FLDS Prophet Bateman Gets Fifty Years — Is It Enough?
True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
Tony Brueski
4.2 • 612 Ratings
🗓️ 10 April 2026
⏱️ 16 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Samuel Bateman is serving fifty years. His follower Ladell Bistline Jr. got life after giving six of his underage daughters to Bateman and participating in their abuse. Torrance Bistline, the financial engine behind the operation, got thirty-five years. Seven of Bateman's adult wives were convicted. In total, all eleven co-defendants in this case have been held accountable — making it one of the most thorough federal prosecutions of cult-based child trafficking in recent history.
But accountability and resolution are different things. This final episode examines what justice looks like when it can't undo the damage. The defense called Bateman "mentally ill" and "delusional," the product of an upbringing that normalized the criminal. The prosecution countered that Bateman and his followers built their own ideology to serve their own interests. The judge sentenced him to what amounts to a life sentence and called him the worst kind of abuser.
Meanwhile, Faith Bistline — who escaped the FLDS and spent years fighting to expose Bateman — is now caring for the children her own brothers helped destroy. Parents of victimized girls attended court hearings to support Bateman, not their daughters. And the conditions that produced both Warren Jeffs and Samuel Bateman remain structurally intact in Short Creek, where thousands of FLDS members still live under the One Man Rule theology.
The hopeful counterweight: the Short Creek Dream Center, built inside Jeffs' former compound, serves as a refuge for people leaving. Survivors are rebuilding. The rescued girls are in school, driving, reclaiming their lives. One of them stood in a courtroom and told Bateman she never needed him. That's the sound of someone breaking free from a system built to make escape impossible. The question is how many others are still waiting.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Colts. Hidden Killers Investigates. Here now, Tony Bruske. Faith Bistline grew up in the FLDS. She got out. She built a life on the other side, and then she watched her entire family get swallowed by Samuel Bateman. |
| 0:33.9 | Two of her brothers, two of her sisters, two of her nieces, her own mother, all followers of a man who declared himself a prophet and proceeded to abuse children under the banner of God's will. |
| 0:41.9 | Faith's family members weren't bystanders. They were convicted in the federal case. |
| 0:47.9 | Her brother Liddell Bistline Jr. gave his own daughters to Bateman. He was found guilty at trial and sentenced to life in prison. Her brother Torrance managed Bateman's finances, |
| 0:52.9 | bought him luxury cars, and was sentenced to 35 years. |
| 0:57.6 | Family members she grew up with, people she loved, people she tried to warn. |
| 1:03.4 | They chose the prophet. |
| 1:06.2 | Sam Bateman has utterly shattered my family into a million pieces, Faith said. That's how I picture it. |
| 1:15.5 | Faith didn't just survive the FLDS. She fought. She spent years trying to expose Bateman and |
| 1:20.8 | protect the girls in his group. She spoke to reporters. She talked to investigators. She did |
| 1:26.0 | everything a person can do from the outside of closed system to sound an alarm. |
| 1:30.3 | And when the case was finally over, when the arrests were finally made, the trials concluded. |
| 1:36.3 | The sentences handed down. |
| 1:39.3 | Faith became something she probably never imagined. |
| 1:45.0 | She became the person raising the children her own family had helped destroy. |
| 1:53.0 | Faith Bisling now cares for some of the girls who were rescued from Bateman's group. |
| 2:02.4 | The children her brothers gave to a predator are being raised by the woman who try to stop it. |
| 2:09.4 | If that doesn't tell you everything about what this case did to a community, nothing will. |
| 2:16.3 | This is the final episode of this series and it's not about |
| 2:19.6 | wrapping up loose ends it's about what justice looked like in this case who |
| 2:24.9 | paid how much and whether any of it was enough I'm sure to get your thoughts in the |
| 2:31.5 | comment section on substack and YouTube as we go through it. |
... |
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