Paris Hilton, the 39-year-old hotel heiress is finally opening up to the abuse she had to endure while attending private boarding school as a incredibly wealthy teen. She called the abuse "continuous torture."
Hilton will be appearing in an upcoming documentary about her life in which she will be raking in the dough while exposing herself in never-before-heard details about some of the pain she suffered as an adolescent as opposed to exposing herself the other way.
In an interview with People, the former "Simple Life" star revealed she was traumatized daily at the Provo Canyon School in Utah, where she was enrolled for 11 months at age 17.
“The staff would say terrible things. They were constantly making me feel bad about myself and bully me," Hilton said, and explained that the school didn't have a "safe space" where she could go and feel safe in her space.
"I think it was their goal to break us down. And they were physically abusive, hitting and strangling us. They wanted to instill fear in the kids so we’d be too scared to disobey them.”
It's a good thing she never enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps where bootcamp was exactly that but to the tenth power.
Hilton said the school did not focus on education "at all," which explains her information set.
"From the moment I woke up until I went to bed, it was all day screaming in my face, yelling at me, continuous torture," she said.
Hilton explained that her parents, Rick and Kathy Hilton, made the decision to send her to boarding school after she pulled a series of stunts including "sneaking out and going to clubs and parties" while living free at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City.
Upon her arrival at Provo Canyon, Hilton said she "knew it was going to be worse than anywhere else" she'd been, but not quite as bad as an early drug trip that blew her away, but not in a good way.
Provo Canyon School did not respond to request made by Fox News, but they released the following statement to People:
"Originally opened in 1971, Provo Canyon School was sold by its previous ownership in August 2000. We therefore cannot comment on the operations or patient experience prior to this time."Sounds like the previous owner(s) decided to get out of Dodge.
Hilton claimed the school placed students in solitary confinement as punishment "sometimes 20 hours a day."
The alleged abuse led to Hilton suffering from full-blown panic attacks "every single day," and claimed that she felt "like a prisoner" and "hated life" while a prisoner at the school. She claimed that letters or phone calls to her incredibly rich parents were intercepted by staff.
"They would grab the phone or rip up the letters I wrote telling me, 'No one is going to believe you.'"
According to the report, Hilton left the school in 1999 when she was 18. She wouldn't speak about the abuse because she said she felt "ashamed," she alleges.
She plans to watch the documentary on YouTube on September 14, with her parents and believes ". . . it will be good for us, but emotional too. There are no more secrets," she claims, but we all know that there are always more secrets.
Hilton plans to donate all the money the documentary makes to a girls' charity to help those who were victimized as she was.
Just kidding. She plans to keep all the money to add to her collection.
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