| State takes 52 girls from sect's West Texas ranch | |
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By BILL HANNA and JACK DOUGLAS JR. Fort Worth Star-Telegram | |
State officials removed 52 girls from a polygamous sect's compound in Schleicher County on Friday, a day after authorities blocked access to the secretive West Texas outpost in response to a report of child abuse, officials said. The girls, ranging from 6 months to 17 years old, were put on buses at the YFZ Ranch outside Eldorado and driven north to San Angelo, where they were being housed at a civic center, Child Protective Services officials said. Eighteen were taken into legal custody and will be placed in foster care, CPS spokesman Patrick Crimmins said. "We're assessing their needs and making arrangements for their placement," Crimmins said. "The caseworkers need to have an opportunity to assess their needs." "Legally, logistically it's a challenge for us -- the number of children we're removing into care all at once in a sparsely populated part of the state. I don't know how difficult it will be to place them, but we will do so." The other 34 children were being interviewed late Friday. The YFZ Ranch is owned by followers of a secretive sect known as the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, which is based in Utah and Arizona. The investigation began with a call reporting the physical abuse of a 16-year-old girl at the compound, CPS spokeswoman Marleigh Meisner told The Associated Press. Late Friday, a warrant was issued in Tom Green County for records dealing with the births of children to a 16-year-old girl and her marriage to Dale Barlow, 50, according to the San Angelo Standard-Times. The main office of the district attorney responsible for Schleicher County is in San Angelo, in Tom Green County. Late Friday, DPS spokeswoman Tela Mange said an arrest warrant has been issued in the case, but she would not disclose the name 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 told The Associated Press. Late Thursday afternoon, DPS troopers, Texas Rangers and Schleicher County sheriff's deputies sealed off roads leading to the 1,691-acre ranch, Eldorado residents said. About midnight, authorities entered the compound, and CPS caseworkers began interviewing people living there. Robert Black, a spokesman for Gov. Rick Perry, said the governor's office received a report on Tuesday that an underage girl had been sexually and physically abused by someone inside the compound. Authorities were also told that people inside the compound might be armed and dangerous. "That was a concern for law enforcement," Black said. "They were proceeding very cautiously." Among those removed from the ranch were young children and their underage mothers, he said. The sect's prophet In 2003, one of the followers of Warren Jeffs, the so-called prophet of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, purchased the ranch near Eldorado after authorities started to scrutinize the group's polygamous activities in the twin towns of Colorado City, Ariz., and Hildale, Utah. As authorities ratcheted up the pressure on the sect, Jeffs disappeared from public view. He was long rumored to make appearances at the group's sprawling and rapidly growing Eldorado compound, but his presence there was never confirmed. Later that year, Jeffs was charged in Arizona with sexual conduct with a minor and conspiracy to commit sexual conduct with a minor. But he was nowhere to be found. In June 2006, he was added to the FBI's 10 Most Wanted List. In August 2006, he was arrested outside Las Vegas on a routine traffic stop. After his arrest, he was extradited and charged in Utah for his role in the arranged marriage of a 14-year-old girl to her 19-year-old cousin. The girl testified that she was forced into the marriage, and Jeffs was convicted and sentenced to two consecutive terms of five years to life in prison. Jeffs is now in the Mohave County Jail in Kingman, Ariz., awaiting trail on charges of sexual conduct with a minor, incest and conspiracy to commit sexual conduct with a minor. The move to Eldorado Eldorado, a livestock and mohair center on the Edwards Plateau, is home to about 1,800 of the 2,800 residents of Schleicher County. In 2003, when word first spread in the town that the group had purchased the former exotic-game ranch, the sect's outpost was compared with the Branch Davidian compound near Waco. As multiple buildings were built, including the multistory white temple, Jeffs' followers kept to themselves. Randy Mankin, an Eldorado newspaper editor who has tracked the group since its members arrived, said no one outside the compound knew how many people were living there. His best estimate is 350 to 400. "You fly over, and you see lots of kids, but if the sheriff goes in or the chief appraiser goes in there, you don't see them because they keep them under lock and key," he said. After Jeffs' arrest and trial, locals' curiosity about the sect began to subside. Thelma Bosmans, who lives on the road to the compound, said it had been quiet in the area until early Friday, when she saw a parade of vehicles -- first state game warden trucks, and then state troopers -- move in. "It's crazy here. It's hysterical," she said. Bosmans said she watched as the girls were bused out. "They were just staring out the windows, staring at the cameras. It was sad," she said. "Can you imagine how hard it's going to be for them ... because it's different out here?" Mankin said residents were caught off guard by the sudden presence of law enforcement. "I didn't see this coming, and I don't think anyone else did either," Mankin said. "It's quite an onslaught. Nobody really knows how much is going on, but it gives you the impression that a whole lot is going on." billhanna@star-telegram.com BILL HANNA, 817-390-7698 | |
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star-telegram.com Originally published April 5, 2008 | |
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