Foster Children Placed in Polygamist Enclave UPDATED

By on 1-15-2013 in Arizona, Foster Care, Foster Care Reform, How could you? Hall of Shame

Foster Children Placed in Polygamist Enclave UPDATED

“Arizona is placing foster children in the polygamist enclave of Colorado City near the Utah border and that’s raising concerns about their future and Arizona Child Protective Services’ judgment in finding homes for abused and neglected kids.

Mohave County Supervisor Buster Johnson has identified one foster parent as a former member of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints whose family was “reassigned” some years ago by church leader Warren Jeffs.
Johnson notified Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer this week and asked Attorney General Tom Horne for help to bring the child back to Lake Havasu City, where the child’s mother still lives.
The boy and his two brothers had been living with a foster family in Lake Havasu since CPS removed them from their mother, Johnson said.
He said CPS recently moved the youngest to Dan Wayman’s home and the boy’s brothers to a foster home in Prescott.
“His wife and children were taken away from (Wayman) by the priesthood,” Johnson said. “They got reassigned, so he’s a single man now.”
Johnson has prodded state and federal officials for years to dismantle the polygamist FLDS. He said foster children should not be placed in Colorado City, where he believes child labor, arranged marriages and abuse run rampant.
“You’re putting them in an environment where you’re setting them up to fail,” Johnson said. “They’re pretty much cut off from the real world.”
Wayman did not immediately return a phone message from The Associated Press.
Tasya Peterson, communications director for the state Department of Economic Security, which oversees CPS and the foster-care system, did not immediately respond to an email from The Associated Press. Horne’s office also did not immediately respond to an email from the AP.
Among the factors DES considers when deciding whether to license foster and adoptive homes is fitness of the parents, including mental health history, lifestyle, domestic violence or past illegal practices.
Johnson has long been frustrated by the lack of action by Utah and Arizona officials against the polygamous sect.
In his letter to Horne, Johnson said Wayman was involved in a Las Vegas leasing company with ties to Jeffs, who’s serving a life sentence in Texas for sexually assaulting two underage girls he considered his brides.
Jeffs continues to try to lead the sect of about 10,000 people from jail. The sect is a radical offshoot of mainstream Mormonism whose members believe polygamy brings exaltation in heaven.
Last year, Horne agreed to pay for Mohave County deputies to patrol Colorado City after state lawmakers rejected a bill to abolish the Colorado City Marshal’s Office.
Horne said the marshal’s officers are FLDS followers and put Jeffs’ orders above the law.
Last June, the U.S. Justice Department sued the twin polygamist towns of Colorado City and Hildale, Utah, alleging discrimination against residents who are not FLDS members. ”

CPS sending foster children to Warren Jeffs’ polygamist sect

[The Daily Courier 1/12/13]

REFORM Puzzle Piece

Update: “Dan Wayman, who is taking care of three boys as a foster parent, responded to Mohave County Supervisor Buster Johnson, who said no children should be placed in the northern Arizona border community.

Johnson said women and children there are systematically abused by the poly­gamous culture promoted by the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

He issued statements Jan. 10 blasting Arizona Child Protective Services for placing foster children in the isolated enclave about 160 miles northeast of Las Vegas.

Johnson is taking up the cause of an 11-year-old boy from Lake Havasu City who is under the care of Wayman, an Arizona licensed foster father who is also caring for a 9-year-old boy from Kingman and a 15-year-old boy from Bullhead City.

Johnson said he has also contacted Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer and Attorney General Tom Horne, telling them that the state is placing children in a culture he deems unfit and backward.

Johnson said foster kids are doomed to fail in a community where they can’t go to the mall or movie theater.

“B.S.” Wayman said. “I take my kids to the movies all the time … We just went last week and some of the boys went and saw ‘The Hobbit.’ It’s 15 minutes away in Hurricane (nearby Utah).”

Wayman said his foster kids play laser tag, enjoy sports and spend time on computers, activities traditionally frowned upon by the polygamous church.

Arlene Sansevero said she is concerned that her 11-year-old grandson has been placed in Colorado City with Wayman. The New York resident in her mid-70s said she can’t care for the boy or his 13- and 15-year-old brothers who are in foster care in Prescott, Ariz.

Sansevero said her son is a mental health patient and that the boys’ mother wants to care for the kids but has battled alcohol problems and lacks adequate housing.

She said she’s terrified that the youngest grandson lives in a community where underage girls have been assigned to older men in “celestial” polygamous marriages arranged by imprisoned church prophet Warren Jeffs.

“I don’t believe any child should be sent to Colorado City,” Sansevero said. “It is a cult commune. It’s not a good place.”

Wayman, 54, said he was married to Warren Jeffs’ sister and another woman and that they bore him 20 children during their time as an FLDS family. He said Jeffs stripped him of his wives and children nine years ago this month.

Jeffs is serving a life prison sentence in Texas where he was convicted of sexually assaulting girls 12 and 15 years of age.

Johnson questioned whether Wayman or any former member of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints can rid themselves of church belief and obedience. “You don’t live in Colorado City unless you follow the tenets of the FLDS,” Johnson said.

“That’s an absolute lie,” Wayman fumed. “I have nothing to do with them. I do not endorse them and I despise what they stand for.”

Wayman said he has spent years rebuilding his life after being removed from his family and property. The machinist who works in the nearby community of Centennial Park said he earned his bachelor’s degree in psychology last year to help him be a better father and that he endured vigorous investigation before state authorities granted him a license to be a foster parent.

“Believe me, they do a real good, thorough, thorough check on you. I mean background checks, fingerprint clearance, the whole works,” Wayman said. “I’m what’s called a foster-adopt home and I look for kids more that I would be willing to adopt.”

Johnson implied Wayman’s interest in foster-fathering and adopting kids was possibly motivated by need of “building a workforce” in a community where child labor law violation allegations have been investigated in the past.

“Absolutely not,” Wayman responded, denying that his interest is anything beyond providing a good home for children in need. He said he honed parenting skills as the oldest child in a family with 11 siblings and that serving as a foster father helps him cope with the natural children he lost through church edict.

“I love the kids,” Wayman said, noting one of his former foster children telephoned Sunday after learning about Johnson’s comments.

“He called me when he heard about this and he says ‘Dad, I don’t know what they’re talking about.’ He says ‘Colorado City was the best foster placement I ever had.’ He says ‘I was happier there than I’ve ever been in my life’ and he’s been in foster care since he was 7,” Wayman said.

Sansevero said she has communicated with Child Protective Services workers and been told that Wayman is a highly rated foster father. But she still blames the agency for trying to move kids to foster homes far from the communities they call home.

“CPS, I think, is the biggest offender,” Sansevero said. “They’re just looking to empty their records of certain children because they’ve been on the books too long and that was said to me. ‘They’ve been here too long. We have to move them along.’ I mean let’s think of these kids.”

Presiding Mohave County Superior Court Judge Charles Gurtler said checks and balances protecting the kids are built into the system. He noted that there are lawyers and advocates appointed to represent the best interests of foster children and petition the court to intervene when necessary.

Judge Gurtler said children advocates and Child Protective Services staffers have primary authority and that courts don’t normally become involved in placement issues and squabbles, unless parties petition for an evidentiary hearing.

“The fact of the matter is that we have so few foster care homes, especially for children that are in their teens, that some of these placements are a long ways away and difficult,” Gurtler said. He said contested child dependency matters are confidential and closed to the public and that case files are sealed.

Brewer in recent years has called for child welfare reforms and additional resources for Child Protective Services. In her State of the State address at the opening of Arizona’s 2013 legislative session in Phoenix on Jan. 14, she said her new budget proposal will include funding for 150 additional staffers for the child care agency.

The Child Protective Services officer who Sansevero said was handling her grandson’s case said she was not at liberty to comment and she directed inquiry to her supervisor.

Sherri Michel-Singer, the agency’s assistant program manager for Mohave County, said Tuesday she can’t comment on individual cases or cases in general.

Michel-Singer said she could not indicate how many other kids have been placed in foster care in Colorado City in recent years.

Wayman said he understands there are a couple of other foster homes in the community.”

Polygamous community resident says he’s a fit foster parent

[Las Vegas Review-Journal 1/21/13 by Dave Hawkins]

Update 2: “A foster father in Colorado City, Ariz., is upset a judge ordered the removal of an 11-year-old boy from his home.

Mohave County Superior Court Judge Richard Weiss directed officials to find another placement for the boy during a Wednesday hearing.

An attorney acting as the child’s advocate, Deborah A. Liverence, said Weiss believed there was too much distance between the boy and his mother, who lives in Lake Havasu City, and his older brothers in a foster home in Chino Valley.

Liverence said there also is a culture shock factor associated with dispatching a boy who spent most of his life in Lake Havasu City to a remote and sparsely populated community 300 miles away.

Foster father Daniel Wayman, 54, said the boy likes his home and he has no ties to the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints or its polygamous culture.

“He’s happy here. He’s got friends, and he’s settled in school,” Wayman said. “Moving him again after three or four months here is going to be disruptive, and that’s hard on kids.””

Judge removes boy from Colorado City foster home

[Las Vegas Review-Journal 3/8/13 by Dave Hawkins]

6 Comments

  1. Um… Dan Wayman is not only an EX-member of the sect, but an outspoken opponent of the cult’s abuse of underage girls. Yes, he had a prior complaint against him in CPS– triggered by his calling the cops after his 17 year old daughter drove off with her 23 year old boyfriend to a party where there was expected to be drinking. His daughter in turn asked for a protective order against her father, apparently in retribution.

    http://www.rickross.com/reference/polygamy/polygamy172.html

    Since there was no follow-up coverage, I can only assume that the case was resolved. Dan Wayman continues to advocate for victims of the cult. If he were an identified child abuser, I’m sure FLDS apologists would use that to discredit him.

    http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=19101493
    http://www.childbrides.org/action_spec_Safety_Net_reaches_out_to_FLDS.html
    http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/blogspolygblog/53434667-185/net-safety-flds-kids.html.csp

    To my mind, simply being an ex-member of a cult isn’t enough in and of itself to disqualify Wayman as a foster parent. Or do you have other concerns?

    • The polygamist sect and the implications of living in this community that are the concern for CPS. I will add this article to the post that also adds a bit more to this particular guy’s past and that is that he had 20 children all that were taken away by FDLS
      http://www.kpho.com/story/20590806/official-fears-for-foster-kids-in-polygamist-town
      “But a Mohave County supervisor is adamant that the community is not a safe place for children.

      Wayman was separated from his own children about nine years ago when Warren Jeffs, leader of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, took them away.

      Wayman said that traumatic event sparked his desires to be a foster parent.

      “I had 20 children of my own,” Wayman told CBS 5 News. “They were abruptly taken from me one day by Warren when he was doing his thing and disrupting families.”
      and
      “But Wayman’s intentions and foster parent license aren’t flying well with his Mohave County supervisor, Buster Johnson.

      “A single adult living in Colorado City sends the hackles off the back of my neck,” Johnson said.

      Johnson recently learned a boy from Lake Havasu City is now in Wayman’s foster care, making three children in Wayman’s care. Wayman also has two adopted sons.

      “If he is living in Colorado City, there is no other way you can live in Colorado City without being FLDS,” Johnson said.

      Johnson says the boy could face child labor, influence from the FLDS church and either be enrolled in one of the state’s lowest performing schools or even home-schooled. Wayman said home schooling is not in his plan, and the boys in his care are enrolled in a public school.

      “He’s very misinformed,” Wayman said of Johnson. “There’s hundreds, I’d say thousands of people here that do not belong to FLDS and many people who would be offended at that statement.”

      Child Protective Services released a statement Monday night that reads, in part:

      “The Department and its licensing contractors follow the applicable laws and regulations for all applicants seeking licensure as foster parents.

      These include, but are not limited to: criminal history checks, checks for current or past reports of abuse, and inspections of the prospective foster parents and their home.

      Anytime allegations or concerns are raised regarding a foster home, the Department investigates to ensure the continued safety of the children.”

      Wayman said it took him about five years to become a licensed foster parent, and was given an even harder look by the state because of where he lives and his background as a member of the FLDS church.”

      • While I agree that the safety of children is more important than the “right” to be a foster parent, Buster Johnson’s claim that everyone in Colorado City is FLDS is incorrect. How could the Justice Department sue Colorado City for discrimination against non-FLDS citizens if there aren’t any such citizens in the first place?

        http://blogs.phoenixnewtimes.com/valleyfever/2012/06/colorado_city_sued_by_justice.php

        Buster Johnson seems to have some control issues as well.

        http://mohavecountyconstitution.com/susan.htm

        • You are right that Buster Johnson’s claim that all people in this town are FDLS is incorrect but your link actually shows that harassment is quite prevalent and severe for nonFDLS children in the area and I would hope foster care placements would take such things into account when placing children. The lawsuit talks about denial of certain public services like police services and investigation to nonFDLS members and unlawful evictions and denial to access public parks and zoos. I really can’t see how this place would beneift a foster child that is not of this religion.

  2. I’m not insisting on Dan Wayman being allowed to be a foster parent– I’m wondering what Buster Johnson’s agenda is, and why he feels the need to lie to advance it. He could have made the point you just made about it being ill-advised to place foster children in a town that’s being sued by the Justice dept for religious discrimination. Instead he comes out insinuating that Dan Wayman is a child molester in league with Warren Jeffs on no real grounds.

    If Buster Johnson really thinks the state and federal government has the power to sweep in and “dismantle” the FLDS, I have to question is understanding of the First Amendment. If he thinks coming down hard on religious fanatics will cause them to crumble, I have to question his knowledge of history. The usual effect of “persecution” is to strengthen zealots’ conviction in the rightness of their beliefs.

    The only thing known to cause extremists to open their minds is free interchange of ideas with people outside the faith group. The justice department lawsuit is a step in the right direction. Buster Johnson’s crusade to keep non-FLDS foster children out of Colorado City to keep them from being “influenced” is a step back from the goal of opening up the society. Now, given the traumas the foster kids are already dealing with, you might reasonably say it’d be better to leave them out of this.

    However, if the foster kids involved are themselves FLDS, then a placement with an ex-cult member may be the best place for them. Dan Wayman is from their own culture. And having them in Colorado City would be a great way to get CPS eyes into Colorado City on a regular basis on unimpeachably legitimate business. Those eyes might see things which would otherwise go unwitnessed by state representatives. Just sayin’.

    Has anyone interviewed Dan Wayman’s children to see what THEY say about him as a father?

    • I actually found an update to this story from yesterday and will add it to the post. It sounds like the grandmother of the 11 year old (who is not FLDS) is who prompted this to happen. He is mentally disabled and the grandmother (in NY) is unable to care for him.The article does not mention the religions of the other 2 children. The 11 year old had also been separated from his siblings who are over 320 miles away.I don’t know about any religious dismantling as a motive for Buster, but AZ CPS really is messed up in a lot of ways. Wayman was Warren Jeffs’ brother in law so if people can be denied as foster parents due to DUIs in the distant past, it does make sense that such a close affiliation with Jeffs, even though it may be in the past, would disqualify or bring extra criticisms to him.

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