Media glare: Two Fundamentalist Church of Latter Day Saints members leave court in San Angelo, Texas, after a judge ruled that 416 children will remain in state custody.
BRIAN CONNELLY/SAN ANGELO STANDARD-TIMES/AP

To regain kids, FLDS women try new tactic: public relations

Texas judge rules that 416 children must remain in state custody for now, orders DNA tests.

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Reporter Faye Bowers discusses the new tack the women of the FLDS are trying in order to regain custody of their children.

The two-day hearing in Texas late last week that resulted in the state keeping 416 children from returning to their communal home opened a rare window into the female side of a religious group that has long shut out contact with the outside world.

Mothers of some of the children now in state custody, adherents of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (FLDS), prominently attended the hearing and often spoke to members of the press outside. In addition, they invited Americans across the nation, via televised broadcasts, to tour a home situated on the isolated 1,691-acre Yearning for Zion ranch near Eldorado, Texas.

Others gathered for group interviews, insisting they take very good care of their children, yet offering little information on the ages at which they permit their daughters to marry or about the fathers of their children.

Up to now, the focus of court cases against the FLDS involving polygamy have focused on the men, such as the prosecution of the group's leader, Warren Jeffs, in Utah and Arizona for arranging marriages of underage girls.

But this case in Texas is not only focusing on the children who are the products of these polygamous, or spiritual, marriages. It is also throwing the attention on the women who are the mothers of the children taken into custody and plural wives to the men on the compound. Spiritual marriages are not recognized as legal by the state of Texas.

The women, in a highly unusual manner for them, according to an attorney who represents them, decided to go public to fight for their children, to show the world they live in a real community and that they take good care of their children.

"When their children were taken from them, it changed the dynamics," says Rod Parker, an attorney from Salt Lake City who represents the FLDS. "The calculation on this was it mattered more for them to fight for their children. The possibility of criminal charges resulting from it was secondary."

Late Friday, after 21 hours of hearings, Texas District Judge Barbara Walther ruled that the 416 children, who were removed from the YFZ ranch earlier this month, may be at risk of sexual abuse if they return to the FLDS compound and must at least temporarily be placed in state foster care while an investigation continues. Separate hearings for each child will be held over the next several weeks through early June, she said. Judge Walther also ordered members of the sect to provide DNA samples for maternity and paternity tests.

Those tests will help the court determine which children belong to which mothers and fathers. Part of the reason the hearings were so chaotic – in addition to the sheer numbers of children and lawyers representing them – is that social service workers testified they had trouble obtaining accurate information on familial relationships.

The DNA tests should take care of that. But they also could help build cases for criminal charges. At issue is whether many of the girls were spiritually married to older men and impregnated before reaching legal age, which is 16 in Texas. At the hearing last week, Texas Child Protective Services workers testified to finding instances of at least 20 girls, some of whom are now adults, who had conceived or given birth before the age of 16 or 17.

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