DNA Test in Store for Polygamy Kids

Texas is hoping to end the confusion over the children's parentage.

ByABC News
April 20, 2008, 10:48 AM

April 20, 2008 — -- The children taken from the polygamist Yearning for Zion Ranch in West Texas will be tested this week to determine their parentage, then separated from the mothers who stayed with them, and sent to foster homes.

DNA testing begins Monday morning on the 416 children. The state of Texas is taking this step because of the confusion over the children's parentage. In many cases the children aren't sure of their names and they don't have birth certificates, so it is a daunting task for the state to identify each child.

To accomplish this task, a mobile genetics testing lab will park at the coliseum in San Angelo where the children are housed. The DNA test will help determine which child belongs to which parent, a surprisingly frustrating task for authorities difficult because the children aren't sure who their fathers are, and some of the parents refuse to cooperate and identify their children.

Tuesday, the mobile testing lab will move down the road to the ranch in Eldorado, where the adults will be tested.

Darrell Azar, with the Texas Children's Protective Services, says only mothers younger than 18 will be allowed to stay with their children once the DNA testing is complete. The agency will also try to keep siblings together, which could be difficult because of the number of siblings.

Marleigh Meisner, also with the Children's Protective Services, says as soon as the DNA testing is finished the children will be placed in foster homes. "We begin right now looking for appropriate placements for these children. We are hopeful, in the coming days and weeks, we will find the very best placement for these children."

The testing was ordered by State District Judge Barbara Walther to sort out the confusion that has resulted from this unprecedented case. Walther on Friday ruled the state of Texas will keep custody of the 416 children taken from the YFZ Ranch at least until hearings can be completed to look ateach child's case.

The children come from families belonging to the reclusive sect of the Fundamentalist Latter Day Saints, who had established a sprawling self-contained ranch in Texas.