with Farrah grew so strained that they simply decided to stop associating with her. The day she moved out of the building, “Farrah saw me in the hall and called me 'trash,'” Alethea remembers. “She was yelling at me and called the police and said that she was going to have me arrested for yelling at her. When the cops got there, they actually told her she had to leave because technically she was trespassing and didn't live there anymore. All the neighbors started clapping.”
In all the commotion, John says, “one of our neighbors comes up and says that Sophia was downstairs in the car, with all the windows rolled up, screaming and crying. The neighbor said he waited 15 minutes by the car to see if Farrah would come back out, but she didn't so the neighbor went upstairs and knocked on her door and asked her if she had forgotten Sophia in the car. She said, 'Yeah, she's waiting for me.' I filmed it all on my cell phone, but didn't tell the cops because I didn't want them to take Sophia away from her.”
Although his time with Farrah caused him to be publically ridiculed by Teen Mom fans, Daniel says he doesn't regret the experience. “I don't have any hate towards her, I'm just telling the truth,” he insists. “In the long run, I look at this as a learning experience. I do not regret my time with Farrah or Sophia and am happy that I was able to be a part of their lives. I wish them both the best and hope Farrah finds happiness.”
We reached out to Farrah and her mother, but both declined to be interviewed for this book. Farrah also chose not to comment on specific remarks made by Daniel, Alethea and John. Contacted by telephone, she told us: “You shouldn't talk to losers. They are all horrible people. That is why they are not in my life. They make shit up. I had to call the police on them. It wasn't even the last day. It was a lot of days. I had to call the police. I had to involve my mother. I had to get help from my family. I had to move out of my apartment building early. The building was messed up. They were selling drugs. So believe me. They don't know their ass from a hole in the ground. I discredit anything that they say because they are such mental cases.”
Stormie Clark desperately wants to see her granddaughter, Sophia. But Farrah Abraham has been determined not to let that happen. The two headstrong women have been locking horns in a bitter, public feud since shortly after the preschooler was born in February 2009. Stormie is still grief-stricken over the loss of her only son - Sophia's father, Derek Underwood - who was killed in a December 2008 car crash. Not being allowed to have a relationship with Derek's only child, she says, is “absolutely not fair” and just compounds her heartache.
Stormie, a small business owner, took Farrah to court in 2010 seeking regular visitation under a “grandparent's rights” statute. She lost after being unable to prove a pre-existing relationship with the child, who was born two months after her son's death. “Farrah wouldn't let me see Sophia so the judge ruled against me,” she explained at the time. “She's a heartless, spoiled brat... If Derek were alive he'd be devastated.”
Farrah had a famously tumultuous relationship with Derek. In a 2012 memoir she even admitted he died without ever being told he was Sophia's father. Still, she wrote: “He was my first love, my only true love. We hadn't spoken in more than two months, but crazily I had still hoped we had a future together - me, him, and our baby, as one happy family.”
Farrah's book also characterized Derek as thoughtless and immature, which Stormie has vehemently denied. Now, she's finally setting the record straight, revealing for the first time that Derek's sister was also 16 and pregnant in high school, and went into labor the day of his burial. What follows is an emotional and heartbreaking letter Stormie has written to her granddaughter about the father she'll never know and the
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