Steve Miller, Journal staff | Posted: Friday, September 28, 2007 11:00 pm
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The people occupying a secretive and growing compound
southwest of Pringle are practicing polygamy and are likely
conducting under-age marriages, say two former members of the sect
led by Warren Jeffs, who was convicted last week of rape as an
accessory.
Jeffs is the head of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints, headquartered in the twin border towns
of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Ariz. He was convicted
of the rape as an accessory charge last week in Utah, and faces
similar charges in Arizona.
Jeffs was a fugitive for several years and was suspected to
have hidden for a time at the compound about 12 miles southwest of
Pringle in the southern Black Hills.
The people in the compound, who consider Jeffs their prophet,
are practicing polygamy, which is a central tenet of the FLDS
church, according to Isaac Wyler of Colorado City, an ex-FLDS
member.
"That's a no-brainer," Wyler said of the polygamy question. "I
know they're practicing illegal, under-age marriages in there
because they can get away with it. Warren has received revelations
from God that he's supposed to be marrying these girls at young
ages. He would have to have a completely new revelation for that to
change."
The Journal has not been able to contact members of the
compound.
Jeffs likely took refuge at the Pringle compound at some point
during the years he was a fugitive, Wyler said, although he
probably spent most of his time on the road.
Wyler said FLDS members in Hildale-Colorado City, as well as
compounds elsewhere in the country, follow Jeffs' teachings. Wyler
said Jeffs excommunicated him, along with 19 other leaders of
Colorado City-Hildale, in 2004.
Jane Blackmore, a former FLDS member from Canada who visited
the Pringle compound in August in an unsuccessful attempt to see
her daughter and grandchildren also said she believes the compound
members are practicing polygamy.
Blackmore of Creston, British Columbia, said she can't be
certain whether the secretive compound is practicing polygamy and
under-age marriage. "From the history and the past, I believe
they're still practicing both," Blackmore said.
Blackmore, accompanied by other family members, went to the
compound on Aug. 25 in an attempt to visit her daughter, Suzie
Johnson, and her grandchildren, but she was turned away by several
FLDS men, Blackmore said.
The compound members called the Custer County Sheriff's Office
and a deputy arrived and told them they had to leave because the
compound is private property.
Blackmore said she recognized some of the men as FLDS leaders
from Colorado City, even though they were wearing wigs.
Custer County Sheriff Rick Wheeler has said nobody has filed a
complaint that compound members are practicing polygamy or are
breaking any other laws.
Wheeler and other county officials say the compound has, in
fact, met every county requirement, including building
permits.
Wheeler said the compound, established about five years ago,
continues to expand. He says the compound has 15-20 structures on
about 140 acres and is now drilling a well. He estimates the
compound could hold 75 to 100 people.
Another FLDS compound, near Eldorado, Texas, also has grown
rapidly.
"It looks like to me they're taking people out of Hildale and
Colorado City and putting them into these two areas," Wheeler
said.
Bruce Wisan, a court-appointed Utah official assigned to
oversee the FLDS financial arm, the United Effort Plan, said he
suspects some residents of the Hildale-Colorado City community are
moving out to other areas.
"The instructions that Warren has given to people are not to
reveal it to anybody. All this happens late at night," Wisan said.
"I've heard from one source that there was a tape that they insert
in the car as they're driving away telling them where they're
driving to and why. Everything is secret."
Sheriff Wheeler said the only complaints he has received about
the Pringle compound are about noise from the constant construction
work, which often goes far into the night.
Bob and Deb Hadlock live nearby in the scenic area above Red
Canyon in far southern Custer County. The Hadlocks say they're fed
up with the construction noise at night and have begun to complain
to the compound leaders and the local authorities. "They wake me up
all hours of the night," Bob Hadlock said. "It's just finally gone
too far."
He said semi-trailers arrive at all hours of the day and night.
"It's ridiculous what comes in here after dark."
Hadlock says that in addition to the surface structures, he
believes the compound members are building something underground.
"You look at the dirt that they got piled above ground. You tell me
where it comes from, if they're not going under."
The compound has also built a watchtower near the entrance.
Wheeler said he has seen men in the watchtower but that he doesn't
know whether they are armed.
Six children at the compound have been registered this year
for home schooling with the Custer School District, the same number
as last year, according to superintendent of schools Tim Creal.
Creal said the children underwent testing last year, but he has not
yet seen the test results.
Wisan said Friday that the compounds are probably being
financed by contributions that FLDS members funnel to Jeffs and
other church leaders.
Blackmore, meanwhile, continues to worry about her daughter,
who she last saw in March on a visit in Rapid City supervised by
her daughter's husband. Suzie, 26, was due to have a baby about a
month ago. "I'm concerned she didn't get proper medical care,"
Blackmore said
She voiced her concerns in August to Ben Johnson. "He said God
is taking care of them."
Johnson also told her that her daughter was living at the
Pringle compound by choice. "I said, you know, the fence and the
watchtower, they give me a different message."