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Kim Kardashian's friend testifies the star begged not to die during life-changing jewelry heist

PARIS (AP) — Kim Kardashian 's childhood friend and then stylist told a Paris court Tuesday that she heard the celebrity beg for her life during a 2016 armed robbery that changed the star’s sense of safety — and transformed the way the world viewed f
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FILE - Kim Kardashian arrives at the Vanity Fair Oscar Party on March 2, 2025, at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills, Calif. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File)

PARIS (AP) — Kim Kardashian 's childhood friend and then stylist told a Paris court Tuesday that she heard the celebrity beg for her life during a 2016 armed robbery that changed the star’s sense of safety — and transformed the way the world viewed fame in the digital age.

Simone Harouche, who was sharing their two-floor hotel suite during Fashion Week, said she heard a terrified Kardashian yelling: “‘I have babies and I need to live.’ That is what she kept on saying, ‘Take everything. I need to live.’”

“I was scared that she was raped or violated. I thought the worst,” Harouche said. Kardashian was “screaming with terror in her voice.”

Kardashian is expected to take the stand later Tuesday, in what is likely to be the most emotionally charged moment of the trial. Her testimony will revisit the night she was zip-tied, held at gunpoint and locked in a marble bathroom while masked men stole more than $6 million in jewels.

One of the most recognizable figures on the planet, Kardashian is set to face 10 men accused of orchestrating the 2016 heist — a crime that shook the fashion world and redefined the risks of being visible, female and famous in the Instagram era.

Harouche told the court the trauma “forever” changed her friend, whom she’s known since age 12, robbing her of a basic human right: freedom.

“She now has a completely different lifestyle,” she said. “In terms of security, she can’t go alone, she doesn’t go alone to places anymore. To lose your sense of freedom ... it’s horrible.”

Kardashian’s testimony is expected to recount how the attackers demanded her ring and left her fearing she would never see her children again.

David De Pas, the lead judge, asked Harouche whether Kardashian had made herself a target by posting images of herself with “jewels of great value.”

“No,” Harouche replied. “Just because a woman wears jewelry, that doesn’t make her a target. That’s like saying that because a woman wears a short skirt that she deserves to be raped.”

Twelve suspects were originally charged. One has died. Another was excused due to illness. Most are in their 60s and 70s — nicknamed les papys braqueurs, or “the grandpa robbers” — and authorities describe them as a seasoned and coordinated criminal gang.

Two defendants have admitted being at the scene. The others deny involvement, and one claims he didn’t know who Kardashian was. But police say the group tracked her via social media, where she had posted images of her jewelry, her hotel, and her schedule — exposing her vulnerability.

The heist turned Kardashian into a cautionary tale of hyper-visibility. At the time, she was at the height of her influence — a style icon, social media pioneer and one of the most photographed women in the world.

Fashion legend Karl Lagerfeld criticized her after the robbery, telling The Associated Press she was “too public” with her wealth. Yet, as details emerged in the days after the heist, public sentiment shifted. The image of Kardashian — alone, bound, and pleading for her life — reframed her in the public eye.

In the aftermath, Kardashian pulled back from the spotlight. She developed severe anxiety and later described symptoms of agoraphobia.

“I hated to go out,” she said in a 2021 interview. “I didn’t want anybody to know where I was … I just had such anxiety.”

Later, she acknowledged that constant sharing had made her vulnerable: “People were watching,” she said. “They knew what I had. They knew where I was.”

Harouche, who hid in a downstairs bathroom during the robbery, said she also suffered trauma. She sought counseling for post-traumatic stress and left the celebrity styling world to become an interior designer.

“That experience was very stressful for me. It made me fearful of being around celebrities," she said.

Harouche said she went to bed before the robbery. Kardashian entertained friends upstairs. Screams jolted Harouche from her sleep.

From inside the locked bathroom, she texted Kardashian’s sister Kourtney and Kardashian’s bodyguard that “something is very wrong,” Harouche testified.

Later, after the robbers had gone, she said she heard Kardashian hopping down the stairs with her ankles still bound to find her.

“She was beside herself,” Harouche said. “She just was screaming.”

Kardashian’s lawyers confirmed she would testify in person.

Thomas Adamson, John Leicester And Nicolas Vaux-montagny, The Associated Press

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