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Sep 4, 2008 6:24 pm US/Central
State Drops Many Custody Cases In Polygamy Raid
SAN ANGELO (AP) ―
Child by child, Texas authorities are acknowledging that many of the
children seized during a raid on a polygamist sect's ranch can safely
live with their parents or guardians.
Since the April 3 raid on the Yearning for Zion Ranch in Eldorado, 235
children's custody cases have been dropped, meaning fewer than half of
the 440 children seized remain bound by a court order to stay in Texas,
attend parenting classes or be available for unannounced visits by
Child Protective Services.
CPS spokesman Patrick Crimmins said more cases are likely to be dropped but he was unsure how many.
They're being dropped "as fast as we can because it's a burden on everyone," he said.
He said the dismissals do not mean that abuse never occurred, only that
many of the children can safely live with a parent or other relative --
something that sect members and lawyers argued early on in the chaotic
custody case.
"It most certainly goes back to the idea that the proper way to have
conducted this process was to get evidence as to what children, if any,
were at risk," said Cynthia Martinez, a spokeswoman for Texas RioGrande
Legal Aid, which represented dozens of mothers in the case. "They went
through this ordeal, and in the end, CPS found they were a good parent."
The children of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints were the subject of one of the largest custody cases in U.S.
history, taken into state custody from their ranch in a tiny west Texas
town because child welfare authorities said girls were being forced
into underage marriages and boys were being raised to be perpetrators.
Authorities went to the ranch after several calls to a domestic abuse
hotline, in which the caller claimed to be an underage wife and mother
who was being beaten and raped by her much-older husband. Texas state
police are now investigating whether the calls were a hoax.
Once authorities had the children at a San Angelo shelter, they said
the sect members refused to cooperate with the investigation, refusing
to give last names or identify parents or siblings. CPS officials said
they had no choice but to treat all the children as potentially members
of the same family.
They were scattered to foster care facilities across the state in April
and remained there for about two months until the Texas Supreme Court
ruled that authorities were wrong to take all the children. Half the
children sent to foster care were younger than 6.
When state District Judge Barbara Walther ordered them returned to
their parents in June, she also ordered them to stay in Texas, take
parenting classes, allow psychological assessments and be available to
investigators from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. every day.
Only one child -- a girl allegedly married to jailed sect leader Warren
Jeffs when she was 12 -- has been returned to foster care.
Five sect members, including Jeffs, have been indicted in Schleicher
County for sexual assault of a child; several have also been charged
with bigamy. A sixth FLDS member is charged with failing to report
child abuse, a misdemeanor. Jeffs, convicted as an accomplice to rape
in Utah, remains jailed in Arizona where he awaits trial on charges
stemming from the alleged underage marriage of sect girls.
Crimmins said the agency never intended to take the FLDS children from their parents permanently.
"We never brought the kids into care to keep them in care. We brought
them into care to do an efficient and effective investigation," he said.
Jessica Dixon, a law professor who oversees the child advocacy clinic
at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, said CPS cases do sometimes
result in children quickly being dropped from court supervision, even
after initial foster placement. But it doesn't happen often.
To remove a child, "legally, you've got to be able to show risk," she said.
CPS now usually looks for a way children can remain with their parents
safely, Dixon said, though she noted that cases of alleged sexual abuse
will usually trigger swifter action.
"In most child welfare courts, they're going to be safe rather than
sorry, and in some cases, that will result in removals that shouldn't
have happened," she said.
Since the April raid and rancorous custody case, the FLDS, which
believe polygamy brings glorification in heaven, has said it will not
sanction marriages of underage girls. The sect is a breakaway of the
Mormon church, which renounced polygamy more than a century ago.
(© 2008 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)
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