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Caretakers get advice on caring for polygamist sect children seized in Texas


Children removed from a polygamist ranch in west Texas are settling into new surroundings around the state, and caretakers are getting cultural pointers on how to deal with them — such as no television, no movies, no radio and nothing red.

"The color 'RED' is not acceptable for clothing," said a memo that the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services sent to caretakers at shelters and group homes for the 462 children seized this month from the Yearning for Zion ranch after a tip about possible abuse.

The ranch was established by the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and sect members believe red is reserved for Jesus Christ, according to officials in Utah.

So workers at the children's shelter in San Antonio spent part of the week taking anything red off the walls and floors.

Another memo from state officials to caretakers describes the children's dietary and clothing needs.

Some officials said they were sensitive to potential culture shock among the children, who led a sheltered life on the ranch near Eldorado.

"Help them with self-esteem, guilty feelings, shame, confusion about mainstream culture, and learning basic decision making skills," said another memo to caretakers.

As the children began settling into foster homes Saturday, sect leader Willie Jessop sent a letter asking Gov. Rick Perry to "block the separation of our 437 children from their mothers," the Houston Chronicle reported.

"The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services have demonstrated, in a most blatant way, their inability to properly care for, or even account for our children. Many have been left in critical medical conditions, resulting in permanent mental damage through threats, intimidation, and ultimately separating them from their parents," Jessop wrote.

An attorney who represents two mothers from the polygamist retreat alleges child welfare authorities cannot account for two boys. The boys, a 16-month-old and 11 year-old, are not on any of the state's placement lists, said attorney Rebecca Flanigan, with Texas Rio Grande Legal Aid in Corpus Christi.

Child welfare officials told the Corpus Christi Caller-Times that no children have been lost, but that parent-child relationships have been difficult to determine. Department of Family and Protective Services spokesman Patrick Crimmins said he is not aware of children being unaccounted for at this point.

The letter by Jessop accuses Child Protective Services of misrepresenting conditions and making false allegations against the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

It called removal of the children from the sect's compound "some of the most horrific violations of human rights that have ever been allowed on American soil."

The last busloads of children from the group left the San Angelo Coliseum on Friday, headed for shelters and group homes around the state. One bus had to stop several times on the way to Brazoria County, south of Houston, because some of the children got motion sickness.

"Some of them probably haven't even ridden in a vehicle before," state trooper Dial King told the Houston Chronicle.

Near Amarillo, Cal Farley's Boys Ranch took in 18 more boys on Friday, bringing to 72 the number of FLDS children under its care. Dan Adams, chief executive of the ranch, said staffers got pointers to help them understand the dress, food and cultural ways of the children.

A judge awarded custody of the children to the state after child-welfare officials argued they could be in danger in Eldorado, where officials say young girls were forced to marry much older men and bear their children.

State officials hope that removing the children far from the ranch may make them more willing to speak freely about even such basic things as their names and ages.

"The children are in a position to no longer on a daily basis be influenced by adults who have encouraged a code of silence," said Darrell Azar, a spokesman for Child Protective Services. "Now that they are away from that influence they may become more comfortable, and we will have a better chance of learning the truth."

Copyright 2008 AP Features
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Author:Staff
Publication:AP Features
Date:Apr 27, 2008
Words:670
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