I'll tell my side in book, says internet twins woman

The woman at the centre of the internet adoption controversy plans to tell her side of the story in a book.

The woman at the centre of the internet adoption controversy plans to tell her side of the story in a book.

Judith and Alan Kilshaw of Buckley, north Wales, have also revealed further details of plans to start a new life in America.

Their interview was broadcast as Flintshire County Council chiefs confirmed nine-month-old sisters Belinda and Kimberley had returned to the United States.

In the programme the TV company offered to pay for the Kilshaws to leave the country, funding one-way tickets to a destination of their own choice.

Both suggested America was their preferred option with Mrs Kilshaw saying she wanted the fair hearing she had been denied in Britain.

She also claimed to have been "morally turned over" and "morally stitched up".

When asked whether she was serious about writing a book Mrs Kilshaw, 47, replied: "I'm going to try my best. I'm not an author. I have never written a book but I'll give it a damn good shot.

"I think it will be worth doing if nothing other than it will tell the true story," her husband replied.

Questioned about the reasoning behind the proposed move to America, Mrs Kilshaw said: "I want a fair hearing. I haven't had in Britain and that's one of my main reasons for wanting to go. "

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