Apr 4, 2008 5:45 pm US/Central
Girls Shuttled Away From Polygamist Ranch
Youngest Girl Was 6 Months Old
ELDORADO, Texas (AP) ―
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State authorities took custody Friday of 18 girls who had been living at a secretive West Texas religious retreat built by polygamist leader Warren Jeffs (left).
AP
Child welfare officials following up on an
abuse complaint took custody of 18 girls Friday who lived at a
secretive West Texas religious retreat built by polygamist leader
Warren Jeffs.
A total of 52 girls, ages 6 months to 17 years, were bused away on
Friday to be interviewed, but only 18 were immediately taken into state
custody, said Texas Child Protective Services spokeswoman Marleigh
Meisner. No arrests had been made.
Meisner said welfare officials were looking for foster homes for
the girls, most of whom have rarely been outside the insular world of
the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. They
were being housed for now at a civic center, she said.
"We're dealing with children that aren't accustomed to the outside
world, so we're trying to be very sensitive to their needs," Meisner
said.
Authorities had interviewed about half the girls since arriving
Thursday evening at the remote compound with law enforcers, she said.
Interviews were expected to continue over the weekend.
The investigation began with a call alleging physical abuse of a 16-year-old girl living there, Meisner said.
On Friday afternoon, the Department of Public Safety officials began executing a search warrant.
The warrant seeks records dealing with the birth of children to a
16-year-old and any records listing a marriage between a 50-year-old
man and the girl, according to the San Angelo Standard-Times, which
cited court records released late Friday in Tom Green County.
Prosecutors in Tom Green, a larger county north of Eldorado, were
handling the case.
An arrest warrant was issued, but the individual that public safety
officials are looking for had not been located Friday evening, said
spokeswoman Tela Mange. She said she could not reveal whose name was on
the warrant.
"We have been working very closely with the adults at the ranch, and they have been assisting us in our search," she said.
The ranch covers roughly 1,700 acres. It is north of this two
stoplight town, down a narrow paved road. Authorities blocked access to
the compound's gate, keeping onlookers miles away.
Only the compound's 80-foot-tall, gleaming white temple is visible on the wind-swept desert horizon.
State officials said they did not know how many people lived at the
retreat, but local officials in 2006 put the number at about 150, as
members of the reclusive church moved from a community on the
Arizona-Utah line.
The congregation, known as FLDS, and has been led by Jeffs since
his father's death in 2002. It is one of several groups that split from
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, based in Salt Lake
City, decades after it renounced polygamy in 1890.
In November, Jeffs was sentenced to two consecutive sentences of
five years to life in prison in Utah for being an accomplice to the
rape of a 14-year-old girl who wed her cousin in an arranged marriage
in 2001.
In Arizona, Jeffs is charged as an accomplice with four counts each
of incest and sexual conduct with a minor stemming from two arranged
marriages between teenage girls and their older male relatives. He is
jailed in Kingman, Ariz., awaiting trial.
The group's retreat, about 160 miles northwest of San Antonio, is
on a former exotic game ranch. The group bought the property in 2004
for $700,000 and began an ambitious construction program anchored by
the temple.
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