I wonder how this will be done. Maybe have 20 women wearing
Mormon-style garments and one male tour guide.
Whomever the man is, the women on the premises
would be expected to hen-peck him at every turn
so as to be true to life
 

 
 
 
-------------------------------------------------------------

 
 
Ex-wife of polygamous sect leader to open doors to secretive  home
George Frey (Reuters, May 8, 2017) 
Hildale,  Utah - The Utah mansion where convicted pedophile and polygamous 
religious sect  leader Warren Jeffs once lived is being purchased by one of 
his former wives,  who hopes to make it a tourist attraction and home for 
people who have left the  church. 
The  house and adjacent buildings are part of a walled compound that 
straddles two  blocks in the town of Hildale, a twin border community with 
Colorado City,  Arizona, where many members of the Fundamentalist Church of 
Jesus 
Christ of  Latter Day Saints lived. 
Jeffs,  61, was the spiritual head of the breakaway sect, which the 
mainstream Mormon  Church has condemned for promoting marriage between young 
girls 
and older men.  He is serving a life sentence in a Texas prison for sexually 
assaulting two  underage girls he had married. 
Photos  of the sprawling mansion, whose estimated value is $1.2 million, 
reveal its 41  bedrooms, meeting and prayer rooms, dining rooms and two 
commercial-size  kitchens. 
Brielle  Decker, who said she was forced to be the 65th of Jeffs' 79 wives 
when she was  18 years old, is hoping to buy the mansion for a reduced 
price. 
"Everything  would flourish more if this thing was turned into something 
good," said Decker,  who escaped from the FLDS five years ago. "That's my main 
goal." 
Decker,  31, has occupancy of the property while she raises funds to 
purchase it. The  mansion is big enough for public events and to house ex-FLDS 
members  transitioning to the outside world, she said. 
With  its secretive history and proximity to Grand Canyon and Zion national 
parks, the  house should attract inquisitive tourists, Decker said. 
"We  could do tours upstairs," she said, "and the middle floor, where the 
kitchens  and the conference rooms are, could be used for events, a 
restaurant and a gift  shop." 
Decker  spent several months at the mansion while Jeffs, who was once on 
the FBI's most  wanted list, eluded police. Their marriage was not considered 
legal, and she is  planning to wed her fiance next month. 
Properties  belonging to the sect were held in a trust that was established 
in the 1940s so  that members could benefit from its shared assets in line 
with their religious  beliefs. The state of Utah seized the trust in 2005 
and is selling back its  assets to FLDS members and ex-members. 
The  compound is one of several FLDS sites sprinkled throughout Texas, 
Utah,  Colorado, Arizona and South Dakota.

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