Dorit Kemsley and Husband PK "Look Forward to the Next Chapter" After Settling 2 Lawsuits
The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills husband and wife are ready to put their legal issues behind them.
Dorit Kemsley and her husband, Paul "PK" Kemsley, are looking toward the future after settling two lawsuits this week.
PK has resolved two separate lawsuits with Ryan Horne and Nicos Kirzis, E! News reports. "These matters, which were never as concerning to the Kemsleys as they were made to appear, have now been resolved," attorney Matthew Pace of Rimon Law told the outlet. "The Kemsleys look forward to the next chapter without the legal encumbrances of the last few years."
The news comes after Dorit addressed recent reports about her finances in connection with her husband's legal issues during an interview with TooFab on October 11. "Everything is perfect," she said. "There is no money issue."
Dorit addressed a lawsuit that was grabbing headlines last season of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills. "This lawsuit looming over my head with a company that I'm pouring my heart and soul into has had a devastating effect on Beverly Beach," she said of her swimwear line during a discussion with PK, which you can view, below. "I've had to pick things up, find new manufacturers, start from scratch."
That conversation with PK came the day after Camille Grammer questioned Dorit about her and her husband's finances during a night out with the RHOBH squad in Season 9. Dorit reflected on the moment and commented on PK's current business affairs during The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 9 After Show (clip above).
"PK's affairs, and whoever's coming out trying to say he owes him money, that is from another lifetime ago. It's way before me, it's way before his bankruptcy. It's at the height — and unfortunately, when you become public they come out of the woodworks and that's exactly what's happening," she explained. "There's far more to the story than what people think that they know, and there's a lot that I can't say, obviously, because it's in the hands of the lawyers and where it should be."