Susan Berman

Susan Berman
Born Susan Jane Berman
May 18, 1945
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Died December 23, 2000, at age 55
Beverly Hills, California
Resting place Home of Peace Cemetery
Occupation Writer
Language English
Ethnicity Jewish
Citizenship U.S.
Education Bachelor's, master's
Alma mater University of California, Los Angeles, University of California, Berkeley
Genres Fiction, nonfiction
Subjects Mob, Las Vegas
Notable work(s) Easy Street
Relative(s) Davie Berman, father

Susan Berman (1945–2000) was a reporter and author who was the daughter of Davie Berman, a mob figure in Las Vegas. She wrote extensively about her late-in-life realization of her father's place in a criminal empire. She was murdered execution style with a nine-millimeter hand gun on Christmas Eve 2000 in Benedict Canyon, California.

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Biography

Berman's father was mob figure Davie Berman, who had replaced Bugsy Siegel in Las Vegas at the Flamingo Hotel after Siegel's murder by the mob. Berman always maintained that her father died mysteriously on an operating table when she was 12. Berman also believed her mother Gladys' overdose suicide a year later was under mysterious circumstances.

Susan Berman was known affectionately as a "Jewish Mafia Princess." In 1981, Berman published the memoir Easy Street about life as the daughter of a mobster. Susan Berman was represented in the 1970s by the William Morris Agency, who talked with several Hollywood producers interested in adapting Berman's book into a screenplay. The movie rights were purchased from Berman, but the film project never got off the ground.

Various published accounts have speculated about possible connections between Berman's murder and the 1982 disappearance of Kathie Durst—the wife of Berman's college friend and heir to a New York real estate fortune Robert Durst. Durst was considered a prime suspect in his wife's disappearance, along with another person of interest, but he was never charged in the case. Berman remained a friend of Durst after the disappearance of his wife, and Durst gave large cash gifts to Berman in the months before Berman's death.[1] Almost two decades after Kathie Durst's disappearance, New York State Police, at the request of Jeanine Pirro, the district attorney at the time in New York's Westchester County, contacted Susan to interview her about the Durst case. She was killed within a few days of the query.

Berman lived right off the Sunset Strip on Alta Loma Road in West Hollywood for several years prior to moving to her last residence in Benedict Canyon. Nyle Brenner, Berman's manager, said to the Los Angeles Times days after the murder that "many details of Ms. Berman's personal life are unclear" and added "she had been married once in the 1980s, and later helped rear the two children of a boyfriend." Berman's relationships were layered, often deep and mysterious. She kept close ties to friends on Alta Loma Road, where she once lived, the Las Vegas Strip and in New York City, including Durst.

Berman was a published author and a graduate of University of California, Los Angeles with a master's degree in journalism from University of California, Berkeley. She was a staff reporter for The San Francisco Examiner and also wrote for Francis Ford Coppola's City Magazine, the Westinghouse Evening Show on KPIX and the People show on CBS. She was a contributing writer for New York, Cosmopolitan and Family Circle. Berman wrote Driver, Give a Soldier a Lift! and Lady Las Vegas, which accompanied the release of an A&E special for which Berman was a co-writer.

At the time of her death, she was working on a project for Showtime with attorney Kevin Norte. The title of the project was Sin City and was being planned as a Showtime's version of the HBO hit The Sopranos.

References

  1. ^ DePaulo, Lisa (March 12, 2001). "Who Killed the Gangster's Daughter?". New York Magazine. http://newyorkmetro.com/nymetro/news/crimelaw/features/4459/index.html. 

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Further reading