Verdict handed down in $14m Kardashian case
A court has handed down its verdict in the case of eight “grandpa robbers” accused of assaulting Kim Kardashian in a Paris hotel.
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Eight French “grandpa robbers” have been found guilty of the 2016 kidnapping and robbery of Kim Kardashian in Paris.
A panel of three judges and six jurors in the Paris courtroom handed down guilty verdicts to all but two of the 10 defendants, nine men and one woman, NBC reported.
They were accused of an elaborate heist that involved binding the superstar influencer with zip ties and making off with $14 million worth of her jewellery – including a diamond engagement ring from Ye (then Kanye West), report the New York Post.
The incident happened during Paris Fashion Week in 2016.
Prosecutors had asked for 10-year sentences for the alleged heisters, most of whom were in their late 50s and 60s when cops rounded them up in the months after the heist, using evidence such as DNA and wire taps to crack the case.
The accused became known in France as “les pays braqueurs” — the grandpa robbers.
After nearly ten years of delays in court proceedings, most of the robbers are now in their late 60s and 70s and suffering maladies including cancers, Parkinson’s disease, and Alzheimer’s.
One suspect died before trial, and the alleged mastermind of the operation – Aomar Aït Khedache – is deaf, communicating with the court through written notes.
The 44-year-old Kardashian, on the other hand, was as resplendent as ever in the courtroom – a contrast to her gut-wrenching testimony about how she was thrown onto a bed, zip-tied, and had a gun pressed to her on the night of October 2, 2016.
“I absolutely did think I was going to die,” she testified. “I have babies. I have to make it home. They can take everything. I just have to make it home”.
She was dragged into a marble bathroom and told to stay silent.
When the robbers fled, she freed herself by scraping the tape on her wrists off against the sink, then hid with her friend, shaking and barefoot.
Khedache was already a veteran of the Paris criminal underworld when he organised the heist, and his DNA, found on the zip-ties used to bind Kardashian, cracked open the case.
Wiretaps captured him giving orders, recruiting accomplices, and arranging to sell the diamonds in Belgium.
The loot was never found.
Khedache claims he was only a foot soldier, blaming a mysterious “X” or “Ben” — someone prosecutors say never existed.
Khedache asked for “a thousand pardons,” communicated via a written note, according to French media. Other defendants also used their final words to express remorse.
This story was published in the New York Post and is reproduced with permission.
Originally published as Verdict handed down in $14m Kardashian case