In Touch Investigates: Kim Kardashian Was ‘Hysterical' After Paris Robbery, Bodyguard's Lawyer Recalls
It's been almost a decade since Kim Kardashian was robbed at gunpoint inside her hotel room in Paris, France. Now, as part of the In Touch Investigates new true crime video series, Kristin Thorne takes a closer look at the brazen crime after Kardashian's emotional testimony in the month-long trial following news that the ringleader and seven other people involved in the heist were found guilty while two others were acquitted.
The reality star's former bodyguard Pascal Duvier's lawyer, Jerry Kroll, reflected on the trauma she experienced that unforgettable evening in October 2016, revealing to In Touch that she was deeply shaken and overcome by emotions.
'One of the most important pieces of his testimony was when he got back to the hotel after this happened, and he goes into the hotel, he opens the door to the staircase and there is the concierge handcuffed, key in his hand,' Kroll explains. 'Then he races upstairs to the room where Kim Kardashian is and he opens the door and his first visual is that Kim is hysterical, crying. And that became a really important point in the trial.'
Kardashian, 44, told the judge on May 14 that she had just started to doze off when she heard someone enter her hotel room during Paris Fashion Week. She first assumed it was her sister Kourtney Kardashian returning from a night out, but two masked men stormed in, jolting her with fear. The robbers bound Kardashian by her hands and feet while holding a gun to her back.
Kardashian was without security the night the group of men broke into her hotel room and stole millions of dollars worth of jewels, including the $4 million dollar engagement ring her then-husband Kanye West had gifted her.
Duvier had been assigned to watch over her sister Kourtney, 46, at a nightclub across town, which is why he was not there when the robbers arrived. Kardashian's insurance company eventually filed a lawsuit against Duvier and his firm for negligence, which they settled in 2020. However, despite that, a friend said that Kardashian 'does not blame' Duvier, according to a report from Page Six.
Duvier took the stand and testified against the thieves during the trial, and Thorne spoke with Duvier's attorney in an interview as part of the new In Touch Investigates series.
Kroll says that Duvier, who let the Kardashians know he would be testifying ahead of time, still has 'good relations' with the Skims founder and that he 'has great respect and admiration for the family.' He also adds that Duvier's testimony was a key part of the trial, and it spoke to how tumultuous the event was for Kardashian.
'In fact, when the Kardashian's lawyer cross-examined my client, they said, 'Had you ever seen Kim Kardashian hysterically crying before?' And the answer was no. In other words, this was, like, shock and awe, devastating experience. And for him to witness that and for her to go through it is something that you don't get over very easily.'
Kroll continues, 'For anybody who was in a violent crime situation where you're violated, you have personally been violated, there has to be some type of reconciliation where you kind of go full circle. And this is the completion of the circle now where the people who did this to her are going to finally face justice. And I think that's the most important part of what we're talking about now. I think the important thing, my client feels this way, and I would think also the victims feel this way, is that we want to see the perpetrators face justice and have a conclusion to this that brings a closure to this horrible event.'
Kardashian, who has spoken openly about her hesitancy to wear large amounts of jewelry in public since the robbery, showed up to the courtroom wearing millions of dollars in jewels. She also said that she forgives the men, despite the trauma they caused her.
On Friday, May 23, eight out of 10 individuals were convicted in connection with the robbery. Looking ahead, those who were found guilty will face prison terms to fines.
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New York Times
30 minutes ago
- New York Times
Football's capacity to make men cry: ‘I was buying milk and just burst into tears thinking about Palace'
Forget the scoreline in the top corner of the screen. The image of the distraught Inter Milan supporter who flashed up on television screens around the world, as his team prepared to take a meaningless corner in the 76th minute, told the story of the Champions League final. Crestfallen and broken, his bottom lip was quivering and tears were streaming down his face. A fourth Paris Saint-Germain goal had not long been scored at the other end of the stadium and it was all too much for a man who looked like his world had come to an end. 'Imagine getting like that about football?' It's hard to explain to people who have no interest in the game why so many of us are so immersed and emotionally invested in this sport that it leads to the kind of behaviour — uncontrollable tears (of joy as well as despair), hugging total strangers, or even turning the air blue after something totally innocuous — that would be almost unthinkable in a public space anywhere else. Advertisement Football, essentially, is escapism; a place for us to forget about the trials and tribulations of everyday life and, for better or worse, completely lose ourselves. 'It's a cathartic experience,' Sally Baker, a senior therapist, says. 'Men are very rarely given permission to express their emotions. But within the context of football, they are — and no one's going to judge them. Everyone's in it together. 'They could swear — people use language at a football match that they never would use outside. It's a safe place and it's a unique environment for men to let off steam.' Those comments resonate on the back of something else that happened last Saturday night in Munich. With less than two minutes remaining, the television cameras showed PSG's assistant coach in tears in the technical area. His name is Rafel Pol Cabanellas and he lost his wife to a long-term illness in November last year. 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We were winning the league. But he's really sobbing. I was like, 'What's up?' Whatever it was just triggered him. He was about 25 — it's not like a young kid doing it.' Pickles, who has been following Manchester City since the 1970s, makes an interesting point when we discuss whether his son's behaviour at Brighton is not as unusual as it would have been in the past. 'That video was just before Covid,' he says. 'But I think certainly since Covid, when there was a lot of talk about mental health issues, it's helped men to speak about that and maybe show their emotions.' Looking back provides a bit of context. In an article on the BBC website in 2004, under an image of the former England international Paul Gascoigne crying at the 1990 World Cup, a clinical psychologist talked about how 'a lot of men know more about how a car works than their own emotions'. 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Forbes
3 hours ago
- Forbes
Marina Shows She's The ‘Princess Of Power' On New Album
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Associated Press
4 hours ago
- Associated Press
CCV Group Invests in Rezonate to Redefine the Future of Music Royalties for Producers and Creators
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