FLDS girls to attend classes on underage marriage
"These are sessions that deal with issues related to state laws on underage marriages and sexual abuse, along with ways to identify, protect, prevent and report sexual abuse," Patrick Crimmins, a spokesman for Texas Child Protective Services, wrote in an e-mail to the Deseret News. "The goal of the sessions are to educate girls who are at risk or who have been sexual abuse victims and to deal with any emotional issues related to this topic."
Approximately 63 children, ages 10 and up, have been asked to attend the sessions provided by therapists in the San Angelo area. They run a total of four hours, either in one-hour or two-hour blocks. If providers have knowledge of sex abuse, it can be included as long as it is age appropriate and does not include sex education, Crimmins wrote.
"These are not formal classes, but sessions with a contracted provider and the information described above is to be addressed in the session in addition to other items that may be relevant for the individual child," he said.
The classes are part of requirements made by family service plans signed by the girls' parents in the ongoing custody case surrounding hundreds of children taken in the April raid on the Yearning For Zion Ranch near Eldorado. The therapists are the same who are providing parenting classes, Crimmins said.
Lawyers for some children said FLDS families may not be happy about it but will attend the sessions to avoid being dragged into court again or risk losing their children.
"It seems to me that they have yet to identify, in many cases, anything more than a cookie-cutter, generalized, you-live-at-the-wrong-address argument," said Mark Ticer, a court-appointed attorney for four children ranging in age from 5 to 10. "What else are you going to do? Pick your battles. If the cases are going to go away, suggest to your client they cooperate."
Ticer would not say if any of his clients were attending the sessions, but CPS indicated in a court hearing earlier this month that one of them would be.
Approximately 439 children were taken into state protective custody during the raid on the YFZ Ranch, when CPS caseworkers and law enforcement responded to a phone call alleging abuse and underage marriages. The children were ordered returned to their parents two months later when an appeals court in Austin and the Texas Supreme Court ruled the state acted improperly and the children were not in immediate danger of abuse.
To date, 315 children have been dropped from court oversight as the nation's largest custody case moves forward. That tally includes 26 "disputed minors," whom CPS initially believed were children but later were determined to be adults.
Recent comments
all this talk about the law misses the point. Yes, the law is mostly…
realitycheck | Oct. 16, 2008 at 11:20 a.m.
The real problem with CPS is that there is a large possibility…
RE: Gramps | Oct. 16, 2008 at 6:23 a.m.
andrea: 16 and 17 year olds outside the flds community have babies…
tigerlily | Oct. 15, 2008 at 3:23 p.m.


