Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Wednesday, August 02, 2006
Former FLDS Member Sues Police Officers Allegedly Controlled By Church
In Salt Lake City, Utah federal court, Andrew Chatwin, a former member of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, has filed a civil rights suit against three police officers from the twin cities of Hildale, Utah- Colorado City, Arizona. Details of the suit were reported yesterday by the Associated Press. Chatwin built his home in Hildale in 1992, but when he left the FLDS church, he turned it over to his father. Chatwin then tried twice to move back, but was blocked by police or family members who said they were acting on orders from former church leader Warren Jeffs. Chatwin argues that the cities' governments are under control of the church. Property and homes in the cities have been the community property of the church's United Effort Plan Trust. Church elders assigned vacant lots to FLDS men who then built their homes on them, but were not given deeds. Church leaders have also traditionally ordered families in and out of homes based on their obedience to church tenets, which include the practice of polygamy. Chatwin wants the court to award him damages and the deed to his house.