Watch: Justin Bieber’s Pastor Judah Smith Speaks Out on Accusations His Church Is a ‘Cult’
Christine Marie moved to Colorado City, Ariz., in 2016, to offer assistance to members of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. And she remembers being told that they didn’t need “outsider help.”
“Well, guess what, they did,” Marie says in Netflix’s Trust Me: The False Prophet. “Yes, they f–king did.”
Because, as the four-part series recounts in haunting fashion, the abuse of underage girls did not end with the arrest of FLDS leader Warren Jeffs, who was sentenced in 2011 to life in prison for sexually assaulting a 12-year-old girl he claimed as his “spiritual bride,” plus another 20 years for assaulting a 15-year-old girl.
Now multiple adherents of Jeffs, including his follower turned self-anointed “prophet” Samuel Rappylee Bateman are serving prison sentences for participating in a child sexual abuse ring.
The Netflix series details how Marie—a self-described former “mainstream Mormon” who once fell under the spell of a false prophet—and her video producer husband Tolga Katas were welcomed by Bateman to document his group, with the sect leader thinking it would be a good way to spread his message beyond their isolated community.
Instead, it was the beginning of the end for Bateman’s rein.
The 50-year-old amassed more than 20 “wives” over the years, 10 of them underage, according to federal prosecutors. In December 2024, he was sentenced to 50 years in prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit transportation of a minor for criminal sexual activity and conspiracy to commit kidnapping. Other charges were dropped as part of his plea deal.
Courtesy of Netflix
“With respect to the minor girls,” U.S. District Judge Susan Brnovich told Bateman during his sentencing, “you took them from their homes, from their families, and made them into your sex slaves. You raped them on a regular basis.”
And yet Bateman’s following remains largely intact, according to The False Prophet.
Courtesy of Netflix
“The vast majority of the adults featured in this film are still followers of Sam Bateman to this day,” series director Rachel Dretzin told Netflix’s Tudum. “All of the minors [in the documentary] have finally separated from Sam and ‘woken up,’ as we call it, but in many cases, their parents have not.”
According to Dretzin, Bateman “is in daily contact with his wives [from prison], which in some ways allows him to still have too much power because he’s now been ‘martyred.'”
But how did he ultimately get caught? And what happened to the women who have since cut ties with Bateman and his community? Here’s what you need to know.
Courtesy of Netflix
Courtesy of Netflix
Courtesy of Netflix
Courtesy of Netflix
Courtesy of Netflix
Courtesy of Netflix
Courtesy of Netflix
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