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First seen bailing Durst out of jail after his 2001 murder arrest, Charatan appears only in archival police interview footage, where she's a brash, sarcastic presence. (She declined to be interviewed for the documentary, perhaps wisely.)
With little else to go on, both Jinx fans and the series itself have speculated on the exact nature of Charatan's relationship with Durst. As one interviewee put in in the penultimate episode, "A lot of people believe Debbie knows Bob's secrets, whatever they may be."
As Durst's legal troubles have been well covered in the press, so, too, have various snippets of Charatan's biography. Here's what we know about her so far.
Like Durst, she's a powerful figure in New York City real estate.
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She met Durst in the late '80s after his first wife disappeared.
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The pair moved into an Upper East Side apartment together in 1990, the same year Durst officially divorced his missing wife, but the cohabitation was short-lived. (She kept the apartment.) The pair kept in contact throughout Durst's travels in the '90s, and she was reportedly a "lifeline" for him whenever he visited New York.
They were secretly married in December 2000, just before the death of Durst's friend Susan Berman.
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The timing is important, as it's shortly after the Kathie Durst case was reopened, and only weeks before the death of Susan Berman.
Their wedding was apparently a rushed affair - 15 minutes, one witness, a rabbi hired from the phone book. "Durst was rather taciturn," the rabbi later told the New York Daily News. "He was not buoyant and didn't smile." The Jinx implies Durst married Charatan to prevent her from testifying against him, and as for what was in it for her, a former co-worker told the Times, "For Debbie, it's all about the money. When she met Bob, she hit pay dirt."
Charatan was a frequent visitor during Durst's Galveston trial, and a confidante during his stint in jail.
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As seen in The Jinx, Charatan was the driving force behind Durst's decision to fire attorney Michael Kennedy and go with a local lawyer, Dick DeGeurin.
According to transcripts of jailhouse phone calls obtained by the New York Post, the decision was a purely mercenary one: Kennedy wanted to go with an insanity defense, which could jeopardize both Durst and Charatan's share of his family's fortune. (When Durst jumped bail, police prevented her from withdrawing $1.8 million from his accounts.) Other parts of the transcripts reveal Charatan saving Durst from potentially incriminating himself, interrupting him when he threatened revenge against Berman's friend Kim Lankford, and reminding him that his armed appearance outside his brother's house was a "suicide" attempt.
Despite all this, Durst didn't fully trust Charatan, telling his sister their wedding was "a marriage of convenience ... I had to have Debrah to write my checks. I was setting myself up to be a fugitive." Later, Charatan appeared on what police claimed was Durst's "enemies list."
She's apparently still married to Durst, and handles his real-estate deals.
Courtesy of HBO