Samuel Bateman: The False Prophet of Short Creek
True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
Tony Brueski
4.2 β’ 612 Ratings
ποΈ 6 April 2026
β±οΈ 20 minutes
ποΈ Recording | iTunes | RSS
π§ΎοΈ Download transcript
Summary
The FLDS put Warren Jeffs in prison for life. Then the same community, the same theology, and the same obedience structure produced Samuel Bateman β and he did it all over again. More than twenty wives. Children as young as nine. Fathers volunteering their own daughters. An interstate operation spanning four states. And a fifty-year federal sentence that might still not be enough to break the cycle.
Bateman's case is the most significant cult-based child trafficking prosecution in years, and it's back in the spotlight with Netflix's Trust Me: The False Prophet, which chronicles the couple who infiltrated his inner circle and helped bring him down. But the documentary tells only part of the story. This five-part series tells the rest β starting with the system that made Bateman possible.
Short Creek, the twin communities of Colorado City, Arizona, and Hildale, Utah, has been the FLDS stronghold for nearly a century. Jeffs ran it as a closed state β cameras in homes, security patrols, no outside media, marriages assigned and dissolved at his sole discretion. When he went to prison, he tried to maintain control through coded letters and phone calls. His followers built wooden replicas of his cell to sit inside and share his suffering. But the community splintered, and Bateman recruited from the broken pieces β people conditioned from birth to follow a prophet, desperate for someone to fill the void.
The question this episode asks isn't how Bateman became a prophet. It's what kind of place produces them generation after generation β and whether anything can stop it.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Colts, Hidden Killers Investigates. Here now, Tony Bruske. Before Samuel Baitman had followers, |
| 0:09.6 | before he had 20 wives, before federal agents pulled children from a sealed trailer on a highway |
| 0:15.1 | in Flagstaff, he tried to take his own daughter. According to federal records, Bateman attempted to claim his only daughter as a spiritual wife. |
| 0:27.2 | He reportedly offered her Doritos and $50. |
| 0:31.1 | I mean, what an offer. |
| 0:33.6 | And told her that if his feelings were right, he'd make her have a child. |
| 0:40.3 | That language comes to an FBI affidavit based on an interview of the girl gave it to advocates in 2020. |
| 0:45.9 | She told her mother what he said. |
| 0:47.6 | Her mother took her and left. |
| 0:49.9 | They got a restraining order. |
| 0:51.7 | That should have been the end of Samuel Bateman. |
| 0:54.1 | A man who tried to groom his own child should have been finished in any community anywhere, right? |
| 1:01.1 | But Short Creek is not any community. |
| 1:04.9 | After that restraining order, after his only wife and daughter fled, Samuel Bateman didn't lose standing. |
| 1:12.7 | He gained followers. |
| 1:19.6 | Within months, he was calling himself a prophet. Within a year, fathers in that same community were handing him their daughters, girls as young as nine years old, and calling it |
| 1:26.0 | God's will. |
| 1:28.3 | Not because they didn't know what he was, |
| 1:31.5 | because the system they were raised in told them that when a prophet speaks, |
| 1:36.9 | you don't ask questions. |
| 1:39.1 | You obey. |
| 1:41.3 | This is the story of how that system works, not just Bateman. |
... |
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