Jeffs’ defense calls on husband
September 20, 2007 - 9:00 pm
ST. GEORGE, Utah -- The two people at the center of a criminal case against a polygamous-sect leader have painted dramatically different pictures of their arranged marriage.
A young woman said she tearfully objected and was forced to have sex against her will when she was just 14.
Her former husband didn't recall any tears from her during the 2001 wedding ceremony and insisted it was the teen bride who snuggled up to him to have her back scratched before their first sexual encounter.
"I believe that every story needs two sides for the truth to come out," Allen Steed said Wednesday as he testified for the defense.
Warren Jeffs, 51, is charged with two felony counts of rape as an accomplice for his role in the ceremonial marriage between the girl and Steed, a cousin who was 19 at the time.
Washington County prosecutors contend Jeffs used his authority as a feared and respected church leader to force the religious and sexual union of Steed and the 14-year-old bride.
The woman, now 21, said Jeffs, president of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, commanded her to obediently give herself to her husband "mind, body and soul."
Steed, however, said Jeffs simply counseled patience, prayer and love.
The defense team called 10 witnesses over nearly two days but it was Steed's testimony that clearly captured the jury's attention. Closing arguments were set for Friday. Jeffs could spend the rest of his life in prison if convicted.
Like the couple's own stories, other witnesses on both sides offered different views of the FLDS culture and religious beliefs.
Testifying for prosecution, the woman's two sisters said FLDS members, who number 10,000 on the Arizona-Utah border, live in a rigid, patriarchal society where obedience is expected and wives cannot question or refuse their husbands.
Nine FLDS members, however, said just the opposite, describing a church where men are taught to lead with love and wives are treated as partners, not servants.
In telling his story on Wednesday, Steed, now 26, contradicted the words of his former wife, saying there was never a time in their 31/2-year relationship when he forced sex on her. He said he wanted the marriage "to last forever."
Steed, who has not been charged in the case, said he was never questioned by police about rape. He acknowledged that his testimony could be used against him but that risk didn't stop him testifying.
The woman claims Steed forced sex on her after telling her it was time to "be a wife and do your duty."
But Steed told jurors she approached him after he fell asleep in his clothes following a 12-hour day at work, weeks after their wedding at a Nevada motel.
"She woke me up and asked me if I cared about her and loved her," he testified. "I told her that I did. She rolled up close to me and asked me to scratch her back. ... I felt like she was ready to go forward."
He replied, "no sir, never," when asked by defense attorney Wally Bugden if he ever had to talk his wife into having sex or if he had used his authority as the head of an FLDS household to demand it.
At one point, the woman appeared to be upset and dashed from the courtroom. She later returned and passed notes to prosecutors as she listened to Steed's testimony.
He said he sought advice from Jeffs to get through a "rocky" period of their marriage.
Jeffs' remedy: Pray, work and play together, Steed testified.
"He told me that I had to learn how to get her to love me so she would obey because she loved me," Steed said.
Under cross-examination, prosecutor Craig Barlow never challenged Steed's account of the couple's first sexual encounter but instead focused on whether he knew marrying a 14-year-old was illegal.
"I didn't really put much thought into it," said Steed, adding he believed it was right under "God's law."
It was an FLDS ceremony, not an official marriage with a license from public authorities.
The couple's marriage ended in 2004 after Steed learned his wife was pregnant with another man's child.
She has left the church and remarried.
He remains single.
MARSHAL, DEPUTY STRIPPED OF POWERS KINGMAN, Ariz. -- The town marshal and his deputy marshal in the polygamous northern Arizona community of Colorado City has been stripped of their law enforcement powers, in part for their failure to cooperate in the manhunt for church leader Warren Jeffs, whose trial is winding down in St. George, Utah. The Arizona Peace Officer Standard and Training, or POST, board voted Wednesday to revoke the peace officer certifications of Marshal Fred Barlow and Deputy Marshall Preston Barlow. POST Executive Director Tom Hammarstrom said the Barlows were sanctioned for their lack of cooperation with investigators who were looking for Jeffs when the leader of the Fundamentalist Church of Latter Day Saints, or FLDS, was on the run more than a year ago. "The specific conduct regarding these two officers was their failure to answer questions in either sworn testimony and depositions or answer questions of legitimate law enforcement authorities who were making inquiries regarding the status of the federal fugitive Warren Jeffs," Hammarstrom said. Jeffs, 51, was arrested north of Las Vegas in August 2006 and is currently being prosecuted in Utah in connection with the alleged assignment of underage girls to male adults in church-sanctioned unions in which illegal sex occurred. Hammarstrom said the Barlows can request a rehearing essentially challenging the POST board findings and revocation of their peace officer status. "This is not surprising and is certainly expected," Mohave County Sheriff Tom Sheahan said of the POST action. Sheahan said the questionable conduct of the Colorado City marshal's office and its officers extends beyond the hunt for Jeffs. "They have very seldom worked with us when we've had arrest warrants for people in their community and we had suspected for a long time that they had tipped them (suspects) off when we were looking for them," Sheahan said. "We've had numerous instances of the Colorado City marshal's office not taking action on legitimate law enforcement complaints." DAVE HAWKINS/SPECIAL TO THE REVIEW-JOURNAL