BishopAccountability.org
 
  FLDS Leader's Lawyers to Question Anti-polygamy Activist

By Ben Winslow
Deseret News

November 18, 2008

http://deseretnews.com/article/1,5143,705264042,00.html

Lawyers for Fundamentalist LDS Church leader Warren Jeffs plan to interview an anti-polygamy activist about the phone calls that sparked the raid on the sect's YFZ Ranch in Texas.

In papers filed last week in a Kingman, Ariz., court, Jeffs' attorneys said they have scheduled a Nov. 24 interview with Flora Jessop in Phoenix. Jeffs' criminal defense team has asked her to bring copies of "any recordings of any phone calls between yourself and Rozita Swinton," the woman suspected of making the hoax call that launched the raid.

The FLDS leader's attorneys also seek phone call recordings between Jessop and Arizona and Texas law enforcement and child welfare officials.

Jessop told the Deseret News earlier this year she received numerous calls from Swinton, who claimed to be an abused, pregnant teenager trapped in a marriage to an older man on the YFZ Ranch. Jessop said she went to law enforcement when she began to believe the calls were a hoax.

It was similar calls to a family crisis shelter in San Angelo, Texas, that prompted authorities to investigate the FLDS Church's property near Eldorado. On site, Texas CPS and law enforcement said they saw other evidence of abuse that led a judge to order the removal of all of the children from the ranch. Approximately 439 children were returned two months later when a pair of courts ruled the state acted improperly in removing all of the children.

Swinton, 33, is considered a "person of interest" by Texas authorities. The Deseret News reported last month that she is undergoing in-patient mental health treatment as part of a pair of unrelated false reporting cases in Colorado.

Law enforcement seized hundreds of thousands of pieces of evidence when serving search warrants on the YFZ Ranch. Some of that evidence details allegations of underage marriages within the FLDS Church. Jeffs' lawyers have filed court papers seeking to keep any evidence seized in the Texas raid out of his upcoming trial on sexual misconduct charges. The FLDS leader is accused of performing underage marriages in the Arizona cases.

A dozen people, including Jeffs, have so far been indicted by a Schleicher County, Texas, grand jury on charges ranging from sexual assault of a child to bigamy to failure to report child abuse.

In addition to Jessop, Jeffs' attorneys are also seeking to question Texas authorities about the raid and Arizona law enforcement's level of involvement in it.

E-mail: bwinslow@desnews.com

 
 

Any original material on these pages is copyright © BishopAccountability.org 2004. Reproduce freely with attribution.