Posted on 05/09/2008 10:05:32 AM PDT by NCjim
Cary, N.C. A Cary man accused of being married to both a Cary woman and Clayton woman might also be married to women in Georgia, Virginia and Arizona.
That's according to his wife in Cary, Shannetta Dawn Stone-Wilkins, who says at least three of them could be in Virginia and one in Arizona.
Police arrested Keron Wilkins, 31, of 136 Chatham Woods Drive, Tuesday after receiving a call from Stone-Wilkins about how he would disappear for several days at a time and could not be reached.
Stone-Wilkins says she later learned he had a wife in Clayton, Chaka Wilkins, and two children with her an 8-month-old and a 5-year-old.
"I gave him every opportunity to come to me and be honest about the situation," Stone-Wilkins said. "I don't know why he did this. I don't know what his motives were."
A third woman from Atlanta, Jenean Baker, also came forward Thursday, saying she married Keron Wilkins in Miami in November 2005 and started divorce proceedings in early 2006.
(Excerpt) Read more at wral.com ...
I have enough trouble with one...can’t imagine 7. ;)
Can you imagine his weekends though? Seven honey-do lists waiting for him, one at every stop. The man must do nothing but carry garbage mow lawns on his time off.
Seven wives? Isn’t “heptamist” the correct term?
Talk about being an extreme masochist
No, the correct term is “knucklehead”. :)
I was thinking "septamist". You could be right, also, though. I'm guessing one's Greek, the other Latin.
When I was going to St. Ives, I met a man with seven wives ... (Jeremy Irons, Die Hard III)
H
Poor guy
Wow. 7 mothers-in-law, 7 mortgage payments, 7 lawns to mow, 7 sets of garbage to take out, and now 7 alimony settlements.
Must be some kind of record.
I was raised to believe a bigamist is a ‘fog over Italy’.
You are correct, sir. "Hept-" is Greek, "sept-" is Latin. Often an initial "h" sound in Greek has an "s" counterpart in Latin, e.g.: "hex-"/"sex-" ("six"), "herp-"/"serp-" ("snake"), "hyper-"/"super-" ("above"). . . .
It’s just as well that they used Greek for naming most of the hydrocarbons. I’d hate to be a grade 8 science teacher talking about “sexane”.
Boy, if this involved Utah or Northern AZ authorities, they’d probably look the other way.
Reminds me of Latin class. Everyone had to count off, and the sixth seat held a particularly attractive girl. She was rather embarrassed. :-)
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