SALT LAKE CITY -
Convicted of murder, polygamist leader Ervil LeBaron died at the Utah State Prison in 1981. Curiously, dozens of people associated with the LeBarons died in the years before and after, as dictated by a book he wrote. The FBI has called it a sort-of "bible" for his followers.
To this day, some people still fear the book and its preachings of "blood atonement."
Irene Spencer met Ervil LeBaron in Mexico in 1953 when she became the second wife of his brother, Verlan. She said she watched as Ervil LeBaron took control of their polygamous church.
"Ervil was the one that got in, wanted to be the leader, wanted to be the king, wanted to take everybody's wives," she said in a recent interview with Fox 13 News.
In his Church of the Lamb of God, LeBaron sought to unite Utah's polygamist groups under one banner -- his. Those who stood in his way were killed. In 1977, two followers assassinated Dr. Rulon Allred, the leader of the Bluffdale-based Apostolic United Brethren (AUB). Afraid of his own brother, Verlan, his wives and children all went into hiding.
"Imagine the mafia coming after you every night," Spencer said. "I used to look at my children and wonder, do I run with the baby? Do I grab two and let the rest of them get killed and get shot?"
Ervil LeBaron was ultimately captured in 1979 and convicted of murder. He died in his cell of a heart attack in 1981.
"I was so thrilled to think after all these years of hiding and the pain and the heartache, to think that S-of-a-B was dead and gone... two days later, we get a phone call and find out my husband Verlan got killed in Mexico City in a car wreck," Spencer said.
Spencer said she believes her husband's death was an accident, but others don't. As the years went by, former church members and enemies of Ervil LeBaron died. Spencer counts 28.
"I'm always amazed when the LeBarons say there was an 'accident' and someone died," said Terry Clark, an assistant U.S. Attorney for Texas, in Houston. "I tend to think, from my understanding and dealing with them, they don't have accidents."
The deaths are believed to be tied to the "Book of the New Covenant." The FBI has called it a "bible" for LeBaron's followers, preaching that the only way to be redeemed is to spill blood. The 600-page book was smuggled out of the Utah State Prison and copies were distributed to family and followers.
"The historic roots of the family and the perverted doctrine it professed came straight out of the dark history of Utah and the religious heritage I share; that made it not only unique, but also quite disturbing," David Schwendiman, a former U.S. Attorney for Utah wrote in an e-mail interview with Fox 13 News. He is currently prosecuting war crimes in Bosnia.
"I've tried a lot of homicide cases, but this is the first time where I've seen a book where it outlined who was to be killed and why they are to be killed. And it's not just talk," Clark told Fox 13 News. "Many of these people have, in fact, been murdered by the LeBarons."
Clark said the book reads like the "maniacal ravings of a madman."
"But it's not," he said.
Former Salt Lake District Attorney David Yocum helped put Ervil LeBaron in prison and was on the hit-list.
"We were all very concerned that the followers out there might in fact carry out his wishes," Yocum said. "And we took precautions at the time. I got a concealed weapons permit."
The book was the catalyst for a series of bizarre killings carried out on June 27, 1988 -- four people murdered in Houston and Irving, Texas, at the same time -- at 4 p.m. Clark said they were killed because they were former members that had left the church who had been branded as a "son or daughter of perdition." Among the victims was 8-year-old Jenny Chynoweth.
"The killings in Texas were just absolutely astonishing as far as how they were carried out and the precision in which they were carried out," Yocum said. "It was obviously a professional hit."
Several of Ervil LeBaron's children were captured and convicted in the killings -- with one exception. Jacqueline Tarsa LeBaron is believed to be the mastermind behind the Four O'Clock murders.
To this day, some people still fear the book and its preachings of "blood atonement."
Irene Spencer met Ervil LeBaron in Mexico in 1953 when she became the second wife of his brother, Verlan. She said she watched as Ervil LeBaron took control of their polygamous church.
"Ervil was the one that got in, wanted to be the leader, wanted to be the king, wanted to take everybody's wives," she said in a recent interview with Fox 13 News.
In his Church of the Lamb of God, LeBaron sought to unite Utah's polygamist groups under one banner -- his. Those who stood in his way were killed. In 1977, two followers assassinated Dr. Rulon Allred, the leader of the Bluffdale-based Apostolic United Brethren (AUB). Afraid of his own brother, Verlan, his wives and children all went into hiding.
"Imagine the mafia coming after you every night," Spencer said. "I used to look at my children and wonder, do I run with the baby? Do I grab two and let the rest of them get killed and get shot?"
Ervil LeBaron was ultimately captured in 1979 and convicted of murder. He died in his cell of a heart attack in 1981.
"I was so thrilled to think after all these years of hiding and the pain and the heartache, to think that S-of-a-B was dead and gone... two days later, we get a phone call and find out my husband Verlan got killed in Mexico City in a car wreck," Spencer said.
Spencer said she believes her husband's death was an accident, but others don't. As the years went by, former church members and enemies of Ervil LeBaron died. Spencer counts 28.
"I'm always amazed when the LeBarons say there was an 'accident' and someone died," said Terry Clark, an assistant U.S. Attorney for Texas, in Houston. "I tend to think, from my understanding and dealing with them, they don't have accidents."
The deaths are believed to be tied to the "Book of the New Covenant." The FBI has called it a "bible" for LeBaron's followers, preaching that the only way to be redeemed is to spill blood. The 600-page book was smuggled out of the Utah State Prison and copies were distributed to family and followers.
"The historic roots of the family and the perverted doctrine it professed came straight out of the dark history of Utah and the religious heritage I share; that made it not only unique, but also quite disturbing," David Schwendiman, a former U.S. Attorney for Utah wrote in an e-mail interview with Fox 13 News. He is currently prosecuting war crimes in Bosnia.
"I've tried a lot of homicide cases, but this is the first time where I've seen a book where it outlined who was to be killed and why they are to be killed. And it's not just talk," Clark told Fox 13 News. "Many of these people have, in fact, been murdered by the LeBarons."
Clark said the book reads like the "maniacal ravings of a madman."
"But it's not," he said.
Former Salt Lake District Attorney David Yocum helped put Ervil LeBaron in prison and was on the hit-list.
"We were all very concerned that the followers out there might in fact carry out his wishes," Yocum said. "And we took precautions at the time. I got a concealed weapons permit."
The book was the catalyst for a series of bizarre killings carried out on June 27, 1988 -- four people murdered in Houston and Irving, Texas, at the same time -- at 4 p.m. Clark said they were killed because they were former members that had left the church who had been branded as a "son or daughter of perdition." Among the victims was 8-year-old Jenny Chynoweth.
"The killings in Texas were just absolutely astonishing as far as how they were carried out and the precision in which they were carried out," Yocum said. "It was obviously a professional hit."
Several of Ervil LeBaron's children were captured and convicted in the killings -- with one exception. Jacqueline Tarsa LeBaron is believed to be the mastermind behind the Four O'Clock murders.



