FLDS aren't denied due process
What is known from facts on the ground and experiences elsewhere is that underage girls are summarily "married" to older men, resulting in statutory rape, pregnancy and the birth of babies to children; that any FLDS mothers are complicit in this heinous practice; that underage boys are often banished from the community to a life on the streets at the whim of their male elders; that the true links between children and putative parents and siblings are largely unknown and perhaps unknowable; that "families" of multiple wives and their many children are used to scam the state and federal welfare systems; and the cloistered environment of the compound is employed to produce generation after generation of perpetrators and victims of these practices. No element of freedom of religion under the United States Constitution protects this behavior.
CPS and other authorities are working to sort out the players, good from bad, restore as many parent-child relationships as the law and good social work allow; and place children in safe, loving foster and permanent homes when reunification is not possible. Their actions to date are grounded in evidence sufficient for the reviewing court to have awarded temporary custody to the state. Continuing that custody while developing a permanency plan, or immediately returning the children to their parents, will be the subject of timely hearings specific to each child. Meanwhile, the FLDS, the parents and the children are represented by attorneys, many of whom are providing legal services pro bono. All the due process required under the law is in place.
C. Ed Davis is general counsel (retired) of the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services.
Recent comments
It worries me how people automatically take what is printed to be...
Mary | May 18, 2008 at 7:00 p.m.
Fred,
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