Man Arrested In Polygamy Compound Raid

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MICHELLE ROBERTS | April 7, 2008 11:10 PM EST | AP

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Members of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints walk along the grounds of their temporary housing at the Fort Concho National Historic Landmark, in San Angelo, Texas, Monday, April 7, 2008. More than 400 children were taken into state custody from a polygamist sect in what authorities described Monday as the largest child-welfare operation in Texas history. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

ELDORADO, Texas — More than 400 children, mostly girls in pioneer dresses, were swept into state custody from a polygamist sect in what authorities described Monday as the largest child-welfare operation in Texas history.

The dayslong raid on the sprawling compound built by now-jailed polygamist leader Warren Jeffs was sparked by a 16-year-old girl's call to authorities that she was being abused and that girls as young as 14 and 15 were being forced into marriages with much older men.

Dressed in home-sewn, ankle-length dresses with their hair pinned up in braids, some 133 women left the Yearning for Zion Ranch of their own volition along with the children.

State troopers were holding an unknown number of men in the compound until investigators finished executing a house-to-house search of the 1,700-acre property, which includes a medical facility, a cheese-making plant, a cement plant, a school, numerous large housing units and an 80-foot white limestone temple that rises discordantly out of the brown scrub.

"In my opinion, this is the largest endeavor we've ever been involved in in the state of Texas," said Children's Protective Services spokesman Marleigh Meisner, who said the agency was also involved in the 1993 siege of the Branch Davidian compound in Waco.

The members of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints spent their days raising numerous children, tilling small gardens and doing chores. But at least one former resident says life was not some idyllic replica of 19th-century life.

"Once you go into the compound, you don't ever leave it," said Carolyn Jessop, one of the wives of the alleged leader of the Eldorado complex. Jessop left with her eight children before part of the sect moved to Texas.

Jessop said the community emphasized self-sufficiency because they believed the apocalypse was near.

The women were not allowed to wear red _ the color Jeffs said belonged to Jesus _ and were not allowed to cut their hair. They were also kept isolated from the outside world.

They "were born into this," said Jessop, 40. "They have no concept of mainstream society, and their mothers were born into and have no concept of mainstream culture. Their grandmothers were born into it."

Meisner said each child will get an advocate and an attorney but predicted that if they end up permanently separated from their families, the sheltered children would have a tough acclimation to modern life.

Tela Mange, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Public Safety, said the criminal investigation was still under way, and that charges would be filed if investigators determined children were abused.

Still uncertain is the location of the girl whose call initiated the raid. She allegedly had a child at 15, and authorities were looking for documents, family photos or even a family Bible with lists of marriages and children to demonstrate the girl was married to Dale Barlow, 50.

Under Texas law, girls younger than 16 cannot marry, even with parental approval.

The church members were being held at Fort Concho, a 150-year-old fort built to protect frontier settlements, to be interviewed about the 16-year-old girl and whether, in fact, the teenager was among them.

State investigators on Sunday got a second, wider search warrant for records related to the birth of any child to a mother aged 17 and under. The initial warrant was only for the records related to the girl who called to report abuse last week.

Attorneys for the church and church leaders filed motions asking a judge to quash the search on constitutional grounds, saying state authorities didn't have enough evidence to search the grounds and the warrants were too broad. A hearing on their motion is scheduled Wednesday in San Angelo.

FLDS attorneys Patrick Peranteau said Monday that "the chief concern for everyone at this point is the welfare of the women and children."

DPS troopers arrested one man on a charge of interfering with the duties of a public servant during the search warrant, but it was not Barlow, Mange said.

"For the most part, residents at the ranch have been cooperative. However, because of some of the diplomatic efforts in regards to the residents, the process of serving the search warrants is taking longer than usual," said DPS spokesman Tom Vinger, who declined to elaborate. "The annex is extremely large and the temple is massive."

Attorneys for the church and church leaders said Barlow was in Colorado City, Ariz., and had had contact with law enforcement officials there. Telephone messages left by The Associated Press for Colorado City authorities were not immediately returned Monday.

Barlow was sentenced to jail last year after pleading no contest to conspiracy to commit sexual conduct with a minor. He was ordered to register as a sex offender for three years while he is on probation.

The Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, headed by Jeffs after his father's death in 2002, broke away from the Mormon church after the latter disavowed polygamy more than a century ago.

The group is concentrated along the Arizona-Utah line but several enclaves have been built elsewhere, including in Texas. Several years ago it paid $700,000 for the Eldorado property, a former exotic animal ranch, and began building the compound as authorities in Arizona and Utah began increasingly scrutinizing the group.

The compound sits down a narrow paved road and behind a hill that shields it almost entirely from view in Eldorado, a town of fewer than 2,000 surrounded by sheep ranches nearly 200 miles northwest of San Antonio. Only the 80-foot-high white temple can be seen on the horizon.

Jeffs is jailed in Kingman, Ariz., where he awaits trial for four counts each of incest and sexual conduct with a minor stemming from two arranged marriages between teenage girls and their older male relatives.

In November, he was sentenced to two consecutive sentences of five years to life in prison in Utah for being an accomplice to the rape of a 14-year-old girl who wed her cousin in an arranged marriage in 2001.

The investigation prompted by the girl's call last week was the first in Texas involving the sect.

 
 

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This is obviously a Democrat conspiracy to jail all the Republicans in that county.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:34 PM on 04/08/2008

Interesting that they have yet to find the so called victim who supposedly telephoned the police, and for all their searching have yet to make a single arrest of anyone at the Texas site in connection with the charges being investigated. One, and only one arrest has been made of one person on that site for interference with an investigation, and no evidence as to what that was about has been given.

Dear people please do recall that in this society people are supposed to be innocent until proven guilty, and that being a religious eccentric is a protected right.

Note again this all started with the allegation of ONE person making a telephone call and numerous accusations, and note also that this person has yet to be found, and the Texas police have yet to show ANY evidence substantiating the allegations.

Please examine your statements, and ask yourself if you are acting like a lynch mob.

http://www.sltrib.com/news/ci_8844183

And no, I am not a member of the FLDS and do not live or advocate that sort of lifestyle, I just think that rule of law and respect for it is more important than almost anything else.

Texas CPS is holding literally hundreds of children based on an unproven accusation supposedly made by telephone by one person who "cannot be found".

I know that polygamy is unpopular, but for crying out loud --- this is America?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:32 PM on 04/07/2008

Amen! People are so quick to grab that Jerry Springer moment and jump in both feet with ready-made opinions and judgments in situations they know nothing about. May I remind you all that the media needs to sell stories and their track record has not been all too brilliant of late (and not so late).

Truth is, we know little to nothing about how these people think, what they do or believe, how they act amongst themselves. And guess what? In fact, it's really none of our business! Except for the possible exception if some true abuse had taken place.... if.... But even if it had, near as we can tell by even these oh-so-reliable stories, it had only occurred between one 50 year old man and a young girl. Neither of which seem to be part of this roundup. Now, I don't know about you, but I find "America" (or anywhere else) a pretty scary place, when the authorities can just come in and swoop down and haul away hundreds of women and children without showing just cause. How would you like it if these "Child Services" people just descended on your house one day and carted off your kids, brothers, sisters, parents? All on the strength of one phone call from someone dissatisfied with the lifestyle he/she/or you were living?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:56 PM on 04/07/2008


I am not passing judgment on polygamists here. Not necessarily endorsing them either. Not my place to do either until I've spent time with them and gotten to know them better. Even then, the final outcome of my decisions would to be my own account only. It is not for me to pass wholesale judgments on how other people choose to live. I can only make decisions on whether I would want to go along for the ride myself. Think it through and try to be fair. It just may be that there is no actual "right" or "wrong" here. It just is what it is. And if it is OK for them, it should be no concern of ours.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:58 PM on 04/07/2008

oh sure

polygamy is super duper.

oh maybe just for the men.

but then there is a large number of birth defects in their compound, unhappily paid for by the state and county health programs.

oh wait

maybe all that inbreeding kinda hurts the children having an uncle's baby at 14 years old.
the baby suffers too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:43 PM on 04/07/2008

didn't i see this on HBO's Big Love last season ??

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:37 PM on 04/07/2008

Well, its ABOUT TIME! Polygamy is illegal, it doesn't matter whether its religious or not. Women and children are being used as property, sexually abused, and old men are allowed to commit atrocities. I hope the authorities finally shut down these cults for good. These women are not allowed an education. Its barbaric. They don't know any different because they are intentionally kept in the dark about their rights. This religion is not a choice. If the people were given an education and allowed to live in society, they would see that Jeff's and his ilk are sickos.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 PM on 04/07/2008

I hope that before they took these 400 kids and their mothers into protective care that they had a plan for what to do with them in the future. Will they find their way into the welfare system? They certainly don't have any way of providing for themselves in the "outside" world. They'll need a lot of assistance.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:31 PM on 04/07/2008

My granddaughter is in a cult not of this denomination, but nevertheless, of this nature. She's housed on Kodiak Island where leaving is simply not available to her. She's not allowed medical treatment (against their beliefs), and must ask the "Father" (sect leader) permission for everything. Everything! She's almost seventeen now and her indoctrination is complete. She'll never know the taste of ice cream unless it's given to her by the "Father."

In honor of my beautiful granddaughter who's been captured in a way of life that will very soon now pair her in marriage with some older male sect member (the only union allowed), I cheer the liberation of these children and those mothers who decided to leave. My granddaughter is lost, but I'll hold every good thought that more than 400 children will find a better way than living in some fundamentalist Jesus-is-coming-any-day-now mindset that has isolated them from reality.

Regardless of anyone's thoughts here about polygamy and its virtues or lack thereof, I deal daily with the knowledge that my granddaughter will never know me simply because some crackpot religious man says so.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:00 PM on 04/07/2008

I am genuinely sorry for your loss. However, is it not true that the girl's parents agreed to live in that cult? If she was kidnapped then you would have legal recourse.

The fact of the matter is that many people, including parents and grandparents are excluded from the lives of their children because their children choose to exclude them. Sometimes they also join cults, and the cult encourages this, but that does not make it the cult's "fault". The choice was that of your child and/or that of their spouse.

Those tragedies do not justify violation of the legal rights of people or acting like a lynch mob.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:55 PM on 04/07/2008

He'll be out in no time at all. His 17 wives will chip in with bail money.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:54 PM on 04/07/2008

I think its interesting that they haven't actually found the young girl who allegedly called the police. Could this whole thing be perpetuated on a prank call?

Everyone loves freedom of religion, when its their religion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:24 PM on 04/07/2008

I don't know much about the details of this case, but my grandparents were from the south and married at a young age (grandmother 15, gradfather 19). She would probably be considered a "child bride" by today's standards.

Polygamy among consenting adults is a much better lifestyle than men having a wife and sneaking around with other women, prostitutes etc. If the man is emotionally, physically and financialy able to take care of more than one, and be a good father to his children, then he should be able to do that.

Also being able to pool resources among various adults may be of help during this economic downturn.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:20 PM on 04/07/2008

Widespread polygamy creates a surplus population of young males without mates. NOT a good thing for society. All of the modern, prosperous, democratic societies are monogamous.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:55 PM on 04/07/2008

By that token - widespread monogamy (or just plain heterosexual sexuality, really) creates a surplus population of all humans. NOT a good thing for our overpopulated planet. As such, all of the modern, prosperous, democratic societies are contributing to the death of this planet.

So, as we listen to and read up on what our ever-so-reliable media are pushing down our throats and minds today, we must indeed feel free to pass judgment on any and all people whose apparent standard of living doesn't closely match our own. This gives us yet another opportunity to herd together into one of our much-cherished, self-righteous little virtual huddles and helps us meld into this massive bleating herd that moves and thinks as one and thus gives us a sense of togetherness, anonymity and safety within its fervent, 'morally correct' bosom. Ahhhh yessss. We are home and it feels good!..... don't it? Chew on lil' Doggies!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:35 PM on 04/07/2008

Wow...what an enlightened response.

The key factor here is that children were being sexually abused. One may assume that your grandparents mutually consented to being together at such an early age. There is a big difference betwween being 12 or 13 or 14 or 16 and being forced into marriage or random sex with a 40-70 year old man...can you see that difference or not?

The bottomline is about CHOICE....children are not choosing to be sexual at an early age someone else is making that choice for them....this is termed "abuse". There is an unequal balance of power and there is exploitation...at the most fundamental level this is really f""""" up.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:36 PM on 04/07/2008

No proof of such sexual abuse has been stated to have been found by the Texas police after days of searching of that ranch and no arrests have been made on such grounds.

The only arrests made have been for interference with the investigation which was all related to the search of their Temple. All Mormons of both fundamentalist and regular get pretty upset about non-mormans invading (going inside) their temples. It is a major religious taboo to them. That is all the Texas police have arrested anyone for in connection with that investigation.

Do you join every lynch mob you see pass on the street?

Do you believe that every accusation is true? or is it only when the accusation is of people you do not like anyway?

I think you would make a fine Nazi.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:10 AM on 04/08/2008

" All Mormons of both fundamentalist and regular get pretty upset about non-mormans invading (going inside) their temples. It is a major religious taboo to them. "
Big goddam deal...US has been destroying mosques in IRaq left and right, nevermind the abuse of laying hands on Iraqui women and then some.

Nazi? what are you in the 5th grade? name calling is the best you can do to present your "argument"? is this your cult- is that it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:40 PM on 04/12/2008

Warren Jeffs is to Christianity as Osama Bin Laden is to Islam.

This is what few people understand. Extremism is extremism and insanity is insanity, no matter the name of the religion someone might utulize to further their own personal goals. Does that mean that we label an entire religion based on the actions of a few sick souls? How would Christians like it if the rest of the world decreed Christianity as evil or false because of Warren Jeffs crimes? I know I would feel unjustly implicated. When the shoe is on the other foot, everything changes doesn't it?

I'm not saying the people who comment on Huff believe that all Muslims are evil, but there are plenty of those in America who do. Just a thought to consider seeing as how this sort of blanket misunderstanding of a relgion is how Crusades get started...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:36 PM on 04/07/2008

Wonder if their local pharmacies sell a higher than normal amount of Viagra?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:28 PM on 04/07/2008

If you want to know the inside story of the poltgamous cult lead by Warren Jeffs who live at the YFZ Ranch in TX and in Colorado City, AZ., check out the recent documentary BANKING ON HEAVEN. http://www.bankingonheaven.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 PM on 04/07/2008

This madness must stop! Thank you for that link.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 04/07/2008

same old story. if I had a nickel for every doomsday, separatist, sister-wife cult I belonged to before the age of 15.... I used to love me some elders. Moon pies, bible study and discipline - in the reverse order. Lived on 'em. You people wouldn't understand. Throughout my life, I have believed any damn thing I wanted to.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 PM on 04/07/2008

I simply can't imagine ripping a hundred or more children out of their parents arms by force, no matter HOW much we may disagree with their cult religion, politics, or polygamy. These kids will NEVER forget "the day." We MAY have just created the next government-hating Timothy McVey.

No, I don't have any answers. Yes, what they are doing is wrong. But two wrongs don't make a right, and tearing families apart will only bring MORE problems, not fewer.

I'm sure the Texas Rangers and the Texas Baptists who lent them schoolbusses are all very proud of themselves, sure that THEY TOO know what "God's Will" is in this situation.

My bet is this will turn into a national disgrace once ALL the facts come out -- or after one of the parents blows up a Baptist church full of parishoners. Wait for it....it'll happen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:54 PM on 04/07/2008

I cannot for the life of me understand anyone who would condone incest and the sexual abuse of children. So before you weigh-in on the authorities "ripping children from their parent's arms", maybe you should read the article. The women AND children have all been kept together. I'm sure they'll discover before long that the "women" are probably just as much in need of foster care as the children are since they've been kept and treated as children all their lives.

And maybe you should also do some research into this theocratic society before you lend your next two cents worth. They're no different than the Taliban or any of the other throwback religionists who use women like livestock for work and children for sex. Except these terrorists live right under our noses. All the while the government up until now has sat back on their collective asses an allow this to happen. Why? Because its a religion.

As for this "tunring into a national disgrace," what do you think it is now? You were right about one thing though: you have no answers. But you sure used a lot of words to convey that fact.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 PM on 04/07/2008

It is not condoning incest or sexual abuse of children to insist that ALL people have legal rights that must be respected.

None of the ACCUSATIONS of incest or child abuse have been proven. The Texas police have not even stated that they have found any evidence at all to support the accusations telephoned in by a person that now cannot be found.

Get a grip DeSwiss accusations do not proof make. Please stop emulating a lynch mob member.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:01 AM on 04/08/2008

Excellent response.

The US is host to the highest number of cults in the the world....bar none. The national obsession with "freedom of religion" is certainly part of the equation. Add a govt that is indifferent to the general welfare of its citizens and you will have this story play out every year , and apparently mostly in Texas (where there is an overabundance of nuts).

Having said that there is a cult in my neighborhood quite colorful and they hold "service" on tuesdays and Saturdays, but there is a family who actually lives in the house wehre this takes place, with at least 25 foster kids who vandalise the area....one of the elders dresses up as a nun...only in America.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:20 PM on 04/07/2008

"The US is host to the highest number of cults in the the world....bar none. "

Really? Do you have some numbers you can cite?

"and apparently mostly in Texas " Prove it.

"The national obsession with "freedom of religion". Do you have a problem with these other "obsessions": Congress shall make no law...abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:52 PM on 04/07/2008

You think freedom of religion is bad? What does that mean, that we should be able to prohibit certain spiritual beliefs? Which ones should be prohibited, and who decides which ones?

Which of the other amendments do you disapprove of?

Do you have any evidence that there are more nuts per capita in Texas? if you do, which I doubt, please share it with us. Stats, please?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:29 PM on 04/07/2008

It's not clear yet, but it looks as if they're at least keeping the mothers together with their kids. But you may be right. The reason this sort of raid isn't done very often is partly because of Waco. But it's mainly because of what happened the last time an FLDS compound was raided, which was decades ago. The film of the babies being taken away from their mothers caused a public outcry that got the governor tossed out of office in the next election.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:41 PM on 04/07/2008

The common thread from all our prior disastrous involvement with religious cults, from Waco to Jonestown, is religion. While they're outside the mainstream, they are what all religions once were. And therein lies the rub.

The governments back in the old days, such as the time of the Short Creek Raid in 1953, were more coercive in their actions, and less gentle in dealing with the public. Particularly once you've been labeled. There were no Miranda warnings, and no Escobedo requirements for lawyers. And it happened during a time of general national hysteria with a number of groups who were viewed askance in the McCarthyist 50s. Sending in 100 state troopers and soldiers from the Arizona National Guard to arrest everyone didn't help the situation either.

But for some time and at various levels of government (includng the feds) everywhere these people have resided, many have known all along that violations of the law were occurring. Particularly the LDS Church itself. It was the idea of them being a religion that stayed their hands -- until now. And so the atrocities continued.

And will continue....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:56 PM on 04/07/2008

The Short Creek raid on the child molesters in nothern Arizoa in 1953. In 1953 mothers and infants were not separated but the families separated did cause an outcry. What really caused a politcal frenzy in Arizona was tht when the men got out of jail the women went right back to them.

The problem is that the women are taught from birth that the only way they get to heaven is to have a man who can get them in. The man can only get there with three or more wives. You hold salvation out to the gullible and they will put up with anything to get it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:20 PM on 04/07/2008

Good points. But you know these folks are "gullible" because they were born into it over several generations, and then isolated from outside influence. I wouldn't blame the victim. The people running this mess are to blame.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:42 PM on 04/07/2008

Why are most these weirdo Christian cults in Texas? Some freak calls himself a minister gets the parent"s buy in, while he rapes their children. These people must really be wanting to give their children up to some creepy pedophile. And there are people equally as creepy on these site who constantly bring up David Koresh a gun happy separatist with a Jesus obsession and a taste for 60"s muscle cars, this freak put woman and children in the line of fire so he could have an "end of days" shoot out with Law Enforcement both federal and state over a mail order gun beef, not to mention he was also a polygamist and a pedophile. It's terrible that these people died, which included 23 children, but the adults had choice they could have lelt or at least sent their families out. These cowards hid behind woman and children, like most cowards do. Lets call it what it is a cult, pretending to be religion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 04/07/2008