States offer reward in search for leader of polygamous sect

Phoenix, USA - The Arizona and Utah attorneys general announced a $10,000 reward Wednesday for information leading to the arrest of the reclusive leader of a polygamous church based in communities along the states' common border.

Warren Jeffs, who has not been publicly sighted in months, was charged in Arizona in June with counts that include conspiracy to commit sexual conduct with a minor.

When Jeffs was indicted, he was believed to have been at a compound near Eldorado, where a four-story temple is being built by the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Eldorado is about 40 miles south of San Angelo.

"I find it hard to believe [Jeffs is] the active leader of 10,000 and no one knows where he is," Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard said.

Colorado City, Ariz., and Hildale, Utah, are dominated by the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, a sect that broke away from the Mormon church and practices polygamy.

Capturing Jeffs, 49, is considered a key to ending the turmoil in the two towns, where polygamist men marry one wife legally and then take on other women as "spiritual" wives.

Goddard said Jeffs could be any number of places, including Colorado, New Mexico, Texas, Mexico or Canada.

When the FBI added Jeffs to its list of wanted people last week, officials said that since his indictment, Jeffs was believed to have been in Colorado and in British Columbia at another polygamist community with ties to Colorado City.

On Wednesday, authorities weren't making any claims about his whereabouts.

"He has gone, very efficiently, underground," Goddard said.