NULL Polygamist Leader Back in Court

Polygamist Leader Back in Court

About a dozen followers of a polygamist leader filed into a courtroom Thursday as a judge began hearing brief testimony.
Dec 14, 2006 01:23 PM EST

ST. GEORGE, Utah (AP) -- About a dozen followers of a polygamist leader filed into a courtroom Thursday as a judge began hearing brief testimony before deciding whether Warren Jeffs will stand trial for his role in the marriage of a teenager to her older cousin in 2001.

She was not expected to attend, after testifying last month that the ceremony was the "darkest time of my entire life."

Jeffs, head of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, is charged with rape as accomplice. A judge must decide if there is probable cause to move the case to trial. (Watch police dodge questions in Jeffs' hometown )

Security was enhanced outside the courthouse, with police posted on cliffs and parking prohibited next to the building.

"They're peaceful people. They just want to get along," St. George police Sgt. Craig Harding said of Jeffs' followers. "They just happen to believe in having more than one wife and that's where the rub comes."

The outcome isn't likely to lessen the 50-year-old Jeffs' popularity. The FLDS sect traces its roots to early Mormon theology, which promoted plural marriage. The modern Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints disavows polygamy and renounced the practice in 1890 as a condition of Utah's statehood.

The FLDS, however, consider themselves "fundamentalist Mormons" who continue to believe polygamy will bring glory in heaven. They also consider Jeffs a prophet of God with dominion over their salvation.

"Prosecution will actually strengthen his position as a leader," said Martha Bradley, a University of Utah professor and author of a history of government raids on the FLDS community. "You just can't underestimate the power of becoming a martyr."

Authorities rounded up and imprisoned FLDS church members in the 1940s and 1950s, but the prosecuted returned home to the community on the Arizona-Utah state line as heroes, Bradley said. The persecution also strengthened the community's resolve to continue its religious practices.

Bradley predicts that pattern will repeat, even if Jeffs is tried and convicted of the two first-degree felony counts that could send him to prison for the rest of his life.

Washington County prosecutors contend Jeffs forced a 14-year-old girl to marry her 19-year-cousin in 2001. The union resulted in sexual relations that also occurred without her consent, the now-20-year-old woman said in a court hearing last month.

Jeffs is also charged with multiple felonies in Mohave County, Arizona, but won't face those charges until after the Utah case is complete.

At the helm of the FLDS church since 2002, Jeffs disappeared from public life in 2004 after lawsuits filed against him and his church alleged abuses of some members. Criminal charges in Arizona and Utah followed in 2005 and 2006. Earlier this year, Jeffs was named to the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list.

Jeffs was arrested August 28 in a traffic stop on Interstate 15 just north of Las Vegas, Nevada. He is being held without bail in the county's Purgatory Correctional Facility.

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