SALT LAKE CITY — A Utah judge has appointed a board of trustees to sort out the redistribution of more than 700 homes in a polygamous community on the Utah-Arizona border where Warren Jeffs' sect is based.
State Judge Denise Lindberg's order Wednesday gives the panel limited power, though.
The five-person board still must get final approval from the court in deciding who should get which homes. Many houses are expected to have multiple claims from people who have at one point lived in or worked on them.
The board's creation is another vital step toward the state's long-held goal of returning the homes and a scattering of property — estimated to be worth more than $100 million — to community members.
The homes have been in state control since 2005 due to allegations of mismanagement by Jeffs and other sect leaders. Many people remain followers of Jeffs, but a growing number in the community have left or been kicked out.
Recently, two dozen families were given deeds to their homes — a first in the community. Since the fundamentalist Mormon sect created the trust in 1942, church leaders held the deeds while others lived in the homes.
Meanwhile, others are being evicted for refusing to pay $100-a-month occupancy fees for years, depriving the trust of more than $4 million.
Lindberg also decided to keep the same person to oversee the trust despite the man's recent no-contest plea to prostitution charges. Accountant Bruce Wisan was appointed to manage the trust after the state took it over nearly a decade ago. Utah and Arizona attorneys general asked for him to be replaced by former Utah Lt. Governor Val Oveson.