Polygamist Leader Warren Orders Only 15 Men To Father FLDS Kids
Jeffs has banned sex for most members of the FLDS community.
June 21, 2012— -- Polygamist leader Warren Jeffs, who is serving a life sentence in prison, has ordered most of his followers to stop having sex except for 15 men -- and the women they men choose --- designated to father all future children for the sect.
The fundamentalist leader, who is still considered the head of the group, issued the edict from prison in Palestine, Texas, where he is serving out his prison sentence for child sex assault, ABC News' Salt Lake City affiliate reported.
The order effectively bans the church's members from having sex with the exception of the 15 chosen men and the church's female members.
"A lot of these revelations are a grab for attention," said Rick Ross, an expert on cults and the Fundamentalist Church of the Latter Day Saints. "He is trying almost through the revelations to maintain the illusion that he is god's elect, he is the prophet. He's saying: 'Don't forget me.'"
A raid in 2008 on the group's Yearning For Zion compound in Eldorado, Texas, brought the FLDS community into the national spotlight. Authorities found a polygamous community and pregnant child brides. Pictures of women in pastel prairie clothes with tightly braided hairstyles and stories of the controlling, male-dominated environment offered the world a glimpse into the lives of the reclusive group.
The FLDS group broke away from the mainstream Mormon church during the late 19th century after LDS officials ended plural marriages. Jeffs took over as leader of the group when his father, Rulon Jeffs, died in 2002.
The younger Jeffs' legal troubles began in 2006 when he was convicted of two counts of accomplice rape in Utah. He was sentenced to 10 years to life, however his conviction was overturned in 2010 by the Utah Supreme Court, which ruled the jury had been given deficient instructions. Jeffs also faced charges in Arizona, which were dismissed.
In 2011, Jeffs was convicted by a Texas jury of having sex with two girls, who were 15 and 12 years old. DNA evidence at the trial proved Jeffs had fathered a child with the 15-year-old girl.
Membership in the polygamist community has decreased following revelations of sexual abuse, the arrest of prominent officials and a financial trust that was taken over by the state of Utah in 2005, Ross said, effectively dismantling the church "in increments."
The church's remaining 10,000 members live mostly in Hilldale, Utah, and Colorado City, Ariz.
Despite decreasing membership, there are core faithful who still view Jeffs as a prophet.
Jeffs has previously issued edicts from prison, including declaring the end of the world and banning members from having sex until he was released from prison. He also sent the Utah attorney general an edict stating women should not be abused.
Ross said the public can expect to hear a lot more of Jeffs' "incoherent" revelations as he spends the rest of his life in prison.
"It's wishful thinking of a deeply disturbed mind," he said. "Jeffs can not really exercise the kind of control he once did. These are the rantings of a man who has really lost it."