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Real estate heir Robert Durst pleads not guilty to firearm charges

NEW ORLEANS - Millionaire real estate heir Robert Durst has pleaded not guilty to two weapons charges in a New Orleans court.

He entered his plea during an arraignment on weapons charges accusing him of possessing a firearm after a felony conviction and possessing both a firearm and an illegal drug, marijuana.

WATCH: "48 Hours" Presents: The Bizarre Saga of Robert Durst

The weapons arrest has kept Durst in New Orleans even though he waived extradition to Los Angeles, where he's charged in the December 2000 death of a longtime friend. Durst is being held without bail in a Louisiana state prison.

Durst, an estranged member of the family that runs 1 World Trade Center in New York, has had multiple run-ins with the law over his nearly 72 years.

He was arrested in New Orleans on the eve of the finale of a six-part HBO documentary called "The Jinx" about Durst, the disappearance of his first wife in 1982, the death of a longtime friend in 2000 and the death and dismemberment of a neighbor in Galveston, Texas in 2001.

A self-defense plea won Durst an acquittal in the death of Morris Black, but Durst is now charged in Los Angeles with murder in the death of his longtime friend, Susan Berman, 55, who was shot in the head in 2000. His lawyers, Dick DeGuerin and Billy Gibbens, have said repeatedly that he just wants to go to California to deal with that charge.

Durst's lawyers also have challenged the weapons charges he faces in Louisiana on several grounds, including the allegation that the FBI "rummaged" through Durst's belongings before getting an arrest or search warrant.

Defense for Robert Durst tries to discredit state's case 02:34

But Andrea Armstrong, a criminal law professor at Loyola University in New Orleans, said Wednesday that "the fact that it was warrantless doesn't necessarily mean it was unconstitutional."

There are at least 11 circumstances, starting with consent, that make it legal to search without a warrant, she said.

DeGuerin also has argued that the two felonies to which Durst pleaded guilty in Pennsylvania - possessing a firearm while a fugitive and doing so while under indictment - are not among those that would make it illegal for him to have a gun.

Until his indictment Wednesday, Durst had been arrested but not formally charged in connection with the .38-caliber revolver authorities say was found in his room at the J.W. Marriott in New Orleans, where he was staying under the name Everette Ward.

According to court testimony, an FBI agent recognized Durst in the hotel March 14 and escorted him to his hotel room. Durst was arrested early March 15 on the Los Angeles warrant and arrested separately on the weapons charges the next day.

Durst's lawyers say the arrest in New Orleans was timed to coincide with the final episode of the HBO documentary chronicling his life.

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