Lyle Jeffs, Polygamous Sect Leader, Captured After Year on the Run
Polygamous sect leader Lyle Jeffs was captured Wednesday
night in South Dakota after being on the run for nearly a year after escaping from home confinement in Utah pending
trial on food stamp fraud charges.
The FBI announced the capture Thursday morning with a Tweet:
"#ARRESTED: FLDS leader Lyle Jeffs in custody after nearly a year on the
lam."
FBI spokeswoman Sandra Barker confirmed the arrest and said more
details would be provided later in the day.
The group, known as the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints, is based in a small community on the Utah-Arizona border,
but it also has a small compound in far west South Dakota.
Jeffs is jailed in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, said Minehaha
County Jail Warden Jeff Gromer. He said Jeffs is being held for the U.S.
Marshal Service.
Authorities had been looking for Jeffs since June 2016 when he
slipped out of his GPS ankle monitor and fled from a Salt Lake City house where
he was on supervised home release. Jeffs and 10 others from the sect were
charged with fraud and money laundering in a multimillion dollar food stamp
fraud scheme.
The FBI had issued a $50,000 reward and a wanted poster with bold red
lettering saying Jeffs should be considered armed and dangerous. It was issued
a decade after his brother Warren Jeffs was featured on a similar poster.
Warren Jeffs is now serving a life sentence in a Texas prison.
Lyle Jeffs was the last of the defendants in the food stamp
fraud case still behind bars when U.S. District Judge Ted Stewart reversed his
earlier decision and granted Jeffs his release on June 9. Prosecutors opposed
that move, arguing Jeffs was a flight risk.
Lyle Jeffs must now face the pending charges in federal court in
Utah.
While he was a fugitive, nine of the 10 other people charged in
the high-profile bust in February 2016 took plea deals while one person had his
charges dismissed.
Prosecutors accused Jeffs and other sect leaders of instructing
followers to buy items with their food stamp cards and give them to a church
warehouse where leaders decided how to distribute products to followers. They
say food stamps were also cashed at sect-owned stores without the users getting
anything in return. The money was then diverted to front companies and used to
pay thousands for a tractor, truck and other items, prosecutors say.
The defendants said they were just sharing food as part of their
communal living practices..
Members of the sect believe polygamy brings exaltation in
heaven. The group is an offshoot of mainstream Mormonism, which disavowed
polygamy more than 100 years ago.

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