================================================
Texas officials looking at possible abuse among
------------------------------------------------ 
FLDS boys By APRIL CASTRO, 
================================================

Associated Press Writer, April 30, 2008
 

AUSTIN, Texas - Texas officials told legislators 
Wednesday that they're investigating the possible 
sexual abuse of some young boys taken from a poly-
gamist sect's ranch, as well as broken bones among 
other children

The disclosures are the first suggestions that 
anyone other than teenage girls may have been 
sexually or physically abused at the ranch run by 
the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter 
Day Saints, a renegade Mormon sect.

In written and oral testimony provided to lawmakers 
Wednesday, officials with the state Department of 
Family and Protective Services said interviews and 
journal entries suggested that boys may have been 
sexually abused.

Earlier, the department's commissioner, Carey Cockerell, 
told lawmakers that at least 41 children, some of them 
"very young," have evidence of broken bones.

The state has custody of 464 children from the Yearning 
For Zion Ranch in the west Texas prairie town of Eldorado, 
including a baby born to a teen mother Tuesday.

Although Cockerell didn't elaborate on the broken bones, 
a report by his department's Child Protective Services 
division said medical exams and interviews indicated 
"that at least 41 children have had broken bones in 
the past."

"We do not have X-rays or complete medical information 
on many children so it is too early to draw any conclusions 
based on this information, but it is cause for concern and 
something we'll continue to examine," the CPS report said.

The state Senate Health and Human Services Committee's 
hearing on Texas' foster care system had been planned 
for Wednesday before the April 3 raid on the ranch. But 
for the morning part of the hearing, the polygamous sect 
took center stage.

The state has been criticized for taking all the children 
from the ranch, including infants and boys, on the theory 
that the girls may be abused when they are teens.

State authorities raided the ranch in search of evidence 
of underage girls being forced into polygamous marriages. 
Since then, the state won temporary custody of the children, 
now scattered around the state in group foster-care facilities.

FLDS spokesman Rod Parker called Cockerell's testimony 
"a deliberate effort to mislead the public."

Although the ranch has a small medical facility, Parker 
said any broken bones would have been treated away from 
the ranch and that doctors are required to report suspected 
abuse.

Parker said state officials were "trying to politically 
inoculate themselves from the consequences of this horrible 
tragedy."

Cockerell told a legislative committee the investigation 
has been difficult because members of the church have 
refused to cooperate.

Mothers who stayed with their children for two weeks 
after the raid launched a coordinated effort to stymie 
investigators, coaching their children to not answer 
questions, Cockerell said.

He said the women and children would gather into apparent 
family units, with the children referring to several women 
as their mother, then the "women switched children in these 
family units ... making it difficult."

"When asked, women and children would change their names 
and ages," he said.

The CPS report also said authorities "tried to use 
bracelets to identify children, but the women and children 
removed the bracelets or rubbed the wording off them." 

The report also said mothers at first refused to let 
the children undergo basic health screenings and that 
"many" teen girls declined to take pregnancy tests. 

On Monday, CPS announced that almost 60 percent of the 
underage girls living on the Eldorado ranch are pregnant 
or already have children. 

Under Texas law, children under the age of 17 generally 
cannot consent to sex with an adult. A girl can get married 
with parental permission at 16, but none of the sect's girls 
is believed to have had a legal marriage under state law. 

Church officials have denied that any children were abused 
at the ranch and say the state's actions are a form of 
religious persecution. They also dispute the count of 
teen mothers, saying at least some are likely adults. 

___ 

Associated Press Writer Michelle Roberts contributed 
to this report from San Antonio.



Reply via email to