Skip to main content.
Religion News Blog is a non-profit service providing academics, religion professionals and other researchers with religion & cult news
ReligionNewsBlog

Religion news articles about religious cults, sects, world religions, and related issues

Navigation:
A Random Image
FLDS, Polygamy:

Attorney for Warren Jeffs says religion is really on trial

Los Angeles Times, USA
Sep. 22, 2007
Nicholas Ricardi
www.latimes.com

ReligionNewsBlog.com • Item 19415 • Posted: Saturday September 22, 2007  

Click here... More articles on this topic: FLDS, Polygamy

ST. GEORGE, UTAH — – A polygamous sect’s leader on trial here is a scapegoat charged with an inflated offense for political reasons, his defense attorney said Friday.

Warren Jeffs, leader of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is charged with being an accomplice to rape of a 14-year-old girl because he purportedly forced her to marry her 19-year-old cousin.

During closing arguments in Jeffs’ trial, attorney Walter F. Bugden Jr. pointed at the more than two dozen reporters in the courtroom and noted that the Utah attorney general himself had attended the trial one day. “This is no small case,” Bugden said. “The state has gone crazy for political reasons.

Inside Warren Jeffs’ World.

“The state can say Warren Steed Jeffs is on trial, but it’s his . . . church, his religious beliefs that is on trial here, dressed up as a crime called rape,” he said.

Washington County Attorney Brock R. Belnap’s face reddened as he responded sharply to Bugden’s contention. “It is absolutely repugnant to me that the suggestion was made that I or any prosecutor would try someone’s religion,” Belnap said.

The law may protect religion, but it does not allow people to commit crimes under the guise of their faith, Belnap said. “Belief is one thing. Hurting young people is another,” he said.

Jurors deliberated about two hours before going home Friday. They are to return Monday.

During the weeklong trial, prosecutors have argued that Jeffs pressured the girl into marriage, then refused to free her when she complained that her husband was touching her in ways she did not like.

Bugden contended that prosecutors should have charged Jeffs with officiating at an unlawful marriage rather than with being an accomplice to rape. The former charge carries a maximum sentence of three years in prison. The latter could bring a life sentence.

The 10,000-member sect headed by Jeffs is based along the Utah-Arizona border. Since 2003, authorities in both states have escalated pressure on the church, and Jeffs spent years as a fugitive until he was arrested outside Las Vegas in 2006.

The FLDS portrays itself as a fundamentalist offshoot of the Mormon church. But the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints banned polygamy in 1890 and does not recognize the sect.

In closing arguments, the two sides used contrasting styles to present sharply different views of the case.

Belnap, the county’s short, owlish top prosecutor, sat through the entire trial but did not question any witnesses. He gave a brisk, methodical closing argument focusing on legal issues.

He argued that jurors must convict Jeffs if they believe he helped entice or coerce the accuser into a situation in which she would be compelled to have sex against her will.

The accuser testified that her husband forced her; he testified that she initiated the contact.

Even if the accuser ultimately agreed to the sex, Belnap said, she was so young that such agreement did not matter in the eyes of the law.

Bugden, one of the state’s best-known criminal defense attorneys, gave a sweeping overview, arguing that common sense would show that Jeffs was innocent.

Tall, with bushy hair and a trim bow tie, Bugden noted that the accuser has a lawsuit pending against Jeffs and his church. Bugden contended that she thus had a financial motive to recall her unwanted marriage in a dark light.

“What has happened is, over time, [the accuser's] story has evolved in her mind from a bad marriage, having ’sexual relations I’m not thrilled with’ . . . to a story of rape,” Bugden said. “Money changes everything.”

He argued that the accuser, now 21, was a strong-willed girl who was the “boss” of her more reserved husband, whom she ultimately left for another man. “This was not Miss Submissive. This was not Little Miss Robot, this girl,” he said.

Under the state’s theory, Bugden argued, any religious figure or psychologist who counseled someone to stay in a bad relationship could become an accomplice to any violence that might ensue.

Belnap contended that the law held that Jeffs must be convicted. “Mr. Bugden wants you to ignore the law,” Belnap said.

But Bugden argued that the state was abusing the law. The unusual charge against Jeffs has been used just once before, to put a man in prison for marrying his 13-year-old daughter to a 48-year-old man.

“They didn’t have the courage to charge him with the real crime,” Bugden said of Jeffs. “Instead, they dropped a nuclear bomb on the FLDS community.”


What You Can Do From Here

Read More Articles On These Topics
more cult news articlemore religion news Categories: FLDS, Polygamy
more religion news aboutmore Religion News Blog articles about
Share, Blog, or Email This Article
Subscribe
Read Another Article
Find Related Information
cult research search enginecountercult information Use our custom search engines to find additional research resources on religions and cults
Find Related Books


Most Popular Today


Share This Article

To share this page simply copy and paste one of these URL's:





Counter Cult Search

Search for information about (religious) cults, cult-like organizations, -- as well as paranormal-, New Age, and pseudoscientific claims -- across 260+ websites, blogs and forums dedicated to cult research, spiritual abuse, ex-cult counseling & support.


Note: results are listed on another domain -- CounterCultSearch.com -- from which you can easily return here.


Apologetics Search

Search for apologetics articles, books, videos, and other research resources across 135 Christian apologetics websites and blogs.


Note: results are listed on another domain -- ApologeticsSearch.com -- from which you can easily return here.

About Religion News Blog
Religion News Blog (RNB), published by Apologetics Index, highlights news items and other resources on world religions, cults, religious sects, alternative religions and related issues. RNB's non-profit news clipping service is used by - among others - Christian apologists, countercult professionals, anticult organizations, cult experts, teachers, religion professionals, reporters and other researchers.

Home
Latest Headlines
RSS news feed [?]
Headlines by Email
News Trackers
Free content for your site
About RNB
Privacy Policy
Contact RNB
Link to RNB
Advertise on RNB
Apologetics Index
Cult FAQ
Apologetics Search Engine
CounterCult Search Engine