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AMBER Alert ELINTRA FISCHER: Missing from Monteview, ID - 1 Jan 2023 - Age 16 | RACHELLE & ALLEN missing since 22 June 2025 (2 Viewers)

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I haven't posted a thread in a very long time. I had to remember what to put in the title and find the way to make one.
This is the case Nate Eaton referred to last night at the end of a Vallow recap. He just put up his coverage from tonight. I haven't even listened to it yet. Member of the FDLS church, a polygamist group and that may be neither here nor there as we follow it.

I have watched Nate's first minute or two and it already grips imo.



MEDIA - Elintra Fischer, Missing, Age 16, Monteview, IDAHO 01/01/23
 
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Search for missing Idaho teens linked to FLDS group extends to Arizona​

The search for missing Idaho teens Rachelle Fischer, 15, and Allen Fischer, 13, whose disappearance is linked to their religious beliefs, has now spread to Arizona after it’s believed they were taken to the state.

The Uvalde Foundation for Kids said it was expanding its search efforts to the state through its Tucson, Arizona, chapter after receiving a tip that the teens may be headed to Fredonia. According to NewsNation local affiliate KTVX, the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office in Idaho said it was unaware of any information that would lead its investigation of the missing teens there.
 

Search for missing Idaho teens believed to be taken by FLDS Church expands into South Dakota​

The Uvalde Foundation for Kids said its search for the children has led to several communities, including Arizona, Colorado and Trenton, Utah, where they had lived previously due to their religious beliefs. Now, the search has expanded into Custer, South Dakota, where the foundation says there may be a connection with a former FLDS compound.

“[The] investigation into the missing teens has now uncovered that the buyers of the compound are affiliated with a Colorado group loosely connected to the FLDS, where the foundation had also expanded its search,” the Uvalde Foundation said in a media release. “The compound in South Dakota’s Black Hills was, according to the release, owned by the FLDS and sold recently to three former members who allegedly broke with the sect years ago.”

The Uvalde Foundation said it had requested to search the South Dakota properties but was denied entry.

As the search for Allen and Rachelle continues, the Uvalde Foundation said it is offering up to a $5,000 reward for their safe return. The two teens were last seen wearing traditional FLDS clothing; Rachelle was reportedly wearing a dark green prairie dress, while Allen was last seen in a light blue shirt with jeans and black slip-on shoes.
 
What the heck are they doing sharing this info??
How come LE are not looking for the kids and following up on this compound information? It's a pity Nate has not got interested in this case.

Here's an article on the compound in South Dakota they may be referring to.

 
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How come LE are not looking for the kids and following up on this compound information? It's a pity Nate has not got interested in this case.

Here's an article on the compound in South Dakota they may be referring to.

3 kids now and a whole $5,000 reward and them outing information
 

She left a fundamentalist Mormon cult. Then her children went missing. ‘Somebody came by the shop and hauled off with them’​

In the Western part of the country, a disturbing pattern is unfolding: children of mothers who fled a fundamentalist polygamous Mormon sect are vanishing — and their families fear it’s part of a radical religious agenda.

In the latest case, Elizabeth Roundy of Jefferson County, Idaho, says her two youngest children, 13-year-old Allen Larand Fischer and 15-year-old Rachelle Leray Fischer, disappeared last month while she was at Bible class.

“My children asked if they could go down to the shop to get on the internet…so they could watch videos while I went to the class,” Roundy recently told EastIdahoNews.com. “I allowed them to do it, and that wasn’t very smart of me. I let them go down there, and when I came back to get them, they were gone. Somebody came by the shop and hauled off with them.”

According to the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office, a report was filed on June 22 after the teens went missing from their home in Monteview, Idaho. An Amber Alert was issued the next day. They haven’t been seen since.

Authorities suspect the teens may have returned to the FLDS community in Trenton, Utah, where they previously lived. They believe the disappearance was not random.

“Their mother was previously an FLDS member,” said Jennifer Fullmer, a public information officer with the sheriff’s office. “She was exiled and had to leave the children there. And then when she finally got custody of them, she brought them back to her hometown of Monteview.”

In 2021, Roundy was granted full custody of all three children, who she shares with her ex-husband and their father, Nephi Fischer.

“We believe that [her children] wanted to go back to the FLDS lifestyle,” Fullmer added.

Still, investigators don’t believe the children simply ran away. “There’s no buses. There’s no trains. It’s out in the middle of the desert,” Fullmer told PEOPLE. “Mom’s belief is that somebody from the FLDS picked up the children.”

“I believe they were watching and waiting for the right moment,” Roundy said. “I’ve seen their vehicles driving by, even past the shop where the kids disappeared Friday night.”

Roundy also believes that the disappearance of her children was an orchestrated attempt by FLDS members to reclaim them for the church, spurred by a chilling 2022 prophecy from imprisoned cult leader Warren Jeffs.

“It’s terrifying,” Roundy said. “The things they told us to do when I was still part of it were erratic and manipulative. You never know what they’re capable of.”

Jeffs is currently serving a life sentence for child sexual assault in Texas after arranging marriages between underage girls and older men. His 2022 “revelation” directed followers to “consecrate and return their children to the church by any means necessary” and prepare them to become “pure” by dying and being resurrected.

Fullmer confirmed that this disturbing prophecy was part of what prompted law enforcement to issue the Amber Alert.

“What the information we got was about this revelation — that the children are supposed to gather to assist in the building of Zion so that they can die and become pure and translated beings,” she said.

“We don’t have any concept of when or how quickly children should be gathered and brought back to the church so that they can die and become pure beings.”

This isn’t the first time Roundy has seen one of her children disappear.

In January 2023, her eldest daughter, Elintra Dee Fischer, then 17, vanished under similar circumstances.



Tonia Tewell, founder of Holding Out Help, a nonprofit that supports women and children fleeing from polygamist groups, told The Independent that she believes the situation is part of a growing, dangerous pattern.

“This isn’t religion — it’s a human trafficking ring,” she told The Independent. “This is human trafficking in the name of God.”

According to Tewell, the FLDS has long used family separation as a method of control.

“It’s kind of the FLDS’s ammo — to separate families, to have control over all people,” she said. “Because at the end of the day, they know if you mess up, what’s going to happen is you’re going to lose everybody that you care about.”

Tewell said that Jeffs’ 2022 prophecy significantly escalated the danger.

“The revelations from Warren Jeffs are very scary,” she previously told ABC News. “Their alternative is hell. What would you pick? These kids are being taught that salvation only comes through death and resurrection — that’s brainwashing.”

But then some of the “moms started to wake up,” Tewell said.She said some mothers, including Roundy, eventually recognized the horrifying implications and escaped. “These are women who were born and bred in this system, and they logically knew something was very wrong.”

With legal support, many of these women were able to win full custody. But the FLDS does not abide by custody rulings, Tewell said.

“They believe God’s law is above the law of the land,” she explained. “So when these kids go back to visit their fathers, they’re being brainwashed all over again. And then, surprise, they vanish.”


Back in Monteview, Idaho, Roundy is barely holding on.

“I’m very concerned about their well-being, and of course, I’m missing them very badly,” she said. “I’m heartbroken they’re gone.”

For now, she’s urging anyone with information to come forward.

“I’ll never stop looking for them,” she said.

“Not ever."
 
BRING THEM HOME

My children were ‘kidnapped by a cult who stalked my home for months’ – I’m terrified they’ll be punished if I speak out​

THE mother of two missing teenagers, who she believes were kidnapped by a radical cult, fears her children are being punished over her continued efforts to reunite with them.


On June 22, Roundy’s nightmare became a reality when she said followers of FLDS, along with her eldest daughter, Elintra, who ran away in 2023 and returned to the group, allegedly kidnapped Rachelle and Allen from an internet cafe while she was at a Bible study class nearby.

The distraught mother immediately called police and an Amber Alert for the missing children was issued.

But nearly five months since their disappearance, Roundy and her one remaining son, Benjamin, 20, have continued to search for clues to the whereabouts of her children.

“Just sad and lonely without them. I miss them both terribly and I wish they were here,” Roundy said of her youngest children, Rachelle and Allen.

“I got in the kitchen and pull out my recipe box to make dinner and there’s a recipe in there that I come across that Elintra wrote,” she added as her voice began to crack.

“Shelly [Rachelle] and Allen would both sleep with me in my room until they ran away.”

The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office told The U.S. Sun that the investigation is ongoing, but there have been no new leads recently.

The police agency said that despite finding no evidence of forced kidnapping, detectives are still working the case.

Roundy acknowledged that her children potentially rejoined the group on their own, but argued that it was because of constant manipulation by FLDS followers.

She said her youngest children would often sneak out of the house and secretly meet with members of the group, who Roundy believes would give them burner phones to communicate with them.

“When they were here for the first several months, they would go on long walks every day – we were pretty sure they were meeting with those people,” Benjamin told The U.S. Sun as he sat beside his mother in their modest living room.

Benjamin said his siblings were convinced their mother had poisoned their food and he even caught them talking to people he believes were FLDS members at a gravel pit down the road from their home.

Roundy added, “If I would have been able to just keep them and those guys would have left us alone they would have come around so quick – all of them.

“But they were continually being manipulated and brainwashed and told what to do by those other people that are still in the FLDS.

“It’s really sad – the situation they’re in, between a rock and a hard spot. Just really breaks my heart. I love them both dearly.”

Roundy believes members of the FLDS broke into her home before her children disappeared, breaking down her back door, and stealing Rachelle, Allen, and Elintra’s birth certificates and baby pictures.

Roundy lives in fear that her children are being punished because of her continued efforts to try to locate them.

“I’m quite concerned about them because of everything that’s still going on in the LDS group,” she said.

“There’s still people that are running them, they’re just out to use and abuse people.

“They don’t care about their well-being at all. It’s just a big cycle of manipulation.

“By now, they’ve turned it into such a cult that religion has very little part of what they’re doing.”

Roundy is disturbed by the thought that Rachelle and Allen are potentially being locked up around the clock.

“It’s pure evil. The children are probably locked up 24/7 and it breaks my heart,” she continued.

“The whole time they’re doing that to them, they’re sitting there telling them it was my fault.

“Telling them that it’s because I put it all over the news and stuff, telling them it’s my fault that they have to be locked up.

“Whereas, I want them here and they wouldn’t be locked up and they know that. I know in their hearts they know the truth.”

Roundy said she still holds a glimmer of hope that her children will eventually come to the realization that she was right about the group, and renounce its beliefs as she did five years ago.

“I just keep praying. I hope that something sinks in,” she said.

“I hope that they can get themselves out of there before anything bad happens to them.
 
Apparently there's more than just the Fischer children missing. This article has details of more mothers looking for their children. 10 children altogether, including the two latest Fischer children.


ABC News


Former FLDS members team up with biker group to search for missing children

4 moms searching for 8 kids fear Warren Jeffs' prophecies may mean mass suicide.
ByLauren Lantry and Vera Drymon
September 4, 2024, 9:37 AM
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9:55

The Road Warriors for the Missing are looking for eight missing children who all grew up in the FLDS church.
ABC News
On a cold morning in April, a group of bikers, clad in leather, gathered at dawn in Brigham City, Utah, in an empty parking lot next to a park. The men and women of Road Warriors for the Missing weren’t getting ready for a joyride. Instead, they were preparing to chase down a lead. Their goal: looking for a child who has been missing since January 2023.
Elintra Fischer, a 17-year-old girl born into the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (FLDS), the polygamist breakaway offshoot of Mormonism, ran away from her mother’s home on New Year's Day in 2023. Her mother and local law enforcement have been looking for her ever since.
"The network we're up against is, is big. It's expansive," Jason Clark, the founder of Road Warriors, said about the FLDS. "They've got a lot of, a lot of places to go. They've got a lot of places where they can put these kids that are making [them] difficult to find."
biker-03-abc-jt-240903_1725392423711_hpMain_16x9.jpg

The Road Warriors for the Missing are looking for eight missing children who all grew up in the FLDS church.
ABC News
Four mothers – Lorraine Jessop, Mirinda Johnson, Elizabeth Roundy, and Sarah Johnson – all ex-members of the FLDS, are looking for their missing children. Their kids, labeled as ‘runaways’ by law enforcement, have disappeared from remote towns dotting the Rocky Mountains.
The Road Warriors’ efforts include trying to find all the missing children; eight in total, one as young as 13.
In addition to Elintra, Salome Jessop, Denver Barlow, Manden Barlow, Truson Barlow, Nathan Barlow, Summer Barlow and Benjamin Barlow are also missing.
“I need to believe you are watching and waiting for me,” Sarah Johnson, the mother of Salome, who has been missing for four years, said at a press conference. “I love you, son. It's never too late to call me. I'll always be here.”
 

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