suggests that:
http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/mar/29/robert-durst-jeanine-pirro-california-timeline-the-jinx He is capable of human bonding and he developed a few meaningful relationships during his life but when he feels threatened, he won't hesitate to kill. Or, when he feels that he's going to be abandoned or betrayed that breaks the ties he had with a person in question. Maybe he has Borderline Personality Disorder.
Durst's bathroom ramblings could have been Durst talking to himself verbalizing what he though everyone would be saying about the handwriting "there it is. You're right, of course. But you can't imagine. Arrest him." It also seems as though he is having a conversation with himself - as if we are witnessing the recordings of a mad mind splitting in two (with the moaning / groaning).
It seemed to me that he noticed the mic and that he talked in a sarcastic way ("killed them all of course"). Maybe he just wanted to get caught, his past reckless actions (shoplifting) indicate that he doesn't care whether he'll be caught or not.
Again, how is it that law enforcement never saw this letter to begin with? One would think that the son would have shared the letter with law enforcement before sharing it with film makers.
There's something fishy about the letter, I agree. It's strange that Susan's stepson or the police didn't go through her documents after she was killed. I always thought that the police searches victim's apartment for clues after a murder takes place, isn't that the standard procedure? To search the documents, mail, computer, phone records in order to find some clues? Susan's stepson talked to Bobby after he found the letter (he's the one that told Jarecki about Durst not being in Madrid); is it possible that he told Durst about the new evidence?
The story of Durst's father saying "come see Mommy and Mommy was outside on the roof I waived to Mommy but I don't know if she saw me." If that is true - why would Seymour Durst have his young son watch his mother commit suicide (or whatever happened to her). Was Mrs. Seymour Durst suicidal - and Seymour thought that if the Mrs. saw the children she would not jump to her death?
You are presuming that Durst is telling the truth. This man lies a lot, maybe he lied about seeing his mother die in order to gain sympathy from the film crew and the viewers. Jarecki was disappointed when he realized that Bobby lied about being in Madrid, even though Durst admitted that he lied to the police when they questioned him about his wife's disappearance - he has a habit of lying.
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"I'm so happy I have you as my best friend, and I love Lisa so much."
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