Deal struck over Jeffs' evidence?
That deal voids any claims Jeffs has that the documents are privileged communications between the polygamist leader and his followers, the U.S. Attorney's Office for Utah said in a motion asking a federal judge to dismiss the evidence-dispute case in Nevada.
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In court documents filed in federal court in Las Vegas, the U.S. Attorney's Office revealed that a deal was made with Jeffs in the days following his arrest.
"The United States would provide Mr. Jeffs' counsel with copies of all documents and imaged computer files seized from the Escalade so that Mr. Jeffs and his counsel could designate which items they believed to be privileged," assistant U.S. Attorney Jared Bennett wrote, adding that Jeffs agreed to it.
Jeffs, 51, was a fugitive on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list until his capture in a traffic stop near Las Vegas last August. Jeffs was in a Cadillac Escalade with one of his wives and his brother when they were pulled over by a Nevada Highway Patrol trooper because the vehicle's temporary tag wasn't visible.
In an affidavit obtained by the Deseret Morning News on Wednesday, an FBI agent revealed more details about Jeffs' arrest. Conflicting stories raised suspicions about a man in the car who identified himself as "John Findley."
"The driver of the Escalade was removed from the vehicle for questioning, whereupon he told the trooper that he and his two companions in the Escalade were on a one-week vacation," FBI Special Agent Martin Schwarz wrote. "The driver stated that they had been to San Francisco, Calif., to see the ocean and that they were travelling to Hilldale (sic), Utah."





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