Tiffany Durst Body Found
Tiffany Durst’s Body Found in Colorado
If you watched the gruesome murder of Aurora couple Terence Scott George and Tiffany Durst on TV One’s Fatal Attraction, then you know what kind of a mystery is encircling the case. In addition to the question of who killed George, it also remains unanswered whether Durst is involved in the murder.
A 20-year-old man, Terrence Andre McNeal, is suspected of the killing. The two have been charged with first-degree murder. They also have been accused of sexual assault and burglary. This is the first time that a suspect in the case has been charged with a crime.
While the case has not been solved, there are several pieces of evidence that suggest that Durst is the primary suspect in the murder. For example, the actor’s car was found at the scene. It was a 1996 Olds Cutlass with Colorado license plates 750 VBW. Other witnesses reported seeing Durst and his girlfriend, Janelle Kimberly Harris, together in the same vehicle. Moreover, the body was found near a Cherry Creek spillway. These facts are consistent with Durst’s description.
However, the identity of the victim was not released. Initially, the police were not sure if she was in fact the missing teen, Kenia Monge, whom Durst was reportedly dating at the time of her disappearance.
However, the Denver Post reports that the police did indeed find her vehicle. Durst’s car was later located. After the investigation, it was discovered that the woman was, in fact, Tiffany Durst. She had been missing since November.
According to CBS4, the police had no mug shots of any of the suspects. However, the arrest affidavits of the three men are still sealed. Even so, there is an abundance of evidence supporting the possibility of these people being the culprits.
Durst’s first wife, Kathleen McCormack Durst, was a medical student who disappeared in 1982. She was reportedly pursuing a divorce with her husband. Her disappearance was considered one of the main reasons for Robert Durst’s bizarre behavior. He tried to hide her death from police and other investigators.
As a result, the investigation into her disappearance was reclassified as a murder. During the investigation, Robert Durst tried to silence his best friend, Susan Berman, whom he believed had been involved in his wife’s 1982 murder. On the day of her disappearance, he arranged for her to be on a commuter train to New York City. His plan seemed to go off without a hitch, until she failed to show up.
Durst’s relationship with his wife began to become strained, especially after her disappearance. The relationship seemed to become strained further as it evolved into a romance. When Durst’s relationship with McCormack was over, he decided to go into hiding. Eventually, Durst posed as a mute woman in Galveston, Texas, and then shot and dismembered his neighbor, Morris Black. Afterward, Durst tossed Black’s body in the Gulf of Mexico.
There have been multiple investigations into the Durst murders, including a criminal complaint by the state police in Lewisboro, New York. In October, the criminal complaint was filed in that town court. Several weeks later, a grand jury returned an indictment charging Durst with second-degree murder. But his trial was postponed because of his health issues.