In two years, the reality TV star has become a force in criminal justice, all while continuing to sell body-sculpting undergarments and plugging diet products on Instagram
Kim Kardashian West speaks alongside President Donald Trump during a news conference on criminal justice reform inthe East Room of the White House in Washington on Thursday, June 13, 2019. Over the past two years, Kardashian West has become a force in the world of criminal justice reform, successfully lobbying President Donald Trump, spending time on the phone with governors and legislators, writing letters in support of clemency petitions and paying legal bills for people trying to get out of prison
Image: Doug Mills/The New York Times
Kim Kardashian West breezed into a steakhouse in Washington, D.C., last month wearing a bright white outfit with a giant fabric flower on the lapel. Technically, it was a pantsuit, but tighter and more fabulous than its Beltway cousins.
Inside the restaurant, Charlie Palmer, with its plate-glass windows overlooking the dome of the U.S. Capitol Building, her sizable entourage roamed around an area with a dozen tables. At the center of one, preset with plates of tuna tartar and salad to share, Kardashian West took a seat with two lawyers and three women who had been released from federal prison just two weeks before. They did their best to pretend the “Keeping Up With the Kardashians” camera crew wasn’t floating a boom mic above their appetizers.
At a nearby table sat goody bags from the White House, packed with MAGA hats and signed commutation papers. That morning, Kardashian West had accompanied her guests there so President Donald Trump could meet the women whose sentences he reduced and convince him to let other people out of prison, too.
She posted about each of the three women on Twitter that day: Crystal Munoz, whom she said was sentenced to 20 years for conspiracy to possess and distribute marijuana, and gave birth to her second daughter while wearing shackles; Judith Negron, who got 35 years for conspiracy to commit health care fraud, her first offense; and Tynice Hall, who spent almost 14 years in prison on drug conspiracy charges after her boyfriend used her house for his drug activities.
The next day, she had a different kind of update for her 64 million Twitter followers, about fuzzy knit tank tops and bathrobes: “JUST RESTOCKED: Our best selling @skims Cozy Collection styles in Bone and Dusk.”
©2019 New York Times News Service