Burglars Raided YouTube Star PewDiePie's Home and Stole His Wife's Jewellery

Published December 3rd, 2019 - 01:13 GMT
PewDiePie and wife Marzia (Twitter)
PewDiePie and wife Marzia (Twitter)
Highlights
The couple, who married at Kew Gardens in West London in August, have been together for eight years and are estimated to be worth more than £26million.

Burglars raided YouTube star PewDiePie's home where they stole most of his wife's jewellery and other valuables, she has revealed.

Marzia Kjellberg, 27, who lives with vlogger Felix Kjellberg, 30, and their two dogs Maya and Edga in Brighton, East Sussex, said they were burgled last weekend.

She claimed on Instagram that they stole '90 per cent of my valuables' as well as other luxury goods and 'special items I've been collecting over the years'.

Mrs Kjellberg, who married the vlogger four months ago, said: 'Our house was broken into and they took 90 per cent of my valuables, from my jewellery, to luxury goods, and special items I've been collecting over the years. It's all gone.

'I know it is very materialistic, and should be happy with what I was left/have. But I can't hide the shock and sadness with all being taken away, just like that.'

Mr Kjellberg is believed to have been burgled before, and made a vlog in 2016 called 'Don't come to my house' on how fans kept turning up at his door, reported The Sun.

The couple, who married at Kew Gardens in West London in August, have been together for eight years and are estimated to be worth more than £26million.

The Kjellbergs have a huge influence on social media with a combined 28million followers on Instagram, 109million on YouTube and 23million on Twitter.

The duo were most recently listed in 2015 as living in a flat just off Hove seafront worth £280,000, but are believed to have moved since then.

The star from Gothenburg, Sweden, generated a huge following playing video games, and has the most subscribers of any personality on the platform.

He has had a long battle with Bollywood music company T-Series to become the most-subscribed-to YouTube channel - currently trailing it by 17million subscribers.

Mr Kjellberg faced controversy in 2017 when Disney cut ties with him after claims some of his videos had 'anti-Semitic' content, but he insisted these were 'jokes'.

 

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