Mon, Jul 06, 2009

Arizona / West

Most Wanted list polygamist leader nabbed near Vegas

By Paul Foy
Associated Press Writer
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 08.30.2006
Warren Steed Jeffs told his lieutenants he was invincible, protected by God from capture, investigators say. According to Utah's attorney general, bodyguards for the polygamist sect leader had promised a gunfight and said they would die for him.
Those vows, fortunately, amounted to nothing Monday night, when the lanky, bookish-looking fugitive was arrested after a traffic stop on a highway north of Las Vegas, three months after the FBI put him on its Ten Most Wanted list.
Jeffs had no weapons, no bodyguards. Just a red 2007 Cadillac Escalade with one of his brothers, one of his wives, tens of thousands of dollars in cash and gift cards, several cell phones and laptop computers, three wigs and a contact lens receipt authorities say he tried to use as a fake ID.
Jeffs had been wanted for more than a year on charges that he arranged marriages between underage girls and older men. He had at least 40 wives, scores of children, thousands of followers and control over millions of dollars from a church trust.
He had safe houses in several states and messengers to carry his orders to the twin polygamous towns of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Ariz., where he ruled by fiat over the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints since the death of his father in 2002.
"Now that he's in custody, he's away from those folks. I think you're going to see a lot of changes within the FLDS community as far as their fear of him, their loyalty to him," said Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff.
Church dissidents say that underage marriages — some involving girls as young as 13 — escalated into the hundreds under his leadership, and that he broke apart families by casting out married men and reassigning their women and children to others.
Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard told KTAR-AM of Phoenix that Jeffs' arrest marks "the beginning of the end of . . . the tyrannical rule of a small group of people over the practically 10,000 followers of the FLDS sect." He predicted it will lead more people to come forward with allegations of sexual abuse.
Jeffs, 50, was a passenger with one of his wives, Naomi Jeffs, in the SUV driven by his most loyal brother, Isaac Steed Jeffs. Naomi and Isaac Jeffs, both 32, were released after Jeffs' arrest.
They were stopped by a Nevada Highway Patrol trooper who couldn't make out the vehicle's temporary Colorado paper license tag on Interstate 15.
Patrol Trooper Eddie Dutchover told The Associated Press he felt something was amiss, but he didn't know that the man sitting in the back seat was the fugitive sect leader.
"Something was obviously wrong," said Dutchover, whose training with a Department of Public Safety suspicious-vehicle task force helped him notice an artery pulsing in Warren Jeffs' neck. "I even told him, 'You're making me nervous. Is everything OK?'
"He said everything's fine," Dutchover said. "He just stared straight ahead."
Dutchover called other troopers and a sergeant. Even when Sgt. David Miller found letters in the car addressed to "President Warren Jeffs," Jeffs refused to give his name.
Jeffs identified himself as John Findley, using a contact-lens receipt from Florida as identification. "Once the FBI got there," Dutchover said, "he gave his full name, Warren Jeffs, and kind of gave a sigh."
Items inside the vehicle included the wigs, $54,000 in cash, gift cards totaling $10,000, 15 cell phones, four laptop computers, a GPS device, a police scanner and numerous unopened envelopes that were thought to contain more cash, said John E. Lewis, special agent in charge of the FBI's Phoenix division.
Jeffs was being held in Nevada's Clark County jail, awaiting a court hearing Thursday on charges of arranging a marriage between an underage girl and an older man.
He is wanted in Utah on similar but more serious charges that include two counts of rape as an accomplice, with each count punishable by up to life in prison.
Arizona filed charges first, but Utah says it has a stronger case and wants to try him first.
Goddard said there are ongoing negotiations with Utah to determine which state will have the first chance at him.
But Goddard said he believes Arizona should get priority because it already is in the middle of a trial in Kingman where the state is prosecuting another member of the FLDS church who was "married" to a girl, then age 16, and had sex with her.
The future of that case, however, was thrown in doubt after the only witness refused to testify Tuesday. (See story, B6)
The FLDS Church split from the mainstream Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints when the Mormons disavowed polygamy more than 100 years ago. Warren Jeffs took over the renegade sect after the death of his 98-year-old father, Rulon Jeffs, who was said to have had 65 children by several women. Warren Jeffs took nearly all his father's widows as his own wives.
Jeffs has been called a dangerous extremist by those familiar with his church. Church dissidents said that while the sect has long practiced the custom of arranged marriages, young girls were rarely married off until Warren Jeffs came to power.
People expelled from the community said young men were sent away to avoid competition for brides. Older men were cast out for alleged disobedience, and their wives and children were reassigned by Jeffs to new husbands and fathers, the former members said.
"If this will bring an end to that, that will be a good thing," said Ward Jeffs, an estranged half-brother of Warren. "We're excited for the people down there, but we're very concerned about who might step up and take the leadership role."
On StarNet: Now that Warren Jeffs has been captured, see the remaining individuals on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list in a slide show at www.azstarnet.com/crime
● Howard Fischer of Capitol Media Services and Associated Press writers Ken Ritter in Las Vegas and Jennifer Dobner in Salt Lake City contributed to this story.