
A Los Angeles judge signed off on a temporary restraining order on Friday, May 29, 2026, shielding Kris Jenner and each of her six children after the family matriarch told the court a Colorado man repeatedly tried to get close to them. The emergency order blocks the man from contacting any family member and bars him from coming near their homes, workplaces, or vehicles.
According to CW Columbus, Jenner laid out her concerns in a sworn declaration that identifies the man as Colorado resident Kyle Robert DeWick. She said security first flagged DeWick in 2021, and that his pattern of attempts to reach the family has caused her "severe emotional distress" and left her on edge about her children's safety.
Federal Court Bid Hit A Dead End
Public court records show DeWick took his own shot at the legal system in late 2024, when he pursued federal relief in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. That petition did not get far. As documented in Justia Dockets & Filings, the case was dismissed in December, with the judge terminating the petition without leave to amend.
Security Red Flags Going Back To 2021
The family says trouble with DeWick dates back to 2021, when security reportedly turned him away multiple times at Kylie Jenner's residence. It is not the first time unwanted visitors have breached or tried to breach the Kardashian-Jenner orbit. In a separate 2021 incident, a trespasser at Kendall Jenner's home ended up with a 180-day jail sentence, as reported by TMZ. In the current case, court papers say DeWick recently resurfaced by contacting real-estate agents linked to family properties and touring homes near relatives, a level of house hunting that reportedly alarmed the clan.
How A California Temporary Restraining Order Works
In California, a civil-harassment temporary restraining order is designed to immediately cut off contact. It can require the restrained person to keep a set distance from the protected party's home, workplace, and vehicle. The state's court self-help materials describe a TRO as short-term relief that lasts only until a noticed hearing, where a judge decides whether to keep protections in place longer. If the legal standard is met, a TRO can be converted into a longer-lasting order. The procedural nuts and bolts, including standard forms and timelines, are laid out by California Courts.
Next Hearing Will Decide If Order Sticks Around
For now, the temporary order stays active while the court sets up the next round of hearings. At that stage, the family can ask a judge to turn the TRO into a longer-term restraining order. Violating a court order can carry criminal consequences, and Jenner's filing asks the court to require DeWick to remain at least 100 yards away from the family, as well as from their homes, workplaces, and vehicles, according to CW Columbus. For now it is a temporary fix, set to be revisited when the case lands back on the court's calendar.









