Untangling the web: Records offer look inside polygamist families
AP file photo
Officials seized a jumbled list of mothers, fathers and children from the Yearning For Zion ranch, home of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in Eldorado, Texas. The records might help shed light on some of the mysteries behind families who lived on the ranch.
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The Associated Press
Published: May 9, 2008
SAN ANTONIO — Hand-scrawled records taken from a polygamist sect are helping untangle the spider-web network of family relationships at the Yearning For Zion ranch, where some husbands had more than a dozen wives.
The church records offer a peek into an intricate culture in which men related to the sect’s prophet, Warren Jeffs, enjoyed favored-husband status in the distribution of wives and all young women were married by 24.
An Associated Press analysis of the records, which authorities seized in a raid last month, show that by the time a girl reached 16, she was more likely to be married than to live as a child in her father’s household. The same was not true for boys.
Ben Bistline, a former member of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints who was raised in the sect, said Jeffs or other church leaders decided who got married and when. Jeffs is imprisoned on an accomplice-to-rape charge in Utah.
“It’s just at the whim of the leader,” said Bistline, who said successful businessmen who donate heavily to the sect or who are close to the prophet are generally favored. “There’s a lot of nepotism involved.”
The records, released by court officials last week, include 37 families totaling 507 individuals. At the time the lists were written from March through August of 2007, most of the people were living at the YFZ Ranch, though others were in homes along the Utah-Arizona line.
Two-thirds of listed households were polygamous, with the brothers of Jeffs and a senior elder claiming the most wives, up to 21 in one case.
Men still in their 20s made up most of the dozen monogamous marriages.
The husbands and wives were married in the FLDS, and none is believed to hold Texas marriage licenses.
Of the 19 youths listed as being 16 or 17, none of the boys are husbands, while nine of the girls are listed as wives. Only one 17-year-old girl remained unmarried.
Under Texas law, children under the age of 17 generally cannot consent to sex with an adult.
The young men in monogamous marriages will likely seek additional wives as they age, Bistline said.
“A man has to have at least three wives to get to the highest degree of heaven,” he said.
After the raid, the state took custody of 464 children belonging to FLDS families, including one born later to a teen mother. Authorities alleged that teenage girls were being systematically abused and forced into underage marriages, while boys were being groomed to become future abusers.
Church officials insist they are being persecuted for their religious beliefs.
FLDS spokesman Rod Parker said the records indicate that many sect members “are either monogamous couples or adult couples, and that incidence of underage marriage is actually not very prevalent.”
No criminal charges have been filed, though state authorities continue to investigate.
“Our investigation and prosecution will go where the evidence leads,” Jerry Strickland, a spokesman for the attorney general’s office, wrote in an e-mail statement.
As in many states, government-recognized marriage in Texas to more than one person at the same time is a felony. But the law also apparently applies to anyone who “purports to marry” — language used in Utah to target polygamists who marry in religious services but don’t get marriage licenses.
Ken Driggs, an Atlanta lawyer who is an expert on the FLDS and the legal history of polygamy, said any prosecution of FLDS members for multiple marriages would be difficult because of the law’s vagueness, questions of jurisdiction and the community’s refusal to testify in previous instances.
“They have a tricky case in front of them,” Diggs said.
Authorities raided the compound April 3 after a series of calls to a domestic-abuse hot line that purportedly came from a 16-year-old girl who was forced into a relationship at the ranch with a man three times her age.
The girl has not been found, and authorities are investigating whether the call was a hoax.
Jeffs was convicted of being an accomplice to rape for arranging a marriage in Utah between a 14-year-old follower and a 19-year-old man.
He awaits trial on other charges in Arizona.
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Reader Reactions
Posted by ( Cosmo Wafflefoot ) on May 12, 2008 at 6:24 am
These people are being persecuted for their religious beliefs. I think it is great! It’s about time we, as a culture, stopped pretending that beliefs should be off the table when it comes to deciding right and wrong. This is a hostage situation. At the Yearning For Zion ranch the bodies and minds of young women and girls were held hostage to the religious beliefs of their parents. Ask yourself if the bigger crime here did more damage to the bodies or the minds. Then ask yourself if Lynchburg and Liberty University, in particular, isn’t involved in the very same activity. Both the YFZ ranch and Liberty totally reject the scientific realities long ago accepted by the rest of the civilized world. Both enshrine dogma and reject a free and open inquiry as blasphemy. Both denigrate a woman’s role to that of a subservient. Both reject and hold government in high suspicion. Both claim not only to be the only “right” way, but condemn nonbelievers to eternal pain and damnation. Both places are self perpetuating bubbles that contain individuals wildly out of touch with the the world around them. Both places will leave no stone unturned to see to it that their children never get exposed to people or ideas that would, or might, lead them to question, not just their parents, but themselves. Both produce the same results if to different degrees. Both claim a mandate from God. As a consequence of our uniquely American passion for freedom of religion we experience the up-sides and down-sides. On the up-side we don’t have religious wars (yet) and people of differing beliefs appear to live side by side with little animosity. On the down-side, in our attempt to keep the door wide open, the really crazies get to come in too. As a result of this America is rapidly, and compared to the rest of the civilized industrialized world, sinking into the morass of pre-scientific, anti-scientific dogma spread by religious hucksters, of which we seem to have an endless supply. As the rest of the scientifically advancing world surges ahead and brighter and brighter minds are turned away from studying and living in America, as a direct consequence of our heavily promoted and profoundly backward views, we fall farther and farther behind on the world stage. Our credibility diminishes daily. What can the future be for people who don’t care about the future? When children are encouraged to believe that “this” life is irrelevant and the mythological “next” existence is the only one that matters the destruction of our society is at hand. Historically, it has always been so. Who was it that said that America will fall while holding a Bible in one hand and the flag in another?
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