Daily Mail

Simon Cowell’s £500k security plan after raid: Panic room and a baseball bat!

- By Clemmie Moodie Associate Showbusine­ss Editor

AFTER a burglar raided his home, Simon Cowell said he lived in constant fear it may happen again.

So to prevent another break-in, he has spent an estimated £500,000 on in-house security including alarms, a panic room… and a baseball bat.

The Britain’s Got Talent judge paid for experts to overhaul security in his £35 million west London mansion after an intruder broke in while he and partner Lauren Silverman, 39, and their baby son Eric were asleep in the house.

Burglar Darren February was jailed for eight years for the raid which took place in December 2015.

‘Now that this guy is in prison, there is an incredible sense of relief,’ Cowell, 57, told the Mail. ‘The whole experience has been pretty traumatisi­ng and not something I ever want to go through again. I’ve obviously had to massively increase my personal security at home with every modcon you can imagine, and all this stuff, including a panic room. My house basically looks like something out of Raiders of the Lost Ark.

‘We called in these guys and one of the things they suggested was a baseball bat. I’m not even joking.

‘So I literally have a baseball bat ready to go if anyone comes in!’

He added: ‘What happened was utterly terrifying.

‘It is almost irrelevant what he took – that is all just stuff. Jewellery, passports, none of that really matters. What really got to me though was that this guy was walking about in my house when Eric was fast asleep – it doesn’t bear thinking about what could have happened if he had gone into his bedroom, and found him. It is terrifying, and still gives me nightmares.’

The 33-year- old thief, who has committed 58 crimes in two decades, was jailed in February this year. He was identi- fied by a security worker as he fled. Items stolen included a ring, earrings, watches and a diamond bracelet, estimated to be worth £950,000 in total. February also stole two passports, which were both recovered. In a statement read out to court during the trial, Cowell said: ‘The whole incident has been very traumatic and there is a constant fear that it may be repeated.’

Panic rooms provide a safe location from within the home during an emergency. Made with steel beams or bricks and concrete blocks, they are designed to be impenetrab­le with the exception of a bulldozer, tank or dynamite.

At the touch of a button inside, police are alerted and a patrol car is sent over to check on the property.

Other provisions are understood to include CCTV, light and heat motion sensors, security guards, electronic fences and alarms.

 ??  ?? Traumatic: Simon Cowell and Lauren Silverman
Traumatic: Simon Cowell and Lauren Silverman

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