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  DNA samples to be taken from polygamous sect kids
Last updated: 2008-04-21


DNA samples to be taken from polygamous sect kids
2008-04-21

Event
2008 Texas Polygamy Case
Lab workers were set to begin taking DNA samples Monday from the more than 400 children in state custody since a raid on a polygamist compound more than two weeks ago.

Officials hope the samples, to be taken from the children and their parents, will help sort out the confusing family relationships in a convoluted custody case that has strained the resources of the child welfare system and the courts.

Judge Barbara Walther ordered the tests at the request of state officials, who have complained that members of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints have continually changed their names, possibly lied about their ages and sometimes had difficulty naming their relatives.

The process will likely take about half an hour per sample because of the paperwork and care needed to avoid contamination, said Darrell Azar, a spokesman for Child Protective Services. The tests could take three or four days to be completed.

A certain number of DNA markers -- segments of the DNA with specific genetic characteristics -- are tested to determine whether two people are related. If any uncertainties arise, analysts test additional markers.

Three male members of the sect said in an interview aired on CBS's "Early Show" Monday that they would cooperate in DNA testing if it would help them get the children back.

"Whatever we need to do to get them back in their peaceful homes," a man identified only as Rulan said.

State prosecutors have argued that the FLDS church encourages underage marriages and births, subjecting children to sexual abuse or the imminent risk of abuse. "Rulan" said sect members are reconsidering whether girls under 18 should have sex with adult men.

"Many of us perhaps were not even aware of such a law," he said. "And we do reconsider, yes. We teach our children to abide the law."

When the DNA sampling is completed, state officials will begin to relocate some of the 416 children staying at the San Angelo coliseum and will separate the children younger than 4 years from adult mothers.

Officials say family relationships in the sect can be confusing to outsiders because the children of more than one wife live in the same household.

The children identify all the women in the house as their mothers, and if a father leaves the community, children and mothers are reassigned to another man, a child welfare investigator testified during a hearing last week.

Mothers of the youngest children had been allowed to stay with the children before the judge's order on Friday. But that arrangement will end after they are moved from the coliseum, Azar said.

He said it's not clear how soon the children will be moved, but state workers will try to keep them grouped together with siblings or others from the community.

They'll also try to shield the children, raised in an insular community with no television and little contact with outsiders, from overexposure to mainstream society.

"We're going to try to keep the children in groups so I don't think we're talking about your traditional foster setting," Azar said.

After two days of testimony, Walther ordered that all the children swept up in the raid of the Eldorado compound remain in state custody.

The custody case is one of the nation's largest and most complicated. The ruling Friday capped two days of testimony that sometimes became disorderly as hundreds of lawyers for children and parents competed to defend their clients in two rooms linked by a video feed.

The children, including 130 children younger than 4 years and two dozen adolescent boys, will receive individual hearings before June 5.

Law enforcement officers raided the Yearning For Zion Ranch on April 3. The raid was prompted by calls made to a family violence shelter, purportedly by a 16-year-old girl who said her 50-year-old husband beat and raped her. That girl has never been identified.

 2008 Texas Polygamy Case  
  Profile2 News58GalleryLinks  
  Polygamist child custody case winds down in Texas (2008-10-31)
  3 more polygamist-sect members indicted in Texas (2008-09-23)
  Girl from polygamist group ordered into state care (2008-08-19)
  Texas wants 8 kids from sect back in state care (2008-08-05)
  Police: Polygamist sect leader Jeffs hospitalized (2008-07-09)
  Texas agency under magnifying glass over sect raid (2008-06-01)
  Deal on reuniting polygamist families delayed (2008-05-31)
  Sect members waiting for children to be returned (2008-05-30)
  Texas gets DNA sample from polygamist leader Jeffs (2008-05-30)
  US court says polygamy kids must be returned to parents (2008-05-30)
  Texas appeal says FLDS families are flight risks (2008-05-27)
  Sect parents cheer court ruling, await next step (2008-05-23)
  Texas sect parents complain of vague custody plans (2008-05-20)
  Polygamist sect's finances are murky (2008-05-15)
  Sect mother of newborn not a minor, Texas concedes (2008-05-13)
  Church records offer rare look inside polygamist families (2008-05-08)
  Former follower: Sect leader wanted to sleep with teenagers (2008-05-03)
  Warrant dropped against man named in polygamist retreat raid (2008-05-03)
  FLDS teen gives birth to boy as state officials stand by (2008-04-29)
  31 of 53 teen girls at FLDS ranch are pregnant or had baby (2008-04-28)
  Caretakers get hints on handling children seized in Texas (2008-04-27)
  Mothers from polygamous sect separated from young children (2008-04-25)
  Polygamist sect kids leave shelter for foster care, for now (2008-04-23)
  Polygamist sect kids leave shelter for foster care, for now (2008-04-22)
  Texas officials seek DNA samples of polygamist sect members (2008-04-22)


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