SAN ANGELO, Texas - A judge has ordered the Texas attorney general's office to prosecute any future criminal cases connected to last month's raid on a polygamous sect's Eldorado ranch.
    In a request filed Monday, Tom Green County District Attorney Stephen Lupton asked the state to step in. In a one-paragraph order issued the same day, a state judge instructed the attorney general to review any possible charges arising from two search warrants served on the YFZ Ranch, home to members of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
    Jerry Strickland, a spokesman for Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott, did not know what type of charges the office would consider, but said: "Our office has been in communication with law enforcement as well as prosecutors."
    Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff has said his office will not prosecute bigamy among the FLDS unless someone is committing additional felonies, such as sexual abuse or fraud. Strickland said the Texas attorney general has not made such a declaration.
    The case volume had the potential to burden the Tom Green County district attorney's office, which has jurisdiction for felony cases in a five-county area with a combined population similar to West Valley City. Lupton also is dealing with a recent leukemia diagnosis.
    Texas Child Protective Services (CPS) has said there is evidence adult FLDS men were having sex with underage girls. Officials also have said 41 of the 464 FLDS children in custody had histories of broken bones, but have acknowledged that it has not been determined whether any of those injuries were the result of abuse.
    Two men arrested for allegedly interfering with police during the raid have not been charged.
    CPS said Tuesday it is assessing the FLDS children to develop individual education plans.
    It is planning for children to be taught in foster care facilities, not public schools, the agency said.
    Authorities raided the ranch beginning April 3, serving search and arrest warrants that said a 16-year-old girl there had called a hot line claiming her 50-year-old husband was abusing her. Neither was at the ranch; the arrest warrant was later canceled and a Colorado woman with a history of making false abuse claims is being investigated in connection with the hot-line calls.
    Legal experts have said criminal prosecutions could be challenged with the apparently faulty information contained in the original warrants.
    But lawyers also have said inaccuracies will not be an issue in the civil proceedings determining child custody. CPS officials have said that once on the ranch, they found evidence of abuse.
    ncarlisle@sltrib.com
    ---
    * BROOKE ADAMS contributed to this report.
   
   
   
Texas laws that may come into play

   A number of laws may come into play if a special prosecutor decides to pursue criminal charges against FLDS residents of the YFZ Ranch in Eldorado:
    * Age of sexual consent: The age of consent in Texas is 17. But anyone charged can raise as a defense that the victim is older than 14; is not someone the defendant is barred from marrying or purporting to marry; and their age difference is three years or less.
    * Bigamy: In 2005, Texas strengthened its bigamy law to address unions that are not legally sanctioned but have the "appearance" of a marriage. Bigamy with someone age 16 or older is a second-degree felony; it is a first-degree felony if the victim is younger.
    * Sexual conduct: The law prohibits sexual conduct when there is a relationship based on full- or half-blood; a stepfamily tie; an adoption; half or full aunt, uncle, brother or sister.
    * Marriage: Until September 2005, it was legal for a 14-year-old to marry with parental permission; the age then moved to 16. This applies, however, to legal marriages only. - Brooke Adams