Dorit's fake Break In

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:There are rumours that PK used the insurance money to pay off his gambling debts, so that does make the whole thing a little suspicious. My theory is PK set it up but didn't tell Dorit, hence her very real emotions about this.


Rumors from what credible source?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:There are rumours that PK used the insurance money to pay off his gambling debts, so that does make the whole thing a little suspicious. My theory is PK set it up but didn't tell Dorit, hence her very real emotions about this.


I think that makes sense, but it seems like the bit about the guy being shocked to find her in the bed seems real.

Maybe the guys messed up the day of the break in? Or more likely, PK didn’t tell them she would be there.


That would be insane. She could have gotten seriously hurt or killed. She is not an incapable person- what if she was in a situation where she used an object to hit a guy? What if her daughter had been in the bed?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't think it was faked but I did think the aftermath was a little strange.

After a horrific incident like that, she spent the next night away from her kids and leaves them with the assistant? Then her husband, whose wife and children could have been killed, came home and gives her a one-armed hug then leaves her outside alone while he gets his phone? Strange behavior.


I DID think it was a little weird that she went out to see friends that evening (my guess is she left after they were in bed and I believe she and Kyle - whose house she was at - live within like five minutes of each other) but didn't think it was weird PK did what he did - he hugged her full body several times in Kyle's house, and just ran back in to get his phone and was probably gone for 30 seconds. No big deal.


At first I thought it was strange to leave her kids, but I can also understand wanting some time to process and decompress away from the kids. They don't want the kids to know what happened so it probably helped her to be around friends and not have to fake everything being fine around the kids.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I've had a gun pointed at my head while my husband and I were instructed to hand over our cash, our phones, and my jewelry.

It's terrifying and I would never wish it on anyone. I would never doubt anyone who said they had been through that experience. You know what, I hope she IS making it up, just so that her kids were never in that situation. But I don't think she is lying.


But they handed her phone back to her (placed it on the edge of the yard) because she asked them to. None of it seems real.


I mean...do you have a degree in psychology or a related field? I bet if you talked to anyone in law enforcement, psychology, criminology or law that they could tell you many tales about criminals who acted in ways that didn't make sense, even against their own best interest. I know I've read articles about people who broke down in the middle of a crime or an attempted crime, such as a guy who was holding someone up at gunpoint and when the cop offered food and a hug, the guy broke down and said he was really hungry and he was sorry.


Wow this is stupid. It's strange that they even spoke about the phone if she legit thought she could die.


Her phone was her life line. She'd just been in a life threatening situation with her kids asleep in their beds. If she has no phone, she doesn't have a way to call for help. She'd have to leave the kids alone and go to a neighbor's house or something. I can definitely understand freaking out and wanting to make sure I had my phone. Most people don't have landlines anymore.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I don't know that it was faked or set up, but I am very confused by the phone thing.

Why would she beg for her phone? After begging for your life and your CHILDREN'S lives, it's weird that you would bring up your phone. Why?

And weirder that they respected her wishes and left it. Why?


I don't think it's that weird - couldn't they easily be tracked if they had her phone? Leaving it at the edge of the property means she can't call the cops immediately, but they couldn't really take it with them. I guess they could have trashed it or thrown it down a storm drain or something, but why?
Anonymous
The kids had no idea what happened. Not weird that she wasn't with them after they went to bed and went down the street to her friend's house to decompress.

The accusations that these shows are scripted are irritating. Reality TV has been around forever and everyone is super open about what goes on. On these Bravo shows, the producers ask the women what is going on in their lives and pick story lines to develop and follow on the show based on what they are told. And do producers influence what happens through things they might say or do? Sure, yes. The shows are absolutely heavily produced. But not scripted. And no they don't stage robberies and police reports. You can read articles and books about all of this if you actually care. It's not some deep dark secret.

There is also a lot out there about shows like The Hills and The Bachelor and how they are developed and made. The Hills was much more blatantly made up, but again not totally scripted. But producers would go back and pick up scenes and text cast members things to say in the middle of a scene. And some complete fabrications of scenarios and relationships. The Bachelor is more just a lot of manipulation of the people on the show to do certain things.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't know that it was faked or set up, but I am very confused by the phone thing.

Why would she beg for her phone? After begging for your life and your CHILDREN'S lives, it's weird that you would bring up your phone. Why?

And weirder that they respected her wishes and left it. Why?


I don't think it's that weird - couldn't they easily be tracked if they had her phone? Leaving it at the edge of the property means she can't call the cops immediately, but they couldn't really take it with them. I guess they could have trashed it or thrown it down a storm drain or something, but why?


This. They really don't want to take the phone with them either. I would think a criminal would just destroy it. But they didn't expect her to be there so probably had not fully thought through what they would do about her phone. So making split second decisions in the moment. They sounded like relative amateurs. Dragging her shit out in a comforter is not a well thought out plan.
Anonymous
I think the break-in was real but Sutton clearly did not believe it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I've had a gun pointed at my head while my husband and I were instructed to hand over our cash, our phones, and my jewelry.

It's terrifying and I would never wish it on anyone. I would never doubt anyone who said they had been through that experience. You know what, I hope she IS making it up, just so that her kids were never in that situation. But I don't think she is lying.


But they handed her phone back to her (placed it on the edge of the yard) because she asked them to. None of it seems real.


I mean...do you have a degree in psychology or a related field? I bet if you talked to anyone in law enforcement, psychology, criminology or law that they could tell you many tales about criminals who acted in ways that didn't make sense, even against their own best interest. I know I've read articles about people who broke down in the middle of a crime or an attempted crime, such as a guy who was holding someone up at gunpoint and when the cop offered food and a hug, the guy broke down and said he was really hungry and he was sorry.


Wow this is stupid. It's strange that they even spoke about the phone if she legit thought she could die.


Her phone was her life line. She'd just been in a life threatening situation with her kids asleep in their beds. If she has no phone, she doesn't have a way to call for help. She'd have to leave the kids alone and go to a neighbor's house or something. I can definitely understand freaking out and wanting to make sure I had my phone. Most people don't have landlines anymore.


I disagree that she wouldn't have a way of calling for help if her phone was gone.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I've had a gun pointed at my head while my husband and I were instructed to hand over our cash, our phones, and my jewelry.

It's terrifying and I would never wish it on anyone. I would never doubt anyone who said they had been through that experience. You know what, I hope she IS making it up, just so that her kids were never in that situation. But I don't think she is lying.


But they handed her phone back to her (placed it on the edge of the yard) because she asked them to. None of it seems real.


I mean...do you have a degree in psychology or a related field? I bet if you talked to anyone in law enforcement, psychology, criminology or law that they could tell you many tales about criminals who acted in ways that didn't make sense, even against their own best interest. I know I've read articles about people who broke down in the middle of a crime or an attempted crime, such as a guy who was holding someone up at gunpoint and when the cop offered food and a hug, the guy broke down and said he was really hungry and he was sorry.


Wow this is stupid. It's strange that they even spoke about the phone if she legit thought she could die.


Her phone was her life line. She'd just been in a life threatening situation with her kids asleep in their beds. If she has no phone, she doesn't have a way to call for help. She'd have to leave the kids alone and go to a neighbor's house or something. I can definitely understand freaking out and wanting to make sure I had my phone. Most people don't have landlines anymore.

There is zero chance she didn’t have a house phone. These are people that run “businesses” from their home, have multiple assistants and nannies inside and out of the house every day. Also, with a security system as extensive that they have (that was of course off) would not be running on WiFi like your home system, it would run through a phone line.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I've had a gun pointed at my head while my husband and I were instructed to hand over our cash, our phones, and my jewelry.

It's terrifying and I would never wish it on anyone. I would never doubt anyone who said they had been through that experience. You know what, I hope she IS making it up, just so that her kids were never in that situation. But I don't think she is lying.


But they handed her phone back to her (placed it on the edge of the yard) because she asked them to. None of it seems real.


I mean...do you have a degree in psychology or a related field? I bet if you talked to anyone in law enforcement, psychology, criminology or law that they could tell you many tales about criminals who acted in ways that didn't make sense, even against their own best interest. I know I've read articles about people who broke down in the middle of a crime or an attempted crime, such as a guy who was holding someone up at gunpoint and when the cop offered food and a hug, the guy broke down and said he was really hungry and he was sorry.


Wow this is stupid. It's strange that they even spoke about the phone if she legit thought she could die.


As someone who was held up at gunpoint for longer than you might think would happen on the street, there was almost a rapport and an understanding toward the end. My husband handed his cash out of his wallet and started to take the cards out and the guy said, "Don't give me the cards," and my husband said, "Can I keep my driver's license?" and he said yes.

Like honestly, you don't know how it is or what you would say or do or what the guy would say or do unless you're in a situation like that. Unless you have literally been held up at gunpoint, or have had a weapon pointed at you, you have no idea.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The kids had no idea what happened. Not weird that she wasn't with them after they went to bed and went down the street to her friend's house to decompress.

The accusations that these shows are scripted are irritating. Reality TV has been around forever and everyone is super open about what goes on. On these Bravo shows, the producers ask the women what is going on in their lives and pick story lines to develop and follow on the show based on what they are told. And do producers influence what happens through things they might say or do? Sure, yes. The shows are absolutely heavily produced. But not scripted. And no they don't stage robberies and police reports. You can read articles and books about all of this if you actually care. It's not some deep dark secret.

There is also a lot out there about shows like The Hills and The Bachelor and how they are developed and made. The Hills was much more blatantly made up, but again not totally scripted. But producers would go back and pick up scenes and text cast members things to say in the middle of a scene. And some complete fabrications of scenarios and relationships. The Bachelor is more just a lot of manipulation of the people on the show to do certain things.


I think you grossly underestimate how thirsty these women are.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s absolutely real. Burglaries like this happen often in LA. Celebrities and athletes are targeted, and so are REGULAR people. It’s quite frightening. I was terrified reading this. Imagine?!!


Plus 1. Absolutely this. Chilling!! And Dorit and PK reacted intensely and authentically, imo. Who knows how they would react if this happened to them!
Anonymous
How does she stay looking so young, she looks amazing
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I think the break-in was real but Sutton clearly did not believe it.


Sutton is REALLY WEIRD!!!!!
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