Porterville Recorder

Polygamous group is slowly losing its power in remote town

- By BRADY MCCOMBS

HILDALE, Utah — In a place where political contests are virtually unknown, the campaign signs offer the latest hint that a polygamous group is losing its grip on this remote red rock community straddling the Utaharizon­a border.

“For Hildale mayor vote Donia,” reads one sign featuring Donia Jessop, a candidate pictured with a contempora­ry hairstyle and a red business suit.

The signs hanging from fences and walls are unusual because elections here have long been decided behind the scenes by the Fundamenta­list Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, a Mormon offshoot that has made its home among the rocks for more than a century and hand-picked men to run unopposed.

Just five years ago, Jessop was a member of the group also known as the FLDS. She wore the sect’s traditiona­l prairie dresses and her hair in a conservati­ve up-do. Now she is among a swelling number of former members who have returned to buy foreclosed homes, open businesses and try to turn Hildale into a place that resembles a typical Western town, not a cloistered religious community.

The competitiv­e elections scheduled for Tuesday could deal a crushing blow to traditiona­lists if the 367 registered voters elect Jessop and the NON-FLDS candidates for two city council seats. It would be another in a series of recent changes to shake up Hildale and its sister city, Colorado City, Arizona, which have a combined population of nearly 7,800.

The government-ordered evictions of sect families from nearly 150 homes forced many members to seek refuge in trailers around town or in different cities across the West. The town government­s and the police are being watched closely by court-appointed monitors after a jury found them guilty of civil rights violations. And a food-stamp fraud case led 10 people to plead guilty and exacerbate­d a leadership void.

Jessop and other former sect members hail the changes as longoverdu­e progress that will help the community break free from the reign of sect leader Warren Jeffs, who is serving life in prison in Texas for sexually assaulting underage girls he considered brides.

“The things that were happening in the church were so destructiv­e. And now that destructio­n can stop, and we can start to rebuild,” Jessop said. “This city is completely at a standstill until we change the city government.”

But FLDS members believe the town they built is being destroyed. Norma Richter, a 50-year-old mother of 13 kids, said the changes overtaking the town feel like “a cultural cleansing,” echoing a common refrain among church members and sympathize­rs.

At the heart of the split is Jeffs, who has been jailed in Utah or Texas continuall­y since 2006.

His followers consider him a prophet and believe he was the victim of religious persecutio­n based on fabricated allegation­s. Former sect members and outsiders consider him a dangerous man who tore apart families and committed sex crimes.

Jeffs is “a very sick man” who controls the people through “fear of not making it to the highest celestial kingdom of glory,” Jessop said. She notes that it was he and other leaders who set the evictions in motion more than a decade ago when they opted not to challenge in court allegation­s of mismanagem­ent of the church trust, leading Utah and Arizona government­s to take it over.

His supporters are steadfast in their beliefs. Jeffs is “still is the only man on this earth that can receive revelation from heavenly father for the people,” FLDS member Lori Barlow said. “That’s a pretty important link to me.”

Authoritie­s say Jeffs still sends some guidance from prison, but Richter says followers have not heard his voice for years and that it’s unclear who is in charge of the church locally.

One of Jeffs’ brothers, Lyle Jeffs, ran the day-to-day operations until last year, when he was arrested in the food-stamp case. He fled home confinemen­t while awaiting trial and was captured in South Dakota after a year on the run. He faces up to five years in prison.

Amid the leadership void, and with so few people left in town, followers no longer meet for regular worship services, Richter said. Marriages that are arranged by the religion’s prophet are on hold until Jeffs returns, Richter said.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY RICK BOWMER ?? In this Oct. 25, 2017 photo, young girls play together in Colorado City, Ariz. The community on the Utah-arizona border has been home for more than a century to a polygamous sect that is an offshoot of mainstream Mormonism.
AP PHOTO BY RICK BOWMER In this Oct. 25, 2017 photo, young girls play together in Colorado City, Ariz. The community on the Utah-arizona border has been home for more than a century to a polygamous sect that is an offshoot of mainstream Mormonism.

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