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Police Action: Women and children taken in for questioning in the 1953 Short Creek raid
JUSTICE

Look Past Polygamy

The 1953 Short Creek raid taught authorities a valuable lesson.

 
 
 

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It was July 26, 1953. In the pre-dawn hours, 120 heavily armed Arizona lawmen prepared to descend upon the small polygamous community of Short Creek, home to the roughly 500 men, women and children of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. The governor, J. Howard Pyle, had ordered a two-year investigation into polygamy and the marriage of teen girls to older men, and the cops arrived ready to take almost the entire town into custody. But the plans hit a snag. FLDS lookouts spoiled the raid by setting off a dynamite charge when they spotted state troopers and National Guardsmen approaching. Fearing a shootout, the lawmen cranked their sirens and sped into town, guns drawn. "You are all under arrest!" shouted the sheriff over a loudspeaker. "Stay where you are." But no one was going anywhere: officers found the residents of Short Creek gathered in the schoolyard, unarmed and singing hymns.

Pyle told a radio audience that day that his men had broken up "the foulest conspiracy you could imagine," but that's not how the public saw it as details of the raid emerged. Thirty-six men were arrested and jailed 250 miles away in Kingman, Ariz.; mothers and children were shipped to foster homes even farther away. The incident turned into a PR nightmare, and within a few years nearly all the families had reunited and returned. For decades, the lessons of Short Creek have exerted great influence on law enforcement's attitudes toward FLDS. The philosophy guiding last month's raid on the Yearning for Zion Ranch near Eldorado, Texas, was at least partially shaped by the aftermath of that morning in 1953. The raid proved such a disaster that officials ignored polygamists for decades. It wasn't until notorious child-abuse cases in the late '90s showed the limitations of that approach that law enforcement settled on a new deal: accept, if not condone, the polygamy, but prosecute the abuses of young girls.

Though the mainstream Mormon church excommunicated polygamists in 1890, the practice has lived on among splinter groups in rural pockets. "The goal of that first raid was to eliminate the practice of plural marriage, and it absolutely failed," says University of Utah historian Martha Bradley, author of "Kidnapped From That Land," a book about the 1953 raid. In his rambling radio address, Pyle, a rising Republican who had delivered a rousing speech at the GOP convention a year earlier, blasted a "small handful of greedy and licentious men," who forced "every maturing girl … into a bondage of multiple wifehood."

Despite the harsh claims, the prosecutions fizzled. Six months after the raid, the men were home on probation. A photo spread in Life magazine showed the "Lonely Men of Short Creek" living forlornly without their missing wives and children, and the case seemed less about polygamy than the rights of parents to keep their kids. "I think the public didn't see them as hurting anybody," says Ken Driggs, who has studied the sect. Pyle was voted out of office the next election—a warning to lawmen and politicians to avoid more crackdowns.

But public sentiment has changed. It's been fueled by the recent prosecutions for sexual abuses—and by last year's conviction of the FLDS prophet Warren Jeffs, now in prison for charges related to performing a marriage of a 15-year-old girl to her older cousin. Texas officials focused on child welfare—unlike at Short Creek, the men have been left in place pending criminal investigation. A judge ruled the threats of abuse to young girls were enough to remove all kids temporarily, and they're now in foster homes. The state says each child will get a full hearing within a year.

Still, could Eldorado also turn into a prosecutorial dry hole? "This isn't going to be like Short Creek," says state Rep. Harvey Hilderbran, a Republican who worked with the local sheriff and other officials in 2005 to revamp state marriage laws in response to the Eldorado community. Thirty-one of the 53 girls between 14 and 17 years old are either pregnant or mothers already, Texas officials say. But attorneys for the Texas families say many of the young moms are 18, and they complain that the FLDS parents are only practicing their faith. There has been media criticism, and civil libertarians are worried. Lisa Graybill, legal director of the ACLU's Texas office, says opposition is building: "We're concerned that the proceeding didn't meet the requirement in Texas law of imminent harm to a child. We have been inundated with concerns from the public." The lessons of Short Creek may not yet be fully absorbed.

© 2008

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  • Posted By: Allmirth @ 05/24/2008 7:31:02 AM

    Oh, I thought that you were describing the Catholics, the Baptists, the Jewish, the Muslims, the Jehovah's Witnesses, the Hillbillies... And the Republicans.
    --------------------
    Posted By: benivarius @ 05/23/2008 3:41:55 PM
    Comment: The four main markers of a dangerous cult are:

    1. Unconditional acceptance upn arrival, followed by an increasing inability to live up to social standards.

    2. Over time spending more and more time involved in a group's activities, until all outside social contact is replaced with cult activities

    3. Gradually replacing personal and sociatal values and judgement with those of the group or leader of the organization.

    4. Increased belief that the world outside the cult is bad.


    That being said, I think we can ALL agree that this organization is a dangerous cult.

  • Posted By: benivarius @ 05/23/2008 3:41:55 PM

    The four main markers of a dangerous cult are:

    1. Unconditional acceptance upn arrival, followed by an increasing inability to live up to social standards.

    2. Over time spending more and more time involved in a group's activities, until all outside social contact is replaced with cult activities

    3. Gradually replacing personal and sociatal values and judgement with those of the group or leader of the organization.

    4. Increased belief that the world outside the cult is bad.


    That being said, I think we can ALL agree that this organization is a dangerous cult. Not necessarily because of Branch Davidian violence or anything, but certainly incredibly unhealthy and illegal social practices. Parents were sending their six-year-old daughters to the compound to be free of "the dangers of the outside world." They were not allowed to send anyone older because Jeffs considered girls older than six too corrupted by the world to fully assimilate into FLDS compound life. Translation: Not totally brainwashable and ready to be married by the time they were twelve or thirteen, depending on how quickly they grew up and got hot looking. Bad, bad, bad. However...

    I knew Texas law enforcement was in trouble when I found out that the call they got from a "thirteen year old girl inside the compound" who turned out to be a crazy lady from Colorado Springs who has done stuff like this before. Though she must have had some contact inside the compound because she knew specific names and place details, you can't get a search warrant based on some crazy lady lying about who and where she is. It's really sad, because this will probably ruin their case, and result in an INCREDIBLE lawsuit, meaning that the FLDS church will now be funded by a mutil-million dollar settlement from the state of Texas. How disturbing.

  • Posted By: The_epoch_point @ 05/20/2008 10:39:25 PM

    It's about time everyone takes another look at Abraham Lincoln and all the other anti-communists like Ronald Reagan and Joseph R. McCarthy. After all it was a Marxist Lee Harvey Oswald and a communist Sirhan Sirhan who knocked off the Kennedy Brothers. Now check out this awesome book I just read at Amazon.com!

    The Epoch Point by Spencer Zimmerman is a religious historical conspiracy thriller that follows evil throughout the existence of mankind, revealing the constant conflict between God and the devil, good and evil. Robert Davis is a young Airman fresh out of Air Force basic training who, after being held captive in China, suddenly finds himself unraveling the most immense conspiracy in history. On duty during the 9/11 terrorist attacks, he soon uncovers hidden facts suggesting Russian and Iraqi involvement. While exploring abandoned military barracks at Kessler AFB in Mississippi, Davis and his friends discover the diary of Lee Harvey Oswald. Suddenly the Airmen find themselves the target of mysterious agents. As the clues surface, an evil emerges powerful enough to rewrite the entire history of humanity, not to mention kill two of his good friends. Before long the conspiracy takes on a supernatural form, marked by lightning, tornadoes, hurricanes, and volcanoes, the wrath of God. Davis finds himself torn by the unbelievable realization that God has a message for him. Nothing could prepare him for the final suspenseful twist the story takes, a Da Vinci style revelation that reaffirms his belief in Christ.

    here's the link:

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