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Polygamist Sect Leader Captured in Traffic Stop

The Nation

Warren Jeffs, on the FBI's Most Wanted list, is accused of arranging underage marriages.

August 30, 2006|David Kelly, Gary Cohn and Don Woutat | Times Staff Writers

LAS VEGAS — The worldwide manhunt for fugitive polygamist leader Warren Jeffs ended when the self-proclaimed prophet was arrested north of here during a routine traffic stop on Interstate 15, police said Tuesday.

Jeffs, who was on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted list, had long said he would never be taken alive. But he surrendered quietly late Monday, police said. He was unarmed.

The leader of the 10,000-member Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is wanted in Utah and Arizona for alleged involvement in underage marriages, rape and sexual assault.

Utah Atty. Gen. Mark Shurtleff said he was glad the hunt ended peacefully.

"This arrest will crack his mystique and provide the opportunity for the entire story to be told in a court of law before a judge and jury," he said. "These charges are not about the FLDS church or polygamy. No one is above the law. Mr. Jeffs will be treated like any other defendant."

Jeffs' arrest comes after months of local, state and federal efforts to crack down on child sexual abuse and underage marriage in the FLDS, a sect based in the adjoining towns of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Ariz. As prophet, Jeffs could approve marriages and evict residents.

"The arrest is a major step toward ending Jeffs' tyrannical rule in Colorado City and in the FLDS," Arizona Atty. Gen. Terry Goddard said.

The FLDS, which emphasizes polygamy, is accused of widespread sexual abuse of women and children, welfare fraud, breaking up families, looting schools, driving out boys to reduce competition for wives, and employing children in often dangerous construction jobs.

The sect was the subject of an investigation by The Times in May that helped focus attention on the abuses and on the failure of outside authorities to intervene for nearly half a century.

Since then, police have raided the homes of several men accused of marrying underage girls in Colorado City. The trials of eight men charged with having sex with minors began this summer in Kingman, Ariz. The first resulted in the conviction of Kelly Fischer, sentenced last month to 45 days in jail and three years' probation. A second member went on trial this week.

The U.S. Department of Labor last week sought an injunction against a Hildale contractor, saying it used 14- and 15-year-old boys for hazardous construction work.

Arizona has cracked down on financial irregularities in the FLDS-controlled local school district. The state board of education seized control and appointed a receiver.

Authorities in Arizona and Utah have decertified polygamous police officers, broken up an FLDS trust that had expelled residents from their homes, removed a polygamous judge from the bench and placed an investigator in Colorado City to focus on sexual abuse.

"The prosecution of Jeffs is part of that picture, showing that the law will be enforced," Goddard said. "The important message is that nobody is above the law -- as he apparently told his followers he was."

Investigators said Jeffs eluded the law by shuttling back and forth among loyal followers and compounds in Arizona, Utah, Nevada, Colorado and South Dakota. The FLDS recently completed a huge temple in Eldorado, Texas.

"I'm surprised he was stupid enough to come off that Texas ranch," said Sam Brower, a private investigator who has tracked Jeffs for three years. "He just got caught and there was no one to protect him; he had no choice but to go quietly."

A Nevada highway patrolman stopped a red Cadillac Escalade around 9 p.m. Monday because the vehicle license tags were not visible. He found Jeffs inside with one of his estimated 72 wives, and his brother, Isaac Jeffs, at the wheel.

Police also found a "large number" of cellphones, laptop computers, three wigs and more than $50,000 in cash, said FBI Special Agent Steven Martinez.

Jeffs, 50, initially gave a false name, but later admitted his identity, the agent said. Both of his companions were released.

Perhaps no outsider knows the FLDS better than Rodney Parker, a Salt Lake City attorney who has represented church members and has been their frequent guest since 1990.

Parker, who is not a church member, said "Jeffs was targeted as a proxy to destroy this religious movement," but predicted his arrest would have little effect on Jeffs' followers.

"The opposite will happen," he said. "The people will rally behind him."

But alleged victims of Jeffs and of the FLDS applauded his capture.

"Warren has been flouting the law for a long time, and it's appropriate that he has to face the music," said Richard Holm, 53, whose wife and children were taken on Jeffs' orders. "I'd like to think there will be more freedom here, that every person can be their own leader if they want."

Sara Hammon, 31, says she suffered incest and sexual abuse as a child in Colorado City, and left at 14 to avoid marriage.

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