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Netflix afslører ny profet i FLDS-sekt efter Warren Jeffs

Netflix Exposes New FLDS Prophet in 'Trust Me' Documentary

Samuel Bateman's rise to power within the fundamentalist sect reveals ongoing abuse following Warren Jeffs' imprisonment

Published
April 17, 2026 at 08:05 AM

Quick Facts

LocationShort Creek, Utah/Arizona grænsen

Netflix's new documentary miniseries *Trust Me: The False Prophet* premiered on April 8, 2026, shining a light on the continued exploitation within the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (FLDS) nearly two decades after the imprisonment of its most notorious leader.

The four-episode series, directed by Rachel Dretzin, centers on Samuel Bateman, a man who declared himself the successor to Warren Jeffs and built a following within the FLDS community spanning the Utah-Arizona border towns of Hildale and Colorado City. What begins as an examination of cult dynamics evolves into a harrowing account of systematic abuse that mirrors the crimes perpetrated by his predecessor.

Bateman's criminal enterprise came to light through an unconventional investigation. Documentary filmmakers Dr. Christine Marie, a cult expert, and Tolga Katas, a videographer and Marie's husband, gathered evidence by positioning themselves within the community under the guise of creating a cultural documentary about FLDS life. This undercover approach yielded audio and video recordings that would ultimately form the documentary's most damning evidence.

According to FBI findings presented in the series, Bateman victimized at least 10 children over several years. The documentary features recorded confessions in which Bateman himself admits to abusing women and children on both audio and video. These admissions provided law enforcement with irrefutable evidence of his crimes.

Bateman's arrest in 2022 marked a turning point in the investigation. Despite initial resistance from parts of the community—some members remained loyal to Bateman's claims of spiritual authority—law enforcement agencies including the Colorado City/Hildale Police Department and the FBI moved forward with prosecution. The case culminated in a 50-year prison sentence, effectively removing Bateman from circulation for the foreseeable future.

The documentary's context cannot be separated from the shadow of Warren Jeffs, the FLDS leader who controlled the sect for decades. Jeffs was arrested in Las Vegas after evading the FBI for more than one year. His capture ended one of the most extensive manhunts in recent history. Jeffs now serves a life sentence plus 20 years for child sex assault charges, yet the institutional structures and ideologies he cultivated within the FLDS persisted.

Bateman's rise demonstrates how vulnerable these closed communities remain to predatory leadership. By claiming spiritual succession to Jeffs, Bateman leveraged existing hierarchies and belief systems to consolidate power and justify abuse. The documentary illustrates how cult dynamics—isolation, theological manipulation, and hierarchical control—create environments where such exploitation can flourish even after high-profile prosecutions.

*Trust Me: The False Prophet* serves as both a portrait of a specific criminal and a broader examination of institutional failure. The series documents how community members, particularly survivors and former believers, gradually recognized the patterns of abuse and abuse of authority. Their testimonies form the backbone of the narrative, offering insight into how manipulation operates at intimate levels within faith communities.

For international audiences unfamiliar with the FLDS, the documentary provides essential context about the sect's origins, its break from mainstream Latter-Day Saint practice, and the specific theological justifications used to perpetuate abuse. The series does not sensationalize but rather methodically builds its case through testimony, evidence, and expert analysis.

The release of this documentary on a major streaming platform signals renewed public interest in understanding how such organizations operate and persist. It also underscores the importance of investigative journalism and law enforcement collaboration in exposing crimes that occur in isolated communities beyond mainstream oversight.

**Sources:** https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/former-flds-member-speaks-out-new-netflix-documentary-highlighting-abuse https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7iPaXgUN0-U https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-djpXYgWUOk https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/trust_me_the_false_prophet/s01 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trust_Me:_The_False_Prophet

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