Posted on 05/01/2008 6:01:31 AM PDT by MizSterious
FLDS doctor denies abuse at YFZ Ranch |
By Heather May and Brooke Adams The Salt Lake Tribune Salt Lake Tribune |
Article Last Updated:05/01/2008 01:20:20 AM MDT |
The physician who cares for the polygamous community now in the national spotlight - and who has treated its prophet in a Utah jail - is described by his mentor as "very kind, very sensitive, very concerned." Lloyd H. Barlow, a member of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, graduated from the University of Utah's School of Medicine in 1995. He completed a one-year internship in internal medicine in 1996, and then did a family medicine residency at the U. that ended in 1999. Barlow oversees a health clinic in Hildale, the sect's traditional home base, and its Texas clinic at its YFZ Ranch. Texas authorities allege there is a pattern of sexual abuse of underage girls at the ranch; and on Wednesday an official said at least 41 children there have had broken bones. He also said young boys may have been sexually abused. Barlow flatly denies that any child abuse occurred at the ranch. "There is not," Barlow said. "The parents are very loving and caring parents, as I believe [Texas child welfare officials] could attest given the stresses put on them over the past three weeks and observing them. The parents are very much interested in the care and well-being of their children." He added: "It is part of our belief system that the way to teach and train children is to deal with them and train them in kindness." Physicians are legally required to report cases of suspected child abuse - something Barlow said he would have done if he found such evidence. Texas authorities would not comment Wednesday on whether investigations include whether anyone failed to report abuse of children at the ranch. Barlow said children with serious illnesses or injuries were treated at health care facilities outside the ranch, and police found receipts for such care, court records show. There have been no public complaints against Barlow or discipline by licensors in Utah or Texas. Physician Marc E. Babitz was Barlow's faculty supervisor during his residency program and worked with him at a now-closed family practice clinic in Salt Lake City. "He was really a very fine student and a very fine resident. He put the welfare of his patients as his top priority," said Babitz, who once visited Barlow at the Hildale clinic. He said he was once introduced to one of Barlow's wives. Until Barlow completed his medical degree, Hildale and the adjoining FLDS town of Colorado City, Ariz., had a single nurse practitioner to rely on. "He made a huge difference to health care in this area," said Joanne Yarrish, a certified nurse midwife in nearby Centennial Park. Barlow repeatedly visited then-ailing sect leader Warren S. Jeffs in the Washington County jail in the spring of 2007. Jeffs was awaiting trial and was later convicted of two first-degree felony counts of rape as an accomplice for his role in a 2001 spiritual marriage between a 14-year-old follower and her 19-year-old cousin. --- * JULIA LYON contributed to this report. |
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Here’s what happened the last time Texas raided a religious compound:
It shook up a lot of people in Blanco County on July 26 when local and state law officers swooped in by car and helicopter to raid the 25-year-old monastery, taking computers, photos and boxes of monastery records.
Authorities arrested founder Samuel A. Greene, also known as Father Benedict, and three other self-styled Russian Orthodox monks on charges they conspired to have sex with young boys at the monastery from 1993 to 1999. A fifth former monk charged in the indictment is in state prison on a child-sex conviction.
- - - - - - - - - -
A Blanco County jury sentenced a former monk to 80 years in prison Wednesday for four counts of sexual assault on a minor.
The jury of 10 men and two women took just more than an hour to convict William Hughes, a former Russian Orthodox monk.
http://www.kxan.com/global/story.asp?s=7255115
Don’t forget The Lds is the “True” Church because:
Other churches are led by men who can only speak as men. We, however, are led by Prophets of God who speak as men!
LOL....I read this on another site, but it is sooooo true.
Guyana is already analogous to El Dorado in another way. The fLDS haven't colonized themselves in a remote jungle, but make no mistake...The outlands of West Texas is about as remote and far removed (mileage wise) as you can get...Eastern New Mexico to its west is not populous; neither is SE Colorado; nor is a good chunk of the parts of Southern Oklahoma more immediate to its North/NE. As for parts East & South, remember, it's Texas-sized.
And make no mistake, El Dorado is indeed a colony outpost from its other sister cities, and like Guyana, things have been taken to a more extreme "control" point in Eldorado (vs. its sister cities) just as it was in Jonestown (vs. the Bay area original base camp).
Of course, they are.
Well, your mind is made up and closed up tighter than a drum, nothing we say (even when presenting facts) will change a thing for you.
I think you are engaging in a bit of projection. :-)
Not that 2b, the other 2b:
b: a sudden invasion by officers of the law
:-)
The state taking 500 people and disappearing them is not the way we do things in America, the people have to be kept informed to some degree.
I'm glad you agree!
Agreed, if that is the order in which it happened. It might point to a little more due diligence being required at the front end, but if LE believed the report had merit, they are duty and no doubt law bound to act. Of course, rounding up every child on the compound is another story!
Besides, the girl who allegedly made the false report has not been convicted in a court of law, but shes been treated as guilty by everyone who want to find reason to find a mistake the government made to prove their actions have no merit.
Her picture has been posted and shes been accused without a trial. Now every time someone sees her, theyll think of this. Her reputation has been ruined forever whether shes truly guilty or not.
So where are her Constitutional rights? Isnt she innocent until proved guilty in a court of law as well? Isnt condemning her without a trial a violation of due process?
It's comforting to me to see that you believe in due process. Your comments regarding the FLDS had led me to think otherwise.
I think MetMom has been pretty consistent. Due process WAS followed at the fLDS ranch. See post #11. Someone who's passed the bar (namely, the author) might provide a bit of education for someone who hasn't (namely, you).
---
MARCI A. HAMILTON
hamilton02@aol.com
---
Professor Marci A. Hamilton holds the Paul R. Verkuil Chair in Public Law at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University, where she is the founding Director of the Intellectual Property Law Program. She has been a visiting scholar at Princeton Theological Seminary, the Center of Theological Inquiry, and Emory University School of Law.
Professor Hamilton is an internationally recognized expert on constitutional and copyright law. She is frequently asked to advise Congress and state legislatures on the constitutionality of pending legislation and to consult in cases before the United States Supreme Court. She represented the City of Boerne, Texas in a successful challenge to the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, a case that resulted in the Court's landmark decision in Boerne v. Flores, 521 U.S. 507 (1997).
Professor Hamilton clerked for Associate Justice Sandra Day O'Connor of the United States Supreme Court and Chief Judge Edward R. Becker of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. She received her J.D., magna cum laude, from the University of Pennsylvania Law School where she served as editor-in-chief of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review. She is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Order of the Coif.
Professor Hamilton's most recent work is God vs. the Gavel: Religion and the Rule of Law (Cambridge University Press 2005), now available in paperback. Professor Hamilton's forthcoming book, which will be published this spring is entitled Justice Denied: What America Must Do to Protect Its Children (Cambridge 2008). She is also a Board Member of NAPSAC.
I think I'll take Prof. Hamilton's word on the law over yours.
****The state taking 500 people and disappearing them is not the way we do things in America,****
Nor should some self-appointed sex pervert, posing as a messiah be permitted to *disappear* young girls and boys - swapping them out when convenient...keeping their biological parentage hidden and otherwise depriving them of LIFE, LIBERTY AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS.
All of these persons we presume to be US Citizens, and as such are afforded the protection of the State - which has to determine, who they are, who their parents are and whether all their civil rights are being protected or abused.
It ain’t easy and it ain’t pretty!
On the contrary, I kept posting that they followed procedure and due process. Some people just don't want to believe that because they just can't stand the thought that the government could do something right. They'll defend the cult and relegate those women and children to a life of sex slavery rather than see them freed from such horrible abuse and bondage , and admit that the government could even possibly, remotely have taken the proper action here.
If you're going to go by their opinion of what I wrote instead of reading my posts yourself, it's clear why you're misinformed about my position.
Your cutesyness is boring.
You claim that you want the law to conduct all of this in secret with a black out of all information and I think that is incredibly ignorant, so your cutesy “we agree” post is silly and of course dishonest, just like continuing to call every piece of information from the CPS a “leak”.
It is the don that claims that he wants the 500 people whisked away and disappeared until the day that the court renders it's verdict at some point in the distant future.
Excellent post. Every point and criticism addressed. Well done.
My husband has a better remedy. HE focuses on the children so I’m free to focus on him. Works pretty slick, IMO.
“Is it safe?”
“You are such a stitch!” — Kathy Bates in Misery ;o)
I stand corrected!
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