| Grand Jury Indicts Polygamous Leader |
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By Jennifer Dobner The Associated Press Guardian Unlimited - London, England |
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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - A federal grand jury indicted the leader of a polygamous sect Wednesday, accusing him of fleeing to avoid prosecution on Utah sex charges. The one-count indictment covers a five-month period in 2006, although Warren Jeffs was believed to be on the run for a longer stretch before his arrest in August during a traffic stop near Las Vegas.
Jeffs, 51, also faces trial in southern Utah in April on charges of rape as an accomplice for his suspected role in the ceremonial marriage of a teenage girl to an older cousin. In Arizona, he faces felony sex charges in Mohave County, Ariz., for his suspected role in arranging underage marriages for some of his followers. A telephone message left for his attorney, Wally Bugden, was not immediately returned Wednesday. Jeffs is president of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, whose members practice polygamy and live on the Utah-Arizona border. He disappeared from public life in 2004 after lawsuits filed against him and his church alleged abuses of some members. The criminal charges in Arizona and Utah followed in 2005 and 2006. To help in the search for Jeffs, federal prosecutors filed an arrest warrant against him in April 2006. Federal charges tied to such warrants typically are dropped once a suspect is caught and transferred to state authorities. But U.S. Attorney Brett Tolman said Jeffs' power and influence in his community, especially over young women who often are placed in marriages to older men, make the case different from most. Tolman also noted that Jeffs was found in a Cadillac Escalade with more than $57,000, satellite devices, cell phones, prepaid credit cards, wigs and sunglasses. "I believe this is the very type of flight to avoid prosecution that is worthy of a federal indictment," the prosecutor said at a news conference. Jeffs is being held in a jail in southern Utah. The federal charge carries a maximum punishment of five years in federal prison. |
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guardian.co.uk Originally published Thursday March 8, 2007 |
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