A new family has been found living deep in the Alaskan wilderness. They were born and raised in the wild. Billy Brown, his wife Ami, and their five boys and two girls who are all grown up live so far away from other people that they rarely see anyone else for six to nine months out of the year. They have their own accent and language, call themselves a "wolf pack," and all nine of them sleep in a one-room cabin at night. Simply put, they are different from every other American family. The Browns say that the cabin where they lived for years was taken away and burned down because it was in the wrong place on public land.
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A new family has been found living deep in the Alaskan wilderness. They were born and raised in the wild. Billy Brown, his wife Ami, and their five boys and two girls who are all grown up live so far away from other people that they rarely see anyone else for six to nine months out of the year. They have their own accent and language, call themselves a "wolf pack," and all nine of them sleep in a one-room cabin at night. Simply put, they are different from every other American family. The Browns say that the cabin where they lived for years was taken away and burned down because it was in the wrong place on public land.
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