From Deseret News archives:

Former child bride asks for LDS action

Utah official says church does aid those escaping polygamy

Published: Sunday, May 13, 2007 12:37 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
A former child bride is asking The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to reach out to people leaving polygamy.

"They can help the victims of (Hurricane) Katrina and the Asian tsunami, and they can't help the people in their own back yard who are living that way because of foundational Mormon teachings?" ex-LeBaron wife Susan Ray Schmidt said in an interview with the Deseret Morning News. "I do not consider that Christian."

Schmidt recently sent a letter to LDS Church leaders, asking the church to step forward and provide financial support and resources to women and children leaving polygamy. In her letter, she suggested that the LDS Church has a responsibility for an issue it created more than 100 years ago.

"The Mormon Church would truly benefit if they could pass the word to the communities that they would be the safety net," Schmidt said.

The LDS Church declined to comment on the issue, church spokesman Scott Trotter said Thursday. The church no longer practices polygamy and excommunicates those who do.

The LDS Church does provide some help to those leaving polygamy, said Paul Murphy, the Utah Attorney General's Safety Net coordinator.

Story continues below
Murphy said that any help from the church comes on a more local level rather than from LDS Church headquarters. The Utah and Arizona Attorney General's Offices have formed the Safety Net Committee, made up of polygamists, activists and bureaucrats to reach out and help abuse victims within closed polygamous societies.

"I'm hearing many accounts of different wards and churches stepping up, offering money, shelter, services and food," he said. "I know some nonprofit groups rely heavily on the LDS Church and Bishop's Storehouse."

The Bishop's Storehouse is a church-owned network of warehouses that provides food, clothing and other items for needy people who request help.

Schmidt made her request to the church public while on a book tour in southern Utah. She is promoting her book, "His Favorite Wife: Trapped in Polygamy," which details her life in the LeBaron group.

As a teenager, she had been told she would marry polygamist leader Ervil LeBaron, but she then married his brother Verlan at age 15.

In the 1970s, Ervil LeBaron ordered a series of assassinations of rival polygamous leaders. Schmidt went into hiding when the murders started, and she eventually left her husband in 1975. She now lives in Idaho and said she did not seek help from the LDS Church when she left the polygamous group.

Recent comments

If you think the LDS would do anything to help stem the problem they...

Arejaymack | July 2, 2008 at 10:49 a.m.

Facination topic.
Has Susan been in contact with any of the other...

Anonymous | Oct. 13, 2007 at 12:36 p.m.

8-05-07 I attended a night with Susan at a St George church. I...

Virginia McAloon | Sept. 3, 2007 at 2:06 p.m.

Image
Family Photo

Susan Ray Schmidt in '74, husband Verlan LeBaron and kids Melanie, James and Jeanette.

previousnext

Latest comments

Once again we are sold out by out government, whither it be local or federal....

Susan Powell's family saddened

Re:KaNaCa "I will speak on winter camping. My father took my two younger...

If you solely lie upon a critics review whether or not you see a movie,...

Since when is "quality wins" for OSU better than Utah's when I only see ONE...

It's official; Heaps signs with BYU

thanks for proving my point Utah has rebuilding years 2004 12-0, 1st...

ANYONE WHO CALLS CATS...OR ANY ANIMAL FOR THAT MATTER "VERMIN" SHOULD TAKE A...

Susan Powell's family saddened

Yes, Silence...that's the key to helping find his wife..."precious silence."...

Jazz notes: Players could meet at FIBA

Isn't it funny that these primma-donna players in the NBA will play for...

Letters: Peace party needed

Thanks Peace On Earth, I appreciated you candor. And I'm about as...

Stake Scoutmaster? Uh, i don't think so.

Advertisements