
The case against Jeffs stems from evidence that the state obtained from the infamous raid of the FLDS' Texas compound, the Yearning for Zion ranch, outside Eldorado – including that the 55-year-old head of the polygamist church had wed a young woman at the ranch. (You can find a picture of Jeffs and alleged child bride here.) The raid, however, was questionable and based on an anonymous phone call to a child protection officals from a woman who said she was a 16-year-old multiple wife – a so-called spiritual wife – at the compound. The phone call, however, was a hoax. Although Texas authorities removed from the ranch hundreds of children, the courts later said law enforcers had overstepped their authority.
Meanwhile, with Kearney as his attorney, Jeffs sought to have Walther recused from hearing his case this summer; her attitude during previous trials of other FLDS men charged in the wake of the raid demonstrated that she was biased against them, he has argued. That request was denied last month, but reportedly Detoto will ask for a re-hearing on the matter. As such it is currently unclear what effect the attorney shake-up – the third since Jeffs was extradited to Texas from Utah (where he was tried and convicted on a charge of rape-as-accomplice – for his role in arranging a spiritual marriage between a girl and her cousin – a conviction that was ultimately overturned) – will have on the trial schedule, but it does raise the question of whether Jeffs' game of musical attorneys is meant to avoid the inevitable.
Courts, Warren Jeffs, FLDS, polygamy, Barbara Walther, Jeff Kearney, Emily Munoz Detoto