Hugh Hefner groomed us & got me pregnant – PTSD took us from CBB to drug spiral say twins Kristina and Karissa Shannon
TWIN sisters Karissa and Kristina Shannon thought they found their ticket to stardom at the age of 18 when they were plucked out of obscurity and joined the illustrious stars of Playboy.
However, now 34, the stars have opened up about how their lives were nothing like they expected them to be – detailed tragic details hidden from the public eye.
The duo, who were born in Clearwater Beach, Florida, moved from their trailer park home into the Playboy mansion in 2008.
They soon became cast members of reality series The Girls Next Door, which tracked life of the women who were then 83-year-old Hugh Hefner’s girlfriends.
Karissa and Kristina also held joint centrefold spreads.
Karissa and Kristina have both since claimed they were “groomed” by Hefner, who died in 2017 at the age of 91, and compare their time at the mansion to "being in a cult".
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The pair believed they wouldn’t be sleeping with Hefner, despite being called his girlfriend, believing it to be an image that wouldn’t be realistic due to his age.
In one instance, recalled in A&E docu-series Secrets Of Playboy, the pair said he forced them to engage in a threesome with him at the age of 19, later contracting sexually transmitted infection, chlamydia.
Kristina said in the documentary: “I believe that Hef would prey on the younger girls, like us, who came from a bad background, or the girls who were not so pretty, he could promise him, here's this beautiful castle, and I have all these surgeons.”
Karissa also claimed she an abortion the same year after getting pregnant with Hefner’s baby.
"I was disgusted with my body and felt like there was an alien inside my stomach. It was like the devil was inside of me," she told cameras.
"I didn't want anyone to know I was carrying an 83-year-old man's child."
Karissa was charged with a felony after the security monitor knocked out teeth.
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“The twins are getting sober off all medications so that we can have children and move onto their next chapter in life," an insider added.
"They still have so many traumas they have to work through and it's hard but right now feels like the right time to deal with it."
If you are having trouble finding the right help, call the FRANK drugs helpline on 03001236600
Or for more advice and support