From Deseret News archives:

Utah, Arizona AGs feel fallout from FLDS raid

Published: Sunday, May 4, 2008 12:30 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff is reluctant to judge Texas authorities on their raid on the Fundamentalist LDS Church's YFZ Ranch one month ago, but he wonders if they may have gone too far.

The isolated nature of the compound near Eldorado may have made the heavy response by law enforcement necessary. Then, when Texas child protective services workers saw what appeared to be pregnant teens, Shurtleff said, they had a duty to remove them and investigate further.

"As far as all the kids, I don't know. What else could they do?" he wondered aloud during a Deseret News interview. "My gut feeling is they shouldn't have. They've gone too far."

The raid in Texas that put 464 children in state custody is a complicated situation for Shurtleff and his counterpart, Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard. They have extended an olive branch to polygamous communities with one hand — while clasping a pair of handcuffs in the other.

The attorneys general have been reaching out to polygamous communities to help abuse victims and trying to end the isolation of the closed societies. At the same time, they have continued to pursue criminal investigations against some of those very people.

Their approach has been both praised and condemned.

Story continues below
In interviews with the Deseret News, the attorneys general spoke at length about the aftermath of the raid in Texas. They believe their actions in prosecuting crimes within polygamy forced the FLDS to seek refuge in Texas, setting the stage for what is happening now.

Crimes within

Shurtleff and Goddard defend their approach of prosecuting abuse and fraud crimes within the closed societies, rather than polygamy itself, which has constitutional implications.

"It's never been that I choose to ignore a felony crime in the state, it's always been a matter of resources," Shurtleff said.

Where Texas has 464 children in state custody, Shurtleff counters that a similar approach would flood the Utah system with thousands of children in foster care and thousands of polygamist parents in prison.

"If we start prosecuting polygamy just for polygamy, where do we stop?" he said. "The state of Utah, let alone my office, does not have the resources."

That's not how some see it. Anti-polygamy activists have accused Arizona and Utah of being too lenient and turning a blind eye to abuse.

Goddard concedes that prosecuting polygamy itself may not even stand up in court under constitutional claims of freedom of religion and privacy rights. Instead, the prosecutors say they focus on abuse, domestic violence and welfare fraud.

Recent comments

Leave the FLDS people alone they should be allowed to worship as they...

freethinker | Nov. 16, 2008 at 3:27 p.m.

Statutory rape laws are stupid, arbitrary and unconstitutional. They...

Anne | May 9, 2008 at 1:10 p.m.

I won't join in making false accusations, Ann. None of the people in...

Paul | May 9, 2008 at 12:44 a.m.

Image
Sherrie Buzby, Arizona Republic

Attorneys General Mark Shurtleff, of Utah, and Terry Goddard, above, of Arizona have been on hot seat.

Related content
previousnext

Latest comments

This is ridiculous. I think fans of both teams should boycott the Fiesta...

Cougars going back to Vegas

nice to inform us after the game that byu won their way to vegas with their...

Cougars going back to Vegas

At least it is an early bowl game, not much competition from any other games,...

wat happened to USC?

I'm also getting tired of the game playing.

BYU professor killed in crash

OUr thoughts are with your family...we are so sorry for your loss.

Again the BCS failed and failed again. What a joke this has become. TCU...

Admittedly, this will actually be a good game with an intriguing storyline of...

The BCS needs to go! What a slap in the face for TCU and Boise! The BCS is...

TCU to play Boise in Fiesta Bowl

All this matchup will prove is that Boise State is either better than...

Advertisements