'Grandpa Robbers' Found Guilty in Kim Kardashian Trial

'Grandpa Robbers' Found Guilty in Kim Kardashian Trial

A gang of "grandpa robbers" who zip-tied Kim Kardashian at gunpoint nine years ago before fleeing with jewellery worth millions have been found guilty by a French court.

Ten suspects have been on trial since last month over the 2016 gunpoint mugging, which saw the A-list celebrity lose $10million worth of valuables in Paris.

Of the 10 people being tried, five are on trial for armed robbery and kidnap charges, while the rest are on for complicity in the heist or possession of a weapon.

Eight of them were convicted by a jury at the Paris Assizes on Friday evening after 11 hours of deliberation – but most will avoid time behind bars as the majority of sentences were suspended.

Two men accused of tipping off the gang were acquitted.

Aomar Aït Khedache, 69, considered the ringleader, was handed the heaviest punishment – three years in prison and five suspended.

But due to time served in custody since 2017, he will not return to jail.

Yunice Abbas, 72, who co-wrote a book titled I Kidnapped Kim Kardashian, was sentenced to seven years, with five suspended.

Didier Dubreucq, 69, received the same sentence.

Marc Alexander Boyer, 36 – the youngest of the gang and proven to have entered Kim’s apartment – was also given seven years, five suspended.

Cathy Glotin, 78, the gang’s only female member and once Aït Khedache’s lover, received four years – all suspended – for allegedly helping with logistics and travelling to Belgium to offload the jewels.

Marc Boyer, 62, was fined around £4,500 for supplying the vintage Mauser pistol used in the robbery.

Francis Delaporte, 69, got a three-year suspended sentence.

Two alleged informants, Florus Héroui, 52, and Gary Madar, 34, were acquitted after prosecutors failed to convince the jury they leaked Kardashian’s location.

Only one necklace has ever been recovered from the stolen haul, after it was dropped as the robbers fled the scene on bikes.

The rest of the jewels, including Kim’s $4 million engagement ring from Kanye West, vanished.

Kim, 44, was not in court for the verdict, but her legal team said she followed the case from Los Angeles.

She completed her law course this week after six years of study and said she hopes to fight for justice like her late father Robert Kardashian Jr., who famously defended O.J. Simpson in 1995.

In a statement to TMZ, the reality star thanked French authorities and said: "The crime was the most terrifying experience of my life, leaving a lasting impact on me and my family.

"While I’ll never forget what happened, I believe in the power of growth and accountability and pray for healing for all.

"I remain committed to advocating for justice, and promoting a fair legal system."

Despite the relatively low sentences handed down, Ms Kardashian’s legal team in Paris said she was ‘satisfied’ with the verdicts.

They were passed on to her as she followed the trial from her home in America, said one of her lawyers.

Trial Judge David De Pas meanwhile admitted: "The sentences are quite lenient".

He added: "They were designed in relation to a serious event, in which no-one was harmed physically."

He told the convicted defendants: "You caused harm, even if you didn't strike anyone, even if blood wasn't shed, you caused fear."

Aomar Aït Khedache, a veteran of the Paris criminal underworld, was at the heart of the trial.

Wiretaps captured him giving orders, recruiting accomplices, and arranging to sell the diamonds in Belgium. The loot was never found.

His DNA, found on the zip-ties used to bind Kardashian, cracked open the case.

Khedache today begged for forgiveness before a jury and offered "a thousand pardons" to the reality TV star.

In court, he was too ill to speak and instead scribbled his apologies on a piece of paper, which was shown on a screen in the courtroom’s historic Voltaire Chamber.

He arrived using a walking stick and could only communicate by scribbling notes, which were read out loud as he is now nearly deaf and mute.

The “heist of the century” trial came nine years after the robbers stormed Kim's luxury residence during the 2016 Paris Fashion Week.

Masked men dressed as police entered Kardashian's Paris home, bound her with zip-ties and vanished with $10 million in jewels.

Kim was left pleading for her life during the attack after they bound her hands and feet, and taped her mouth - known as sausaging someone in French.

Most of the stolen valuables were never recovered, including a diamond ring given to Kardashian by her then-husband, rapper Kanye West.

The ring alone was valued at $3.9million, and the robbery was the biggest against a private individual in France in 20 years.

They then carried her to the bathtub wearing only her dressing gown.

When the robbers fled, Kim freed herself by scraping the tape on her wrists off against the sink, then she hid with her friend, shaking and barefoot.

The terrifying ordeal led to the Kardashian family changing how much they share of their lavish lifestyles on social media.

Nine years after the raid, Kim made an emotional appearance at the trial of 10 people who are accused of being involved in the traumatic burglary.

Her testimony earlier this month was the emotional high point in the trial.

In a packed courtroom, she recounted how she was thrown onto a bed, zip-tied, and had a gun pressed to her on the night of the robbery.

She broke down as she said: "I absolutely did think I was going to die, she said. I have babies. I have to make it home.

"They can take everything. I just have to make it home."

Judge David De Pas asked her directly if she believed she was going to die during the ordeal.

"Absolutely, I was certain I was going to die," Kim replied.

The elderly gang - now in their 60s and 70s - had been inspired by Kim’s flashy posts online showing off her bling.

A chauffeur allegedly told them that she was alone in her secluded hotel room in the 8th arrondissement during Fashion Week.

It was supposed to be one final job for the veteran robbers who each had a string of convictions.

They claimed not to know who the social media influencer was but instead demanded the concierge take them to “the rapper’s wife”.

In an emotionally charged moment in the courtroom, Judge David Du Pas read out a letter from suspected ringleader Aomar Ait Khedache.

The letter read: “Madame, after seeing you in a French TV show and seeing your emotion and realising what psychological harm I did to you, that I decided to write to you.

“Not with the aim of getting forgiveness... I want to tell you human to human how I regret my actions and how I was touched to see you cry...

"I am sorry for the pain I caused you, your husband, you children and those who love you."

Kardashian broke down in tears while the letter was read out, and was handed a tissue by a member of her legal team, before telling career criminal Khedache that she forgives him.

She told the court: “I do appreciate the letter for sure. I do appreciate it. I forgive you for what had taken place.

"But it doesn’t change the emotion and the trauma and the way that my life had forever changed.

“But I do appreciate the letter, so thank you.”

In a handwritten note in response, Khedache - who is deaf and mute - wrote: "Your forgiveness is a sunshine that has enlightened me... I am forever grateful."

Another of the defendants, Yunice Abbas, also said he regretted his part in the terrifying raid.

Abbas has previously written a book about his involvement in the heist.

When asked if he wanted to say anything to Kardashian, Abbas stood up and said: "Hello. I recognise your trauma. I regret my part."

Kardashian, who once said this experience really changed everything, hopes the verdict will offer a measure of closure.

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