How does this make you feel?
Quote:
219 children, women taken from sect's ranch
ELDORADO, Texas (CNN) -- More than 200 women and children have been removed from a Texas ranch that's home to members of a polygamist sect, but authorities have not identified the girl who called them with allegations of abuse.
The 16-year-old girl, who called authorities last week with allegations of physical and sexual abuse at the compound, may be in the group and using a different name, Marleigh Meisner, a spokeswoman for Texas Child Protective Services, said at a news conference Sunday.
"I am confident that this girl does indeed exist," Meisner said. "I am confident that the allegations that she brought forth are accurate."
Since Thursday, authorities have removed 159 children and 60 adults from the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (FLDS) compound in Eldorado, Texas. Watch buses take girls from compound »
Eighteen of the girls have been taken into state custody. Authorities believe all "had been abused or were at immediate risk of future abuse," a state spokesman said.
The others are now housed at a shelter in San Angelo -- about 45 miles north of Eldorado -- where they are being questioned about abuse, Meisner said.
"It's certainly emotional for the children, but they are with caretakers -- people that they're accustomed to being with -- at the time," Meisner said. Many of the adults at the shelter are parents or relatives of the children, she said. Watch Eldorado residents react to the removals »
Warren Jeffs, the 52-year-old leader and "prophet" of the 10,000-member FLDS, was convicted in Utah last year on two counts of being an accomplice to rape, charges related to a marriage he performed in 2001. He still faces trial in Arizona on eight charges of sexual conduct with a minor, incest and conspiracy.
Critics of the sect say it forces girls as young as 13 into arranged marriages. Watch why police want every child removed »
Meisner said the adults cooperated with child protection officials as authorities continued their search for more children.
An arrest warrant was served last week for Dale Evans Barlow, 50, who authorities believe fathered a child with a 16-year-old girl he had married. As of Saturday night, Barlow had not been found, and child welfare workers could not confirm whether the girl or her child had been found.
The rogue church bought 1,900 acres near Eldorado four years ago and built what it calls the YFZ Ranch. It is now home to as many as 400 members who moved from compounds in Arizona and Utah.
YFZ is a reference to a song written by Jeffs, "Yearning For Zion."
Previous visits by CNN revealed the ranch was guarded by armed men equipped with night-vision gear and other high-tech surveillance tools to prevent intruders.
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The Facts:
This is not just an issue in Texas. Places like this compound still exist in Utah and Arizona. There are also several large Colonies in Mexico.
In 1890, the president of the LDS church called an end to polygamy. Since then, any practicing polygamist has been excommunicated from the LDS church. The FLDS church was founded during this era. At one point, the FLDS had strongholds stretching from southern Canada, through Wyoming, Utah, Arizona, and into Mexico. They regularly smuggled their polygomist leaders from one settlement to the next, over state and federal lines, in an attempt to protect them from the law.
My Opinion:
I am mad and disturbed that people allow this lifestyle to continue. Forced polygamy, as practiced by the FLDS needs to be stopped.
I wonder why it has taken so long for this group to be taken down. I am relieved that the police finally came to the rescue of what I view as prisoners. My cousin, who lives in Utah, and is devout LDS (not FLDS) explained once to me how she would go to extreme lengths to pick up any woman hitchiker, because they were most likely escaping an FLDS compound. She actively supported a couple of organizations that worked to provide women escaping from this life with proper healthcare, counseling, and housing.