The Texas Supreme Court ruled that 468 children seized from a polygamist sect must be returned to their parents, saying state child welfare officials had overstepped their authority.
The ruling on Thursday upheld a lower court’s finding last week that Texas child welfare officials failed to prove the children were in immediate danger when they were taken from the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (FLDS).
ALLEGATIONS
Texas police and welfare officials raided the reclusive sect’s sprawling compound near the small town of Eldorado on April 3 and took the girls and boys into state custody amid allegations of sexual and physical abuse.
Officials said girls were being “groomed” to accept sex with their middle-aged “spiritual husbands” as soon as they hit puberty and boys were being indoctrinated to perpetuate the cycle of abuse.
Sect members believe that polygamy is a way to get to heaven.
But despite the shocking allegations there have yet to be charges or arrests in the case.
The Texas Department of Family Protective Services, which oversees the Child Protection Services (CPS), vowed to “take immediate steps to comply.”
CPS “has one purpose in this case — to protect the children,” the statement said. “Our goal is to reunite families whenever we can do so and make sure the children will be safe. We will continue to prepare for the prompt and orderly reunification of these children with their families.”
QUICK RELEASE
A lawyer for Texas Rio Grande Legal Aid, the group challenging the state’s actions, called for the children to be released quickly.
“CPS should be ready now to send these kids back to their mothers,” David Hall told reporters in the state capital Austin.
The high court justices wrote that “removal of the children was not warranted” and that child protection authorities had taken possession of “all 468 children at the Ranch without a court order.”
“The Family Code gives the district court broad authority to protect children short of separating them from their parents and placing them in foster care,” the high court said.
It suggested authorities had other methods to ensure the safety of the children, including “restraining a party” from taking a child outside a certain area, and “the removal of an alleged perpetrator from the child’s home.”
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