The Photo The Kardashians Are Trying To Bury
Mamamia Out Loud
The Many Complicated Lives Of Kyle Sandilands: Part One
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“I had no idea,” Samantha sighs. “Only in the last month of staying with him, he started acting weird and getting possessive of me and my two youngest daughters.”
Samantha remembers the moment, earlier this year, when her second youngest daughter told her what he was doing to her.
“It made me sick because we trusted him and for him to go and do that to her, gutted me,” Samantha tells
Mamamia.
“It ripped my heart out that someone we put our trust in would do something like that to my baby.”
20 Under 40: Samantha Wilson creates new jobs, thriving new business in Moffat County
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Toronto’s The Second Co. introduces apparel next week
Photography courtesy of The Second Co.
After launching last May with a range of timepieces inspired by a desire to create what she couldn’t find on the market, Samantha Wilson II’s brand The Second Co. will offer an array of unisex, Canadian-made loungewear for the first time, starting March 2. “I have so much more time now to be creative and think about my designs, and edit them,” Wilson says of the new pieces, which include a barcode graphic-boasting hoodie, jogger pants, crewneck sweaters and a new style of beanie.
9 & 10 News
February 25, 2021
A woman is facing meth charges following a traffic stop in Missaukee County.
Michigan State Police pulled over Samantha Wilson in Lake City last Sunday and found a syringe loaded with meth in the driver side door pocket.
Wilson is now charged with having the drug.
Slow bleed: Three stories of Colorado child care providers trying to survive
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After a frustrating search for child care in her rural Colorado town, Samantha Wilson left her office job to open a child care center. Two months later, the pandemic hit.
Across the state in the suburb of Aurora, Latanya Austin watched helplessly last summer as parents tearfully pulled their children out of her in-home child care business because of lost jobs or fear of COVID-19.
In Montrose, the large size of Chrissy Simmons’ child care center, which serves about 150 kids, didn’t protect her from the pandemic. Enrollment plummeted and the center nearly went out of business.
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