Kim Kardashian thought she was going to be raped and killed when criminals broke into her bedroom in central Paris, tied her up and stole more than $6 million in jewelry. More than eight years later, 10 people will go on trial in Paris over the robbery, abduction and kidnapping of the media personality and the concierge of the residence where she was staying during Paris Fashion Week the night of Oct. 2, 2016. Kardashian’s lawyers said she will testify in person at the trial starting Monday and scheduled to run through May 23.
Kim Kardashian thought she was going to be raped and killed when criminals broke into her bedroom in central Paris, tied her up and stole more than $6 million in jewelry. More than eight years later, 10 people will go on trial in Paris over the robbery, abduction and kidnapping of the media personality and the concierge of the residence where she was staying during Paris Fashion Week the night of Oct. 2, 2016. “Ms. Kardashian is reserving her testimony for the court and jury and does not wish to elaborate further at this time,” they said. “She has great respect and admiration for the French justice system and has been treated with great respect by the French authorities. She wishes the trial to proceed in an orderly fashion, in accordance with French law and with respect for all parties to the case.”
When reports of the incredible Paris heist emerged in 2016, cynics branded it a publicity stunt. But nine years on from the $10.6million [£8m] raid, the billionaire businesswoman and reality TV star is about to relive in court how she was bound, gagged and locked in a bathroom during the terrifying ordeal. On Monday, ten people accused of “armed robbery in an organised gang”, “kidnap” and “criminal conspiracy” will stand trial at Paris Assizes, two miles from the scene of the crime. As a key witness, Kim, 44, is reportedly willing to face her alleged attackers for the first time since the terrifying raid at the Hotel de Pourtales.
1h ago — A Wall Street Journal investigation has revealed that Meta's AI chatbots on Instagram, Facebook, and WhatsApp are empowered to engage in "romantic role-play" with users that can turn sexually explicit, even with accounts belonging to children. In a statement to Breitbart News, the social media giant says it has "taken additional measures"
7h ago — Google told a federal court that only it can operate Chrome properly due to deep integration with its infrastructure, warning that a forced divestiture would break the browser, while a government expert argued transfer is feasible.
7h ago — Fara Dabhoiwala’s What Is Free Speech? reflects an alarming contempt for our most precious liberty.
7h ago — Children fear anyone could create sexual deepfake images of them, the children's commissioner says.
7h ago — California joined several other states in suing Trump over a policy banning DEI in federally-funded schools, despite its own Proposition 209.