A Polygamist Cult's Last Stand: The Rise and Fall of Warren Jeffs. On a January morning in Phoenix, Willie Jessop enters the courtroom through a side door, nods at the lawyers and saunters up to the witness stand. He's a big man – six feet three, well over 2. He glances at the jury, a faint smile crossing his lips.
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In the past, Jessop has been the staunchest defender of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter- day Saints, a polygamist offshoot of Mormonism. When he used to take the stand to explain their way of life, a few sister wives in pastel prairie dresses would always be on hand to show support. But today, they're gone. That's because Jessop, the former spokesman for the FLDS and one- time bodyguard to its jailed prophet, Warren Jeffs, has turned against his church. He's not here to defend the FLDS; he's here to take it down.
The prosecutor asks why Jessop would turn on FLDS leadership to become a key witness for the Department of Justice. Jessop's face reddens as he leans forward. Because those sons of bitches were raping girls in Texas, and they knew it and I knew it," he says, "and that battle is still raging today."It's Week Two in a federal trial currently underway against the adjoining towns of Colorado City, Arizona, and Hildale, Utah, and increasingly disturbing and bizarre revelations are coming to light. Known collectively as Short Creek, the two towns have a total population of about 8,0. FLDS, making the community the largest polygamist enclave in America.
For generations, the FLDS leadership has had total control over this desert outpost on the edge of the Grand Canyon, selecting the mayors, the city council and even the town marshals without any problem. But in recent years, the DOJ has been investigating allegations that the two towns have been violating residents' civil rights, allowing the church to use public officials to run members who left the faith – "apostates" in FLDS parlance – out of town, denying utility hookups and even spying on citizens. The trial is slated to end in late February or early March and, if the feds are successful, criminal charges could follow, helping to end FLDS control over Short Creek.
Warren Jeffs with some of his 8. He is now serving a life sentence in Texas. Illustration by Sean Mc. Cabe. But the FLDS isn't expected to go without a fight.
Once a fringe religious community seemingly stuck in time, Short Creek has fallen into a spell under its prophet, Warren Jeffs – a spindly, hollow- eyed man who allegedly runs the town despite serving a life sentence in Texas for multiple convictions of child rape. Jeffs has banned all TV and the Internet in Short Creek. His private security force roams the streets in SUVs with blacked- out windows, enforcing church discipline and tailing anyone who passes through town.
FLDS members who disobey his word are banished. Watch Wild Things Online Free 2016. But not everyone is following Jeffs' orders anymore.
Jessop is part of a growing band of outcasts numbering in the hundreds who have refused to leave town, and the rising tension between the faithful and these exiles has pushed Short Creek to the brink of civil war. Former church members claim they have been driven off the road, seen FLDS children peeing on their lawns and found dead animals with their throats slit left on their porches. In September, the office window of a victim's advocate was shot out. A week later, someone blew up an apostate's truck. There are even rumors that Jeffs is trying to create a master race, loyal only to him, through a secret breeding program known as the "seed bearers." "This is a community that has been controlled by a madman now sitting in a jail in Texas," says Sam Brower, a private investigator who worked on the Jeffs case and is the author of Prophet's Prey, a penetrating look inside the FLDS. That's the really scary thing about this. This guy is crazy.
The more power Warren Jeffs loses, the more desperate he becomes."As Jeffs' former bodyguard, Jessop is one of the DOJ's most important witnesses, a key to taking down the FLDS. And today, he's spilling the church's secrets. During a break in the trial in Phoenix, Jessop sighs – he may have helped light a fuse no one can control. How far is this going to go?" he says. That's what's got everyone on pins and needles. Could it end in a Waco or in a Jonestown?
I hope not, but I don't think we've seen the climax of this thing."For most of its history, few outsiders even knew of Short Creek's existence. A remote polygamist town off a two- lane desert highway, it was the sort of place where no one locked their doors or even built fences. Boys rode their horses bareback down dusty unmarked streets, and girls in lavender prairie dresses walked arm in arm to church, humming Mormon hymns. And then Warren Jeffs came to power in the late Nineties, and everything changed.
The ambitious, twisted son of the previous FLDS prophet, Jeffs took control and became obsessed with the idea of "perfect obedience." He started kicking people out of Short Creek that he deemed sinners: young men who came to be known as Lost Boys, teenage girls he considered too rebellious and men no longer "worthy of priesthood," reassigning their wives and children to loyalists he felt he could trust. Jeffs with his bride Merrianne Jessop, who was 1. She is still married to him.
Beginning in 2. 00. Utah. He then began evading authorities while marrying off teenage girls to the sect's leadership. He also ordered the construction of a new FLDS compound, the Yearning for Zion ranch, in the West Texas desert. In May 2. 00. 6, he landed on the FBI's 1. Naomi (code name: 9. With the help of Jessop, who ran the church's security force – called the God Squad by detractors – Jeffs communicated through coded letters and burner phones and shuttled between the church's "houses of hiding" scattered throughout the West (in particular, he often visited his favored brides at the compound in Texas). In August 2. 00. 6, he was arrested during a routine traffic stop on the outskirts of Las Vegas, carrying 1.
Convinced God would liberate him from his prison cell in Utah, he had his wives record his sermons when he called them, to be played for his followers in Short Creek. The end of the world was coming and they must be ready. For a time, with various cases against him falling apart, it seemed like Jeffs might actually be released.
And then in the spring of 2. Texas police breached the gates of the FLDS compound in West Texas, seizing evidence that resulted in the temporary removal of more than 4.
The raid made international headlines and sparked the largest child- custody battle in U. S. history. Suddenly, news trucks from around the country were descending on Texas and Short Creek to talk about Jeffs' taste for young girls and what life was really like inside the secretive cult. In the meantime, investigators had uncovered evidence that Jeffs had taken several teen brides and married one girl who was only 1. Jeffs was eventually extradited from Utah to Texas and in August 2. Yet despite being in jail, Jeffs was still the prophet and determined to keep his stranglehold over Short Creek, where the majority of his estimated 1. But the town was changing.
During Jeffs' years on the run, an obscure legal case made its way through the courts, challenging FLDS control over something called the United Effort Plan. Created by the town elders in the 1. UEP was a charitable trust designed to allow FLDS members to live communally and keep outsiders at bay.
All FLDS members gave ownership of their property to the church- controlled trust, on top of paying a percentage of their incomes. By the time Jeffs took over the church, in 2. FLDS owned nearly all of the land in Short Creek, which meant he could kick out whoever he wanted from their homes, a power he regularly abused. But that all changed when several Lost Boys sued the church in 2. Answer them nothing," Jeffs told his lawyers. Any kind of response, he reasoned, would be an acknowledgment of the unholy power of the government.
World News Tonight With David Muir.