GEORGIA Steel has had her faith restored in men by her hunky new squeeze Addis Miller.
The Love Island star – who fell victim to a terrifying conman earlier this year – has been dating the 21-year-old model for a few months and things are already getting serious.
The reality TV star was left “too terrified to sleep and fearing for her life” after discovering the “huge sum of money” missing and her ex-footballer boyfriend allegedly nowhere to be seen.
After she ended the relationship, Georgia said she would struggle to trust men in the future and revealed the ordeal left her unable to sleep on her own.
Georgia, who rocketed to fame in the fourth series of the hit ITV2 show last year, began dating a man she thought was a wealthy American called Miguel.
They met in a nightclub and began chatting, before he asked her out for dinner – beginning a six-week long whirlwind romance.
The TV star’s world came crumbling down when The Sun Online revealed her new lover was in fact convicted fraudster Medi Abalimba.
The one-time Derby County player was jailed in 2014 for pretending to be ex-Chelsea footballer Gael Kakuta.
He would break into lockers at a private health club to steal credit card details before splurging on designer clothes and five-star hotels.
He also splashed out on champagne in trendy London nightclubs and once duped staff into running up a £25,000 bar tab – claiming he was a “Premier League star and good for the money”.
Georgia, 21, said he was lying in bed next to her when she decided to confront him over who he really was.
She told The Sun Online’s Big Interview: “He told me he had to change his name when he got out of prison because he didn’t want it to affect him.
“He told me he’d done bad things but that he really liked me and wanted to change.”
But just a day later, Georgia logged on to her bank and says she discovered “tens of thousands of pounds” had gone missing.
Georgia then confronted Medi at her apartment block, but the convicted fraudster allegedly told her it was nothing to do with him.
The relationship was only stopped when Georgia received a call from her mum as the two went out on a dinner date and was given an ultimatum.
Georgia explained: “I put my glass of wine down and just got up and left. That was the point when I knew it couldn’t go on.”
A Metropolitan Police spokesman confirmed to The Sun Online officers were investigating an allegation of fraud.
Action Fraud, the UK’s national fraud reporting service, further confirmed it had received the allegation and was in the process of getting it assessed.
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