Showing posts with label Polygamy case. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Polygamy case. Show all posts

Friday, April 18, 2008

SHOCKING: Black Woman's Fake Call May Have Led To Polygamist Raid In Texas!!!

Leave It To A Sistah To Get This Party Started

A call from a 16-year old girl, claiming sexual abuse at the Texas Polygamist Compound may have been a prank call from a African American Colorado woman.

The F.B.I. began tracing calls from a person named "Sarah" to a Teenage Rescue Mission for girls trying to escape the sect. "Sarah" is the same person who made the call which lead to the raid. Authorities now believe Rozita Swinton, 33, was behind those fake calls.

Swinton was arrested Wednesday Night by Colorado Springs Police. Texas Rangers were in town Wednesday night to interview Swinton, but they have not filed any charges. Court Affidavits have been sealed in her recent arrest, but news sources have learned that it relates to a false call back in February from a girl named "Jennifer" claiming she was being held hostage in a basement. This case is getting more and more bizarre.

Meanwhile, a child welfare worker said some women at the sect's ranch may have had children when they were minors, some as young as 13.

The testimony came late Thursday, the first day of a court hearing to determine whether the 416 children, swept up in a raid on the ranch two weeks ago, will remain in state custody. Child welfare officials claim the children were abused or in imminent danger of abuse because the sect encourages girls younger than 18 to marry and have children.

Child welfare investigator Angie Voss testified that at least five girls who are younger than 18 are pregnant or have children. Voss said some of the women identified as adults with children may be juveniles, or may have had children when they were younger than 18.

Identifying children and parents has been difficult because members of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints have given different names and ages at various times, Voss said. The state has asked that DNA be taken from all of the children and their alleged parents to help determine biological connections. The judge has not ruled on that request.

The court hearing, which continues Friday morning, disintegrated Thursday as hundreds of lawyers who descended on San Angelo for the proceedings shouted objections or queued up to cross-examine witnesses.


The case — one of the biggest, most convoluted child-custody hearings in U.S. history — presented an extraordinary spectacle: big-city lawyers in suits and mothers in 19th-century, pioneer-style dresses, all packed into a historic courtroom and an auditorium two blocks away that was patched into the proceedings by a grainy video feed.


The state wants to keep the children in its custody, and likely move them to foster homes while officials continue investigating abuse allegations. The state must provide evidence the children were physically or sexually abused, or are in imminent danger of abuse.

The children, most of whom are being kept in a domed coliseum in San Angelo, range in age from 6 months to 17 years. About 130 are under 4 years old, Voss said. She said she was concerned about how the children and women followed the orders of the church's prophet, identified as jailed leader Warren Jeffs.

Girls As Young As 16 & 17 Pregnant By Elders

"The children reported that if the prophet heard from the Heavenly Father that they were to marry at any age, they were to do that. If the prophet said they were to lie, they were to do that," Voss said.

Jeffs is currently awaiting trial in a Kingman, Ariz., jail on charges related to the promotion of underage marriages. He previously was convicted of being an accomplice to the rape of a 14-year-old wed to her cousin in a Utah case.

The sect came to West Texas in 2003, relocating some members from the church's traditional home along the Utah-Arizona state line. Voss said the ranch was considered a special place, the sect's Zion.

Authorities raided the 1,700-acre ranch south of here in Eldorado on April 3 and began removing children while seeking evidence of underage girls being married to adults. Walther signed an emergency order giving the state custody of the children taken from the ranch. [CNN]

Thursday, April 17, 2008

You Know If These Were Some Black Women, This Thing Would Have Been On & Poppin A Long Time Ago!

Surprise-Surprise, Chaotic Hearing in Polygamist Case Begins

SAN ANGELO, Tex. — Sistahs, accustomed to handling their business while their men are missing in action, are collectively shaking their weaves right about now.

A hearing on the fate of 416 White children birthed by 6 cowardly White men (okay, we're exaggerating... a little) taken in a raid on a polygamist compound descended into chaos on Thursday. That's not surprising, consider police allegedly found papers at the prison, er... compound suggesting one man had 22 wives. The youngest is believed to be 16.

Before the proceedings were recessed after about 45 minutes of wrangling, a lawyer for the state’s Department of Child Protective Services said it would seek psychiatric examinations for the children, as well as genetic testing of both the children and the adults, and would try to have the children relocated to other parts of the state, away from this town in west Texas. Then defense lawyers in the second location started entering a flurry of objections as the state tried to press on with its case.

The request for genetic testing appeared to be a way for officials to establish the family relationships between the children, many of whom appear to be half-brothers and half-sisters, and the adults involved.

"It is a huge logistical problem today," said Tom Vick, a lawyer from Weatherford, Tex., and member of the Access to Justice Commission created by the Texas Supreme Court who helped secure volunteer lawyers to represent the 416 children.

Thursday’s hearing was the first time the state has attempted to present evidence since it persuaded Judge Barbara Walther of Tom Green County to sign an emergency order two weeks ago giving the state custody of the children on the basis of a telephone call from a girl who said that she was a 16-year-old and that she had been raped and beaten by her 50-year-old spiritual husband.

The girl said that she had already had a child with the man and that she might be pregnant again. Under Texas law, children under 16 cannot get married.

After the raid, during which the Department of Child Protective Services took away all the children from the 1,700-acre Yearning for Zion Ranch, authorities searched the buildings on the property, taking documents and computer hard drives as possible evidence.

Since then, the two sides have engaged in what has amounted to a propaganda war.
Members of the polygamous group, calling itself the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, denied that any abuse took place and said the state is prosecuting them because of their faith. They said the remote ranch, with its log cabin-style houses and white temple, is simply a refuge from a hostile and sinful world.

A lawyer representing some of the families questioned whether the girl who reportedly made the original complaint even exists. "Not only have they not found her, but no one around here seems to know who she is, or where it came from or what it’s about,” said the lawyer, Jim Bradshaw of Salt Lake City. “It appears to be created out of thin air."

Janet, a woman at the raided compound in Eldorado, Tex., who declined to give her last name, asserted, “We don’t know who she is."

Because many of the children have similar names and were reluctant to talk to state authorities, family relationships were difficult to sort out. Officials first confiscated all the cellphones held by the children and mothers who went with them to shelter to prevent communication with outsiders. Later, they separated the mothers from children older than 6 in hopes of getting them to talk without a parent in attendance.

Because more than 350 lawyers are involved in the case, many on a voluntary basis, the county courthouse was too small to accommodate them and the members of the church who wanted to attend the hearing. That is why the live video feed was set up at the nearby city hall.

Some lawyers said they expect all sides to make group arguments, rather then individual ones. Nevertheless, some predicted that it would be another day before Judge Walther would decide whether to keep the children in state custody or allow them to return to their homes. [NY Times]