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Jail takes its toll on polygamist leader's authority
StarTelegram.com ^ | May. 04, 2008 | JACK DOUGLAS Jr.

Posted on 05/04/2008 8:42:14 AM PDT by Politicalmom

As his polygamist followers in Texas undergo one of the most intensive child abuse investigations in the nation's history, sect prophet Warren Jeffs sits in a small jail cell in Arizona, emaciated and under a suicide watch, as he awaits trial on charges of criminal incest and sexual assault in a desert town that was once the home of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh.

Jeffs, 52, is alone in his cell 23 hours each day, allowed out only to shower and use the telephone. He is given two 30-minute visitation periods a week. Those who come to see him are usually his wives from Texas who, one sect expert said, have a "vested interest in his retaining his leadership."

But Jeffs' rule over the estimated 10,000 members of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints is believed to be eroding, observers and former sect members say.

"From a theological standpoint, Warren Jeffs would still be considered the prophet, even though he is behind bars," said Shannon Price, director of the Salt Lake City-based Diversity Foundation, which helps victims of polygamy.

But Jeffs' continued control relies on the information he gets from the outside world, said Price, who grew up in a monogamous family but has relatives who are polygamists, including three uncles who were "prophets" of the sect. Based on his visitors' log at the Mohave County Jail, she said, Jeffs is getting his news from women who have little sway in the male-only hierarchy of the FLDS and its sprawling compound near Eldorado, in West Texas.

'He was a creep'

Carolyn Jessop, who was married to a top lieutenant of Jeffs' before she and her eight children escaped in April 2003, said Jeffs is losing control over the sect, mainly because he is cut off from his handpicked followers, considered his favorites, at the 1,691-acre YFZ (Yearning For Zion) Ranch, 45 miles south of San Angelo.

"He's not doing well in prison at all. If he continues to starve himself ... he'll eventually kill himself," said Jessop, author of the book Escape, which chronicles her life in and out of polygamy.

As a "plural wife" to Merril Jessop, a top confidant of Jeffs who leads the compound in Eldorado, Carolyn Jessop was around Jeffs more than she wanted.

"I have no respect for the man. I thought he was a creep the first day that I met him. There was something wrong with the man. If you look at the things he's done to people, they're criminal," she said.

Jeffs inherited the leadership of the breakaway Mormon sect from his father, Rulon Jeffs, who at the time of his death in 2002 had 19 or 20 wives and about 60 children. The new leader reportedly told his flock, "Hands off my father's wives." He married most of them.

The only person in the FLDS with the authority to do so, Jeffs "assigned" girls and women to marry older men in the sect, and he continued to take more wives. It is unknown how many he had before his arrest.

"I don't think even Warren Jeffs knows how many wives he has," Price said.

He was one of the FBI's Ten Most Wanted Fugitives when he was arrested in 2006 for arranging the marriage of a 14-year-old girl to her 19-year-old cousin in Utah. When police caught up with him during a traffic stop in Nevada, he was traveling in a red Cadillac Escalade that was packed with luggage, 15 cellphones, laptop computers, three wigs and $54,000 in cash. A large duffel bag was stuffed with letters containing more money from loyal sect members who supported him while he was on the run, authorities said after the arrest.

Jeffs was subsequently convicted in Utah of being an accomplice to child rape and was sentenced to between 10 years and life in prison.

He has been in the county jail in Kingman, Ariz., since February, charged with sexual conduct with a child and incest after accusations of arranging the marriage of another young girl to a blood relative.

The incest defense

Jeffs' legal defense has at times raised eyebrows in the courtroom, including when his lawyers argued that incest could not be prosecuted as a crime because the case involved a child. "In addition, the participants to these alleged acts are not full first cousins ... but rather first cousins of the half-blood, and therefore do not fall within the reach of the incest statute," defense lawyers argued in court records.

Baffled prosecutors called the argument "absurd" and said it was crazy "to punish incest involving adults more harshly than incest involving minors," according to the records.

Jeffs' lead defense lawyer, Michael Piccarreta of Tucson, Ariz., was out of the country and could not be reached for comment.

Since being jailed in Arizona, Jeffs has been "very quiet, keeping to himself," Mohave County Sheriff Tom Sheahan said.

Jeffs is under a suicide watch because of his reported attempts to commit suicide in Utah jails, and he is kept alone in a cell with no television or any other electrical device, Sheahan said.

A jail log shows that on April 2, a day before the Texas compound was raided by state police, Jeffs received two visitors -- believed to be among his many wives from the YFZ Ranch -- who communicated with him by phone through thick bulletproof glass.

Now, before Jeffs is allowed into a court hearing on his pending case, the courtroom is swept for explosives and the number of guards is increased. "His followers can be very fanatical," Sheahan said.

Jeffs' presence in Kingman has drawn a crowd of reporters, but not nearly as many as 13 years ago.

Timothy James McVeigh lived in the town, working part time at a hardware store, shortly before he and accomplice Terry Nichols blew up the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995.

After the bombing, 250 federal agents and an equal number of reporters swarmed Kingman, said Dave Hawkins, a 24-year veteran reporter for the town's KGMN-FM radio station.

When Jeffs was moved to Kingman early this year, two months before his favorite followers were besieged by law officers in Texas, only about a dozen reporters attended his first court appearance, Hawkins said.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: childabuse; flds; jeffs; polygamy
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To: Zakeet
You can see an annotated list of Joseph's plural wives HERE.

Since the revelation authorizing polygamy was not given until July 1843, it appears that Joseph Smith already had 30 wives before God told him it was OK.

Apparently all the time Joseph was marrying these women, he was publicly denying it:


21 posted on 05/04/2008 10:43:54 AM PDT by P-Marlowe (LPFOKETT GAHCOEEP-w/o*)
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To: Politicalmom

bkmk


22 posted on 05/04/2008 11:53:40 AM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar
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To: P-Marlowe

I(we?) am not here to criticize any religion.

My only concern is that the laws of the U.S. and it’s states are being broken.

Polygamy is against the law.
So is sex with a minor.
So is child labor.
So is child abuse.
So is wife beating.

If we allow the FLDS to continue these practices, under the cover of ‘religion’, then we might as well withdraw our troops from Iraq, and welcome the MUSLIMS with open arms.

All men who have had sex with minors should be released from prison, as long as they claim it is a ‘religious thing’.

Then, the Mexicans will also quit crossing our southern borders, as they will be ‘underpriced’ by the sudden availability of masses of ‘child labor’ for our fields and factories.

Of course, it won’t matter too much, because future generations may be so retarded, after such a growth of inbreeding, that we won’t care anymore if someone invades us and takes over our country.


23 posted on 05/04/2008 12:22:56 PM PDT by UCANSEE2 (I reserve the right to misinterpret the comments of any and all posters)
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To: greyfoxx39

Maybe Rulon’s son should have been named “WARRANT JEFFS”.


24 posted on 05/04/2008 12:23:52 PM PDT by UCANSEE2 (I reserve the right to misinterpret the comments of any and all posters)
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To: UCANSEE2

Poor Rulon, LOL.


25 posted on 05/04/2008 1:11:12 PM PDT by greyfoxx39 (FLDS.... making babies with children because their God wants earthly bodies for spirit babies.)
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To: Politicalmom
"He's not doing well in prison at all. If he continues to starve himself ... he'll eventually kill himself," said Jessop, author of the book Escape, which chronicles her life in and out of polygamy.

*yawn*

26 posted on 05/04/2008 1:56:55 PM PDT by ukie55
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To: greyfoxx39

Post 14?


27 posted on 05/04/2008 1:59:05 PM PDT by ukie55
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To: Politicalmom
Those who come to see him are usually his wives from Texas who, one sect expert said, have a "vested interest in his retaining his leadership." . . . Jeffs is getting his news from women who have little sway in the male-only hierarchy of the FLDS and its sprawling compound near Eldorado, in West Texas.

What difference does it make who's bringing the information? Those women will say exactly what the male leaders tell them to, so Jeffs would be hearing the same thing whether his visitors were his wives or male leaders.

I'm sure his control is waning, but not because he isn't getting information or giving orders based on it (I've read that he uses a lot of his phone time to talk to the male leaders). But his prophecies about the wonderful imitation Zion that YFZ would be, isolating members from "contamination" by the evil outside world, obviously aren't coming true. Jeffs told his hand-picked followers that they'd all (especially the women and children" be kept "pure" when they moved to this compound. Instead, every single one of the children, and some of the adult women are now living on the evil outside under the control of evil outsiders. And their temple -- the first such building erected by the cult, and hugely significant -- has been raided by law enforcement and had a lot of its "sacred" records carted off. Even the hard core believers won't be nearly as eager to follow any of his future orders, as they were to follow his order to move to Texas and build "Zion".

28 posted on 05/04/2008 4:43:10 PM PDT by GovernmentShrinker
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To: greyfoxx39
Following the examples of his predecessors.

Polygamists in striped prison uniforms, including George Q. Cannon (center with cane), William Gimbert Saunders (second from right), and William Morley Black (right of Cannon with white beard).

29 posted on 05/04/2008 5:23:37 PM PDT by Godzilla (I'm out of my mind, but feel free to leave a message.)
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