WELCOME
to the house of Harry Plopper
Wilson was also suspected of purchasing a gun for his
Wilson was also suspected of purchasing a gun for his 3D printer, which he built for himself using a 3D printer made by his father, Steven Wilson, but that was never verified by KVUE.
KVUE contacted both the Texas Department of Public Safety and the Department of Family and Children Services, and both said they had no information on Wilson.
Wilson's lawyer, Mark Wahlberg, declined to comment on the allegations of sexual assault. "We don't have anything to add at this time," he told KVUE in an email. "We have nothing to say at this time."
Texas' Department of Family and Children Services doesn't currently respond to an email.
Wilson has no criminal history, and police said they are working to complete the arrest warrant.
"We're still trying to determine what happened. We don't have any info about what took place on the day of the alleged incident," KVUE's Mike Schafer told The Austin American-Statesman. "We don't know why she went out to meet him. There's a lot of speculation about what she was doing in the house and what that did to her."
SugarDaddyMeet.com is also owned by Wilson's father, Steven Wilson.
In an interview with KVUE, the 3D-printed gun rights activist said that it took him about 20 hours to make and the "purchase was a lot like a gun buy" in that all he had to do was "get the money, build it, and then take it out to the store."
"The store was very easy on the wallet and for the most part, it was easy on me," Wilson said. "After a while it was going along."
Wilson said that he felt a sense of security in a home where he had lived for more than 40 years.
"It was so easy to get the money or to buy things. It was a pretty easy place to buy things, a pretty easy place to live," Wilson said.This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I'm Amy Goodman, with Juan González. On Friday, President Clinton and the Department of Defense announced that the U.S. will spend $75 billion on U.S. missile defense. That is, for missile defense. That's $75 billion. President Clinton, President Obama, and Secretary
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