ELDORADO, Texas (AP) – It was a year ago that the outside world got its first glimpse beyond the battered green gate of the YFZ Ranch. And the view was mesmerizing:

Women in pioneer-style dresses, their hair swept up in braids. Men who married multiple times – sometimes, it was said, to underage girls. Children snatched by authorities from their mothers, for fear that they might be abused.

Officials had come looking for an abused teenage girl named “Sarah.” Since then, it’s become clear Sarah didn’t exist, that calls made to a domestic abuse hot line were probably faked.

And since then, all but one of the 439 children who were taken away in one of the largest custody cases in U.S. history have returned to their families. About two-thirds are back at the ranch, says Willie Jessop, spokesman for the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

But life at the YFZ Ranch has not returned to normal. The sect’s prophet, Warren Jeffs, is not there – convicted in Utah as an accomplice to rape, he sits in a 7-by-12-foot cell in Arizona awaiting trial on a similar charge and has been indicted in Texas for sexual assault of a child and bigamy.

And Jeff’s followers have yet to recover hundreds of boxes worth of Jeffs’ journals and teachings, letters from FLDS members, family photos and detailed church census records that were seized by authorities in the raid that began last April 3.

More than anything else, these papers testify to a simple truth:

At the YFZ Ranch, Warren Jeffs controlled everything.

In the beginning, there was a vision – and there was the land.

It was Jeffs’ vision. His chosen people, he said, must go to Eldorado, a tiny town of 1,850, to buy the 1,700-acre Isaac’s Ranch. This was not verdant land. Like much of the soil of West Texas, it was suitable only for raising goats and drilling for oil – so rocky and inhospitable that some followers thought the land was a curse.

But the people worked it hard.

The men quarried deep enough to find white stone for the four-story temple, following Jeffs’ exact specifications and time table, sometimes allowed just two hours of sleep a night. They made mortar from a formula Jeffs said was divinely inspired, painted and furnished to his exact specifications, and women sewed drapes that hung one inch – “no more, no less” – off the floor.

In just five years, a new community arose on what was now known as the Yearning for Zion Ranch – an oasis with a gleaming white temple, a place where folks kept to themselves.

Jeffs, the 53-year-old son of the sect’s previous prophet, gave regular dictation and teachings used to govern every aspect of life on the ranch, even when he was on the run from authorities and after he was jailed in 2007.

“God in the heavens confers upon one man on the earth the keys of priesthood to act in his stead and to follow revelation so that when that one man performs any work, gives a teaching, performance ordinances by the power of God, it is God doing it,” he wrote.

He is certain that he is that man, and his followers agree.

Life was generally austere at the ranch. Toys, including simple wooden blocks, were forbidden by Jeffs as “selfishness.”

“There is so much work to do around here – no idle time. There is no football. There is no basketball. There is no soccer. There is no gentile games here. There is hard work and constant rejoicing prayers,” Jeffs told young men when they arrived.

FLDS members were taught, perhaps above all, that sexual purity was imperative. Attraction – and certainly masturbation or contact with the opposite sex – were mortal sins. Jeffs warned the boys that sexual immorality was “the most terrible sin next to murder.”

Marriage was seen as the cure, though it didn’t end all restrictions. Sex was meant only for procreation and should take place between a husband and one wife at a time.

“A woman should ask for children, and that be the motive for those sexual relations,” he said, adding there was to be no sex for pregnant women or women beyond childbearing years.

To enter the afterlife, women must be bonded to a worthy man, and men had to take multiple wives for heavenly glorification. Men considered unworthy by Jeffs were expelled from the community and their wives reassigned to other men – sometimes willingly, sometimes less so.

But child welfare authorities and prosecutors say the FLDS theology of purity and plural marriage, combined with Jeffs’ one-man rule, had a darker undercurrent. They say it made the marriage and sexual assault of underage girls regular practice in the sect that uses the Book of Mormon but follows plural marriage and other practices long ago renounced by mainstream Mormons.

Since the raid last year, the FLDS has said it will not sanction underage marriages. But for years, Jeffs only acknowledged whether a girl had reached puberty, not her legal age.

“I say, in the name of the Lord, there is no underage marriage in a priesthood marriage, in celestial marriage. God has the right to rule. The Lord had me take these two underage girls on purpose, to show that I and we, this people, are with him, with God, not fearing man,” he wrote in 2003.

One of those girls, Jeffs wrote, was lucky to have a husband at her age. The girl, allegedly married to Jeffs at age 12, is the lone ranch child who remains in foster care.

While Jeffs talked tough about following God’s law and not man’s, there were clearly times when he feared the repercussions of the underage marriages he arranged.

In August 2005, a 16-year-old wife had been in labor for days, attended by the sect’s doctor, Lloyd Barlow, and a midwife at the ranch, but she was having a difficult birth. A ranch leader called Jeffs and asked what to do.

“He told those attending that, because of her age and the associated government pressures against the prophet and those who abide the law of God, going to the hospital was not an option,” wrote a church member who was recording the daily events at the ranch.

The teen and her daughter survived childbirth. Her husband, 37-year-old Raymond Merril Jessop, has been indicted for sexual assault of a child and bigamy.

His trial, tentatively set for Oct. 26, is expected to be the first of the dozen trials for FLDS men. The charges range from failure to report child abuse, in the case of Barlow, to bigamy and sexual assault of a child for Jeffs and several of the other men.

Through his attorney, Michael Piccarreta, Jeffs declined to be interviewed.

Piccarreta said the charges are little more than religious persecution. He’s trying to have the evidence seized in the raid excluded from Jeffs’ Arizona trial, while other attorneys are trying to suppress it in the Texas cases. One photo obtained by the AP shows crime scene investigators around a temple bed, where early court documents indicated marriages may have been consummated – a charge the sect has denied.

“There are a lot of people in government and elsewhere that are doing everything they can to try to crush this small religion, and it seems nothing is beyond them,” he said.

Texas authorities insist, however, that religion has never been the issue.

“The Eldorado case was about the sexual abuse of girls and about the abuse of children who were taught that underage marriages were a way of life – and about adults who didn’t stop the practice,” said Patrick Crimmins, a Child Protective Services spokesman. “It was not about the religious practices of the FLDS.”


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