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More people removed from Texas polygamist ranch

DALLAS
Sun Apr 6, 2008 6:40pm EDT
Warren Jeffs looks toward the jury in his trial in St. George, Utah, September 25, 2007. REUTERS/Douglas C. Pizac/Pool

DALLAS (Reuters) - Texas officials removed more people on Sunday from a ranch belonging to a breakaway Mormon sect linked to jailed polygamist leader Warren Jeffs but have yet to find a young woman whose complaints sparked the raids.

U.S.

"No arrests have been made and we are still trying to find this young woman," Allison Palmer, a local prosecutor from a nearby county handling the case, told Reuters by telephone.

"The young lady made more than one call seeking assistance. She is a young, underage mother with an older husband," she said.

Authorities said that she may be among the scores of people who have already been taken from the compound.

Local media reported that more people had been removed on Sunday from the ranch in a semi-arid area 120 miles northwest of San Antonio.

Palmer could not say how many had now been removed. Texas Child Protective Services had said that as of late Saturday 183 people had been removed, consisting of 137 children and 46 women, but would not say if they were taken from the ranch or whether they had left voluntarily.

Texas authorities descended on the ranch this week in response to allegations that a middle-aged man there had married and fathered a child with an underage girl.

An official at the sheriff's department in the nearby town of Eldorado told Reuters that police were working at the compound around the clock in shifts. There have been no reports of violence or resistance from residents.

It is unclear how many people are living at the compound. The current investigation is the latest brush that the polygamist Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints has had with the law.

In November, the sect's spiritual leader and self-proclaimed leader Jeffs was sentenced in a Utah court to 10 years to life in prison as an accomplice to rape for forcing a 14-year-old girl to marry her 19-year-old first cousin.

He is in jail in Arizona awaiting trial on similar charges for arranged marriages there.

Polygamy is outlawed everywhere in the United States but the male followers of such sects typically marry one woman officially and take the others as "spiritual wives." This makes the women single in the eyes of the state which can entitle them and their children to various welfare benefits.

The mainstream Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, as the Mormon faith is officially known, renounced polygamy more than a century ago and tries to distance itself from breakaway factions that still practice it.

(Additional reporting by Jeff Franks; Editing by Eric Walsh)



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