FLDS trust asks to be dropped from child-bride suit

Published: Friday, Nov. 21, 2008 11:05 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
A judge will decide if the Fundamentalist LDS Church's real-estate holdings arm should be on the hook in a former child bride's multimillion-dollar lawsuit.

During a hearing Friday in Salt Lake City's 3rd District Court, lawyers representing the court-controlled United Effort Plan Trust asked to be dropped from Elissa Wall's lawsuit against the trust, the FLDS Church and its leader, Warren Jeffs.

They argued that the conduct of Jeffs in performing a 2001 marriage between Wall and her 19-year-old cousin is not the conduct of the UEP Trust, which was recently reformed by the courts.

"The fact that it happened doesn't make it doctrine," attorney Jeffrey L. Shields argued. "It doesn't mean the beneficiary class should be liable for the conduct of its trustees."

Shields argued that those who would ultimately lose are women and children who live in trust-controlled homes in the FLDS communities of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Ariz. He also said Wall's suit could lead to a flood of litigation.

"We're trying to protect minors. That's what this case is about," Wall's attorney, Roger Hoole, told the judge. "Elissa Wall wants no one to go through what she went through."

Story continues below
Hoole argued that the trust and the church are one and the same, and that as a leader in the FLDS Church, Jeffs was the alter-ego of the UEP. The trust was created to preserve and promote the doctrines of the FLDS Church, which he said included underage marriages.

In Wall's case, attorney Greg Hoole argued that the trust provided the home and the bed after she was married.

"Go after people who really are blameworthy here," trust lawyer Mark Callister said in his rebuttal.

The UEP Trust was taken over by the courts in 2005 over allegations that FLDS leaders mismanaged it, including defaulting on lawsuits. A judge reformed it, doing away with the communal property concept and paving the way for private property ownership.

Wall was the state's star witness in the case against Jeffs, who was convicted of two counts of rape as an accomplice. She recently authored a best-selling memoir of her life in the Utah-based polygamous sect. Jeffs is currently facing criminal charges in Arizona and Texas connected to underage marriages.


E-mail: bwinslow@desnews.com

Recent comments


Now now children....can we all just get along. Seems I saw...

zxcvbnm | Nov. 22, 2008 at 4:33 p.m.

thanks. That makes me a genius compared to the FLDS camp....

realitycheck | Nov. 22, 2008 at 4:00 p.m.

" " represents you ears and the emptiness between them.

realitycheck this is for you | Nov. 22, 2008 at 6:45 a.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

TCU showdown has big implications

I look at how TCU has been playing all year, especially the past several...

Seniors helped BYU regroup

Do we need anymore evidence that the MWC will continue to be the big three...

you need to move to Sweden, where citizen in fact are guaranteed housing,...

I am a PG fan and wanted to congratulate the girls on a State championship! I...

Reducing game time laughable

I definitely understand the need to train year round. I'm not a collegiate...

TIME FOR CHANGE IN AMERICA. I have a family here in America.... They...

Libs, Silver Grey? That's cleaver.

Let's imagine an man comes to your door and tells you he has an amazing...

House passes health care bill

To have health coverage which government workers enjoy. To be able to work...

Come on. This showdown is nothing like Alabama. Contrary to what's been...

Advertisements
Advertisement