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Polygamist Jeffs, 5 Others, Indicted
Michelle Roberts, Associated Press
July 22, 2008, 5:59 PM PDT
ELDORADO, TX -- A Texas grand jury Tuesday indicted
polygamist sect leader Warren Jeffs and four of his followers on
charges of felony sexual assault of a child. Another was indicted
for failing to report child abuse.
Attorney General Greg Abbott said the five men are charged with
one count of sexually assaulting girls under the age of 17. One of
them, but not Jeffs, faces an additional charge of bigamy.
Abbott said a sixth member of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints is charged with three counts of failure
to report child abuse.
Jeffs, already convicted of being accomplice to rape in Utah and
awaiting trial in Arizona on other charges related to underage
marriages, is accused of assaulting a girl in Texas in January
2005, according to the indictment issued Tuesday.
"Our investigation in this matter is not concluded. This is an
ongoing investigation that we intend to continue," said Abbott,
whose office is acting as the special prosecutor in the case.
The grand jury in this tiny western Texas ranching community
will continue consideration of other possible criminal charges on
Aug. 21, according to a source who spoke on the condition of
anonymity because proceedings of the panel are secret by law.
The identities of the Jeffs' followers who were indicted in
addition to him were not released Tuesday because the indictments
remain sealed until authorities can arrest the men.
"There will be an aggressive effort to apprehend them," Abbott
said when asked whether he was concerned the men may have fled
Texas.
FLDS members have historically lived around the Arizona-Utah
line and bought the Yearning For Zion Ranch in Eldorado about five
years ago.
Calls to spokesmen for the church were not immediately returned
Tuesday.
The indictments follow a child custody case in which more than
400 children were placed in foster care. The Texas Supreme Court
ruled child welfare authorities overstepped in taking all the
children from their parents even though many were infants and
toddlers and the state failed to show any more than handful of
teenage girls were abused or at risk.
The criminal charges came during the panel's second meeting on
the case; it met in June without taking any action.
Abbott spent Tuesday in the small community building where the
grand jury was meeting near the courthouse. Women and girls in
prairie dresses, including a 16-year-old daughter of Jeffs, were
escorted in and out, while lawyers and FLDS members crowded a bench
in front of the courthouse.
Grand jury proceedings are supposed to be secret, but documents
released as part of the separate child custody case involving the
FLDS children have revealed some of the evidence collected by law
enforcement during the weeklong raid that began April 3.
Among the hundreds of boxes of photos, documents and family
Bibles, investigators found photos of Jeffs in intimate embraces
and kissing several apparently underage girls.
A journal entry purportedly from Jeffs attached to a report by a
child advocate indicates he married his daughter to a 34-year-old
man the day after she turned 15. The girl turns 17 on Saturday and
has denied being married, though the child advocate report
indicates intimate notes between the girl and man were also found
in the raid.
In addition to discussions of the girl's marriage, the Jeffs
journal entry also indicates he blessed marriages of two other
underage sect member to himself and another member.
FLDS leaders have consistently denied there was any abuse at the
ranch and vowed not to sanction underage marriages.
Under Texas law, a girl younger than 17 cannot generally consent
to sex with an adult. Bigamy is also illegal in Texas, and although
FLDS plural marriages were not licensed by the state, the law
contains a provision outlawing the act of "purporting to marry"
more than one person.
The FLDS, which believes polygamy brings glory in heaven, is a
breakaway sect of the mainstream Mormon church, which officially
renounced polygamy more than a century ago.
Copyright © 2008, KTLA
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