From Deseret News archives:
Jeffs' lawyers to ask judge to restrict some evidence
A federal judge will be asked today to consider whether some of the evidence seized when Fundamentalist LDS Church leader Warren Jeffs was arrested last year should be declared "protected" under his First Amendment right to freedom of religion.
"These sacred revelations are at the core of the group's religious beliefs and they cannot be shared with outsiders," Jeffs' defense attorney Walter Bugden Jr. wrote in an emergency motion filed in March.
Lawyers for the FLDS leader want the documents sealed and reviewed behind closed doors to determine who gets to see them. Jeffs' lawyers also want to keep the papers from being seen by lawyers for the United Effort Plan Trust (the financial arm of the FLDS Church), which is under court control amid allegations Jeffs and other top FLDS leaders fleeced it.
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"The fiduciary is informed and believes Mr. Jeffs and the other removed trustees refuse to recognize this court's authority and the appointment of the fiduciary and continue to operate as de facto trustees," fiduciary lawyer Jeffrey L. Shields wrote in court papers obtained by the Deseret Morning News on Wednesday.
Objecting to the subpoenas, Bugden said the materials were protected by attorney-client privilege, as well as Jeffs' religious freedom and fair trial rights.
"Release of such materials at this juncture of the prosecution would jeopardize Mr. Jeffs' Sixth Amendment rights to a fair trial and effective assistance of counsel," Bugden wrote in a letter to Shields filed with the court papers.
Jeffs was arrested during a traffic stop outside Las Vegas last year. Inside the Cadillac Escalade he was riding in, the FBI also found wigs, two GPS devices, religious books, a duffel bag of letters, prepaid cell phones, prepaid credit cards and more than $57,000 in cash, among other items.
An affidavit filed with a search warrant says the FBI is looking for any evidence from Jeffs' time on the run. However, defense lawyers fear that some of that evidence goes deeper into the FLDS Church's beliefs and membership records.










