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"Carolyn, when people come to me for help I don't usually go to the authorities. Generally, I don't recommend it. But if Merril Jessop is your husband, you're not going to have even a remote chance of getting out unless you go straight to the top for help. I feel it's urgent to get the attorney general's office involved today as soon as possible!"
"I'll do anything to protect my kids."
Dan left immediately. I don't think either of us understood the danger we were in.
My head was spinning. I hadn't slept for twenty-eight hours. I was running on adrenaline from the stress and tension of our ordeal and there would be moments when I felt weak and ready to pa.s.s out. Everything was happening so fast. When I got back to the guest house I did a head count and discovered that Arthur was missing. I guessed that when he was watching the road he'd been looking for the nearest pay phone so he could run back and call Merril.
Arthur didn't have any money, but boys who worked on construction crews always had phone cards in case they got into trouble. I ran back to Leenie's house and told her what happened. Her daughter Jolene had just arrived to help.
Leenie called Dan, and he said it was too dangerous for us to remain on his property. He said we'd be safer at Jolene's. I started rounding up my children to take them into hiding again and gathering up the black plastic garbage bags with all our clothes.
Betty started screaming again. "I'm not going with you! What are you doing? Where are you taking us?"
I found out later that before he left, Arthur had told Betty that he was going to call Merril and that she would have to get the children into the truck the minute he arrived. I pulled her into the car while she was fighting and kicking me as hard as she could.
Fortunately for us, Jolene had just graduated from dental school, and few in the FLDS even realized she was back in town. She had a beautiful house not too far from her father's. Jolene carefully explained to my children that there was an alarm system and if anyone opened a door or window from inside, an alarm would go off and the police would come.
Shortly after we settled in, Sarah arrived with Arthur. She'd found him a few miles from Dan's.
Arthur had unwittingly saved our lives because when he fled, I knew our cover was blown and we had to leave Dan's immediately. I found out that Merril had arrived at Dan Fisher's house five minutes after we left for Jolene's. He had learned where we were staying even before Arthur called because, as I'd later find out, my stepsister betrayed me. If he had found us there before I had a protection order, there would have been no legal way I could have stopped him from taking my children. I would have had to go to court to fight for custody. It would have taken years.
Arthur's five-mile run was a G.o.dsend.
I also learned from this episode not to talk to anyone. Merril had tracked us down because Darrel had told his wife where we were after he dropped us off. She mentioned it to my stepsister, who called her mother in the cult, who then called Merril.
Jolene insisted I go to bed for a few hours. She ordered pizza for my children and sent me upstairs to crash with my two youngest. I nursed Bryson to sleep and put Harrison in bed beside me.
After a few hours Jolene awakened me. Someone from the attorney general's office had come over to question me so he could file for an emergency order of protection. He asked me for the name of someone in the community to call to tell them that the attorney general was now involved in this case. I gave him Sam Barlow's name. He was a close ally of Warren's, and I knew he would see to it that the word got around. I was sure Merril would still keep hunting for us, but at least he would be answerable to the law once the protection order was in place.
After he left, I went to check on my children. Betty and LuAnne were sitting on the couch. "I'm not eating another thing until I can go back to Father," Betty said. LuAnne said she was on a hunger strike, too.
Jolene said that not eating wouldn't get them anywhere. Moments later, her husband came in and put on the movie Shrek. Shrek. It was the first movie my younger children had seen since Warren Jeffs banned them in the community. They were enchanted. I took Bryson back upstairs to bed. Arthur followed me into the bedroom. It was the first movie my younger children had seen since Warren Jeffs banned them in the community. They were enchanted. I took Bryson back upstairs to bed. Arthur followed me into the bedroom.
"Mother, I know you have been living in h.e.l.l," he said quietly. "But I can't back you in this. I don't want to live in Salt Lake. I want to be in Colorado City with my brothers and sisters."
I just listened. I knew he needed to feel he could tell me everything.
"I have never lived in a big city before and I don't want to. I want to be in a small town."
"Arthur," I began cautiously, "you're fifteen. In a few years you can live wherever you want. But until you're eighteen, you'll be with me."
Arthur was not a boy who showed his emotions. But suddenly he began to quiver, then shake. "Mother, this has been the worst day of my life. I watched the road going to Dan's house. Once we were there, I got the address and ran to call Father. When Father answered his cell phone I could barely speak, I was so out of breath. I told him where you were. I was going to run back and meet him there but Sarah showed up and stopped me."
By this point, Arthur was sobbing. "Mother, I gave Father my word. I told him I would meet him at the address that I gave him, but I didn't do it! I always keep my word to Father."
It was awful to see my son in such agony.
"Arthur, I don't expect you to understand what I am doing. But there's no way your father ever would have let me leave peacefully. Escape was our only option."
"I don't want to be pulled into this fight between you and my father. I don't want to have to take sides. What you did this morning seems crazy. But I will do whatever is necessary to protect my brothers and sisters. You can't ask me not to."
I was proud of Arthur because he was such a responsible son. He had been completely indoctrinated by the FLDS and I didn't expect this to be easy for him. We'd always been very close. He never saw much of Merril. But he had been taught to fear and respect him.
Now he was in an impossible situation. He didn't want to turn against me, but he also wanted to keep his word to Merril. I knew this was tearing him apart, but at the moment there was nothing I could do.
When we finished talking and I'd helped Bryson get back to sleep, I went to check on the rest of my children.
Everyone except Betty and LuAnne was bathed and ready for bed. Jolene had gotten them ready. It was one of the strangest moments of my life. In seventeen years, no one had ever helped me get my children ready for bed before. Never-not even when I was sick and confined to bed during my worst pregnancies.
Merrilee bounced into the bedroom. "Mama, look at me!" Her eyes sparkled. She was, for the first time in her life, wearing little-girl clothes. "Look, Mama!" She pulled up her nightgown to show me her underpants. "See the roses!" The panties were trimmed with rosettes, and this was the most miraculous thing Merrilee had ever seen.
She'd had a bubble bath and shampoo and her hair smelled fragrant. Jolene had a daughter Merrilee's age, so her clothes fit my daughter perfectly. Merrilee had never realized such pretty clothes existed. After wearing long underwear 24/7 through all the seasons, she was experiencing herself in a way she never had before.
All of my children were euphoric. Even Betty seemed happy and engaged. This was an unimaginable adventure. They could eat as much as they liked, drink sodas, and watch television and movies. For the first time in their lives, I think they felt like the center of attention because they were not competing with dozens of siblings.
Arthur asked if he could work with my brother the next day, and I agreed. I felt that I could trust him, and I knew my brother would keep close tabs on him. When my brother came to pick him up the next morning, he took me aside.
"Carolyn, I don't think you know how much trouble you have created for yourself. The entire city is crawling with men from the FLDS. They are scouring every possible place you could be hiding. I was afraid to come over here because I was sure I'd be followed. Things are really crazy. I know you went to the attorney general's office, but Merril is not afraid of the law, not under these circ.u.mstances. I'm worried about your safety. Getting out of that religion might just not be possible."
I looked directly at him. "The truth is I have nothing to lose. I would rather be dead than live that way another minute. I'm going to protect my children and do everything I can to get out."
Arthur started to laugh. "Yes, I imagine you will. I don't know anyone else who would try such a stunt. Your van was so out of gas we couldn't get it off the trailer. You took a van that had almost no gas, loaded it with children who didn't want to go, and now look where you are! Actually, you've gotten farther than anyone else could have."
Then he got serious again. "Carolyn, you took the children of one of the most powerful men in the FLDS. They will hunt you down for that and plow over anyone who gets in their way. There's no way the FLDS is going to let you escape with Merril Jessop's children. This is one fight I don't think you can win."
A New Life Begins
The next morning Dan Fisher came over to Jolene's and told me the emergency order of protection was in place. Now if Merril grabbed the children he'd be in a lot of trouble. Dan said if I felt I needed still more protection, I could move into the battered women's shelter in West Jordan. But he added that he and Leenie would be delighted to have us return to their residence.
This was a no-brainer for me. My children had been too traumatized by our escape to go into the shelter system. I felt we would be safe enough at Dan's. He sat down and had coffee with me. We were sitting around Jolene's table with her husband, Neil Jessop, who was a relative of Merril's-although not close to him. Dan was telling me about the crimes he was hearing about in the FLDS and said I was right to get my children out.
"I never knew what this country's Founding Fathers fought for until I left," he said quietly. "Even so, it took me a few years to grasp what it really meant and how deeply it mattered.
"You have a real fight ahead of you," he went on. "It might mean testifying against Merril and Warren. Neither of these men is going to let you take your children without a fight."
I knew what Dan Fisher was saying was true. But it terrified me. I was willing to fight for my freedom, but I had not realized that might mean testifying against Warren in court. My fear was that I knew so much about him he would never let me be free. I had witnessed him marrying an underage girl-my stepdaughter Millie, who was seventeen when she married Warren.
I remember Millie going through the motions during her wedding in a robotic way. I knew this wasn't what she wanted because the day Merril told her she had to marry Warren, she broke out in hysterical sobs. I was just coming into the house and went into Merril's office to see what was wrong. Millie threw herself into my arms, crying and crying. Merril kept telling her to be brave. It was one of the most helpless moments of my life. At that point, Utah had not pa.s.sed a law that banned underage women from polygamist marriages. Millie went on to become one of Warren's favorite wives.
What I later learned was that Warren mistakenly thought Millie was my oldest daughter. This lit a fire in me to do everything I could to protect Betty so she would be spared a similar fate.
Dan said that my best hope of overall protection was to go into the attorney general's office and tell everything I knew about Warren Jeffs. Bryson started to fuss as I was taking in all that Dan was saying. I was trying to quiet him while I was shaking all over.
"I know what you are saying is right. I will tell them everything I know. But backing out of the FLDS is only one of my concerns. How am I going to take care of my children and support us all? Harrison needs twenty-four-hour-a-day care, and my other seven children are traumatized and afraid of the outside world. My work at home is cut out for me, but I still have to find a way to feed us."
"Carolyn, listen to me. Of all the women I've helped, you are in the best shape of any of them."
I wasn't sure what he meant. It seemed impossible to believe that this was true.
"It might take some time to get on your feet," Dan said, "but at least you have a college education and you're very intelligent. Most of the women I see have less than a seventh-grade education and no life skills. You're in a different category altogether."
Dan and I talked for nearly an hour that morning. He said he would try to get an investigator from the attorney general's office to meet with me and listen to what I knew about Merril and Warren's crimes. Dan told me to take it a step at a time so I would not get overwhelmed.
He also reminded me that I was now in an environment with checks and balances. A judge could rule on the evidence in my case rather than condemn me as an immoral woman. I could tell a courtroom about Merril's abuse instead of having to talk to Warren Jeffs, another perpetrator. I was thirty-five years old and had never been in a fair fight or had anyone on my side. This was going to take some getting used to. But I was not backing down. That was one of the few things about my life I did know.
Dan left, and I went upstairs and started gathering up our things for the move back to Dan's. My sister Annette came over to help me move. She'd also fled the FLDS. Several years later she met Merril's half brother Robert-who had also quit the FLDS. They dated for several years, then married and had four children. After living in several different cities, they returned to Salt Lake to be closer to other family members who'd left. Annette and I laughed about the black garbage bags we relied on for suitcases. She had escaped with one; I, with many.
It was a relief to go back to Dan's guest house. I immediately started doing laundry because we didn't have enough clothing. My children went outside to play, and I'd never seen them more excited or happier. This was a great adventure for them. Little did they know they were never going back. For the second night in a row I put eight happy children to bed. It felt like a miracle. Betty kept up her threatened hunger strike and claimed she would never eat. But I put food in her bedroom at night and when I went up in the morning, the plate was empty. Arthur was quiet now but concerned. I think he understood what I was trying to do and why. But he was afraid I couldn't pull it off.
Harrison awakened me the next morning with his crying. I gave him a bath and then took him outside to pull him around Dan's reservoir in a wagon. The morning was silent with a shimmer to it. Dew was still on the gra.s.s as the sun was beginning to rise. I watched two Canadian geese fly low toward the water, then skid across the surface of the reservoir before gliding to a stop.
The world looked brand-new. I was seeing life in color again. For seventeen years I'd lived in a blur of terror and fear. It had taken all my energy to survive my life. I'd noticed a sunset here and there, but there had been no time for beauty, wonder, or marvel.
It hit me all at once. I could suddenly see beauty in an ordinary day: the bright green gra.s.s, the emerald pines, and the red, red roses on Dan Fisher's rosebushes. The forbidden color looked especially brilliant to my grateful eyes.
I took Harrison out of the wagon and sat with him in the gra.s.s. I looked up and saw that the gates at the entrance to Dan's property were locked and a security guard was stationed outside. For the first time in longer than I could remember, I felt safe. Harrison went into a spasm, and I held his body next to mine to quiet him.
When I looked up, I saw a black truck on a hill above Dan's property. It was an FLDS truck. I was being monitored. My sweet moment vanished. I put Harrison in the wagon and headed back to the guest house. Once inside, I realized I was still safe. The only power the person in the truck had was the power of observation.
The next day I went with an attorney to file more paperwork for my order of protection. I also got a call from my father, who tried to convince me to stay out of the courts. He said he was sure Merril would help me work things out and that I didn't need to make such a big fuss.
"Merril and Warren already had their chance to work things through with me, and they both refused," I said. "If Merril was interested in working with me, he would have done it three years ago."
"But Carolyn, he didn't realize you were so serious then," Dad said. "He doesn't want his children living outside the community, and he wants you back. He's willing to let you have your own house."
"Dad, Merril has never kept one promise he's made to me. Why should he change now?"
My father told me I didn't need an attorney. He and Merril could find one for me if I was determined to continue in the courts. I could not believe what I was hearing.
"Dad, do you think I'm that dumb? I'll be keeping my attorney," I said. "I am not going to live with Merril's abuse any longer. I have a clear claim on my children and I'm going to fight for custody." I had never stood up to my father before. It felt good.
My father was still a true believer and did not feel I had the right to leave and take my children with me. He was helping Merril on principle: in my father's eyes, Merril owned me the way he owned his car. Dad felt Merril was wrong to abuse me, and he'd never doubted me when I told him what was happening. But he felt now that Merril understood how serious I was, he might be less abusive to me if I came back.
For my father, my salvation was at stake. If I broke the covenants that I'd made with G.o.d, I would relinquish all claims to any kind of salvation. So Dad was thinking of the big picture, and within that context, he genuinely believed he was acting in my best interest to encourage me to return.
When Merril's pressure on my father couldn't get me to roll over, he turned to my son Arthur. He kept badgering Arthur to make me talk to him. I had been gone for only a week, but Linda told me the things Merril had already started to say about me in church.
Merril accused me of being the worst kind of apostate and said I had turned traitor to the work of G.o.d by going to the authorities. He said I planned on destroying his children, and he even accused me of betraying my grandmother, who had stood faithful during the raid on Short Creek in 1953. During that raid, it was said that if one woman turned against the work of G.o.d, then every woman could lose her children and the men would be imprisoned. Merril put me in that category of being the one woman who would destroy the work of G.o.d in the last days and turn traitor to the prophet.
I told Arthur that now that I knew what Merril was saying about me behind my back, there was no way I'd speak with him. Arthur told his father I'd heard what he had said about me in church. Merril was furious that someone had ratted him out.
Two weeks later, on May 17, 2003, was our seventeenth wedding anniversary. To mark the day, I got a babysitter and went to a salon to have my hair cut and styled. This was the first time I had ever had my hair cut professionally. Annette took me there and we looked through books and magazines to pick out a hairstyle. It felt weird to be looking at all these different and forbidden ways to comb my hair and to know that I could have any of them I wanted!
I had always worn my hair in the FLDS style, which meant a big wave in the front and then pulled tight in the back. Sometimes we wore long braids wrapped around our head. A woman's hair could never be loose. Sometimes I'd rolled my hair up and put a lace hairnet over it. Now I was overwhelmed by the choices when I looked at all the styles, and had absolutely no idea what would look good on me. Trying to be pretty was such an alien concept. Annette helped me pick a cut that was soft and easy to comb and style. I got a professional perm-which I'd done once before in the FLDS as an act of sheer rebellion-and the stylist taught me how to comb it to match the picture. It felt so strange to me to wear my hair down and without a big wave across the front that was anch.o.r.ed in place with hairspray.
When I got home, I was in the midst of making dinner for my children when a big bouquet of carnations and other flowers arrived from Merril. Much joy for a pleasant day, Much joy for a pleasant day, the card read. the card read. Pleasant Pleasant was one of Barbara's favorite words, so it was obvious to me that the flowers were from her. was one of Barbara's favorite words, so it was obvious to me that the flowers were from her.
My children were so excited by the flowers that I couldn't throw them away immediately. I just left them on the table and proceeded to make dinner. Harrison had been born on my anniversary, so we were celebrating his fourth birthday that night. I had bought a cake and candles for him, which was a novelty for all of us. In the FLDS, birthdays were rarely celebrated.
Early the next morning, while everyone was still asleep, I took the entire vase of flowers to the dumpster and threw them in. I could hear the gla.s.s shattering. It was liberating. The oppression was over. My life was my own, and no one could take my freedom away from me now.
I had another immediate fear to conquer: driving. I had avoided it as much as I could since the accident on Black Ridge. Compounding the problem was that I wasn't used to driving in a big city. But I had to be able to buy groceries and drive Betty and LuAnne to their counseling sessions. LuAnne was in school but Betty and Arthur were not yet ready. (My other three school-age children were in public schools, but Dan made arrangements for their transportation there and back.) My freedom didn't mean much if I couldn't drive. Still, it terrified me to get into a car again. My heart raced and my mouth went dry. I couldn't let the girls see how scared I was, so I took a deep breath and turned the key in the ignition. It would be a year until I felt comfortable driving again.
The biggest challenge I faced was financial; this was not a surprise. I had no expectations of getting any money from Merril. He'd even refused to contribute to Harrison's care before I escaped, since he believed Harrison was my punishment from G.o.d.
But I had made one really smart move before I fled. In planning for my escape, I knew I had to do something about money, and the one option I had was getting Social Security benefits for my children. Harrison was getting $100 a month in SSI benefits, but that never covered his monthly costs.
When Merril had retired, he applied for Social Security benefits for two of his youngest children, Harrison and Wendell-Cathleen's son, the one Barbara beat one night at prayers. This was dishonest because he claimed that the boys' mothers weren't able to care for them. But scamming the government for benefits, whether food stamps or welfare, was routine in the FLDS. It was referred to as "bleeding the beast." Merril was smart enough not to put more than two children on Social Security-he knew he'd be investigated if he claimed he was raising dozens of children by five mothers. The children had to be living with him if he was to collect the money. It was credible that he could be raising two children from separate mothers.
I calculated that if Social Security knew about my other children, Harrison's benefit would jump to at least $400 a month. So I applied. But when I did, I was turned down because Merril claimed my other seven children were not his and that we'd never been married. I had just almost died giving birth to Bryson, and I was infuriated. But in denying my claim, Social Security gave me a long list of items I could send in to substantiate his parenthood, so I at least knew what I needed to get this turned around.
Between nursing Bryson, coping with Harrison, and trying to get my stamina back, I was not exactly in the mood to take on a big bureaucracy, but what choice did I have? I was thinking big picture. I needed a steady income, no matter how small. And I had to find a way to prove that my children were Merril's without his knowing it.
I knew that there was doc.u.mentation in Merril's office; he had birth certificates and tax returns. But how to get it was the challenge. Merril's office was closely monitored when he was away. It was off-limits to anyone else in the family, but the door wasn't locked. What I decided to do was wait until Merril was out of town and sneak into his office when everyone else in the house was asleep. I set my alarm for 2 A.M A.M.
I never went through more than one file at a time. It was too big a risk if I was caught. And I always brought something of Harrison's with me-such as the dishes I used to feed him that I might be returning to the kitchen-so it would look like I was up because of him.
I'd take a flashlight and would lock myself in Merril's office. But I attempted this only when I knew Merril would be away for two nights, because once I took anything, I had to copy it the next day, then sneak it back into Merril's office the following night. But I found a treasure trove of doc.u.mentation.
There were tax returns in which he claimed my children as deductions and a letter to the attorney general's office explaining that he couldn't pay his medical bills from his heart attack due to his large family. Then he listed all his underage children. I made about eight trips over two months collecting all the doc.u.mentation I might possibly need.
Once I submitted the doc.u.mentation, all of my children received benefits. Merril knew about this but not how I made it happen. I dutifully turned over the $700 a month I was receiving to him. Little did he know how masterfully I'd outsmarted him.
But on my first day of freedom, I called Social Security and told them I had a new address so the money would come directly to me and not to Merril.
I also applied for state benefits in Utah, but that was slow going. It took several months, and there was one goof-up after another. Even though the state acknowledged that Harrison's situation was critical, there was nothing to do to speed up the process, which was agonizingly slow.
Harrison and I went for a walk at sunrise every morning after his bath. I pulled him in the wagon down to the reservoir. That black truck was still perched on the hill like a menacing shadow. I felt like I was trapped between a world of freedom and a world of slavery. The truck remained there for several weeks.
A few days later when Dan Fisher returned from a business trip he asked to meet with me. There was a problem. Merril was in hiding and the police had not been able to serve him with the order of protection. In truth, he said, I didn't have much protection until Merril was actually served. The police wanted me to lure him into a trap.
In the three weeks since my escape I had tried to face every fear head-on. This felt like the ultimate challenge. I didn't think I could do it. The thought of seeing Merril again made me shut down.
Dan said that since Merril was still hounding Arthur about seeing me, we had an easy way to make this happen. He urged me to set this in motion. I trusted Dan and finally agreed.
We talked it through. The key was that I could only meet Merril in a public place. There would be undercover cops there, so I'd have some protection. But that didn't make me feel safe. I had lived under Merril's tyranny for seventeen years and had seen how hard he had come down on wives who disobeyed him.
I had embarra.s.sed him in the eyes of the entire community. Now everyone knew he did not have his family under control. Trained to be terrified of him for seventeen years, I found it excruciating to stand up to him, let alone trap him. But I knew Merril was a coward at heart. What I feared most was what he would try to do to me after our confrontation-not what he might do or say during it.
Other women had fled the FLDS, but I was unaware of any who had made it out with all their children, nor did I know any who were ever granted full custody in court. No one had ever fled from a man as powerful within the FLDS as Merril Jessop. In taking on Merril, I knew I was taking on the cult.