Roy Jeffs died when he was 26 years old, just eight days before his 27th birthday, on Tuesday, May 29, 2019, and the cause of his death was suicide. Keep Sweet: Pray and Obey, the horrifying Netflix documentary, that details the atrocities and capture of polygamist cult leader and child assaulter Warren Jeffs, doesn’t come with adequate trigger warnings. Go through the article to learn more about Roy Jeffs’ cause of death.
To compete with all of the other streaming services out there, Netflix has had to improve its original content show, which it has done with its latest addition. The four-part docuseries, titled Keep Sweet: Pray And Obey, goes into the terrifying past of Warren Jeffs and his involvement in the infamous Yearning for Zion Ranch in Texas.
Rulon Jeffs, popularly known as Uncle Rulon, is the main center of the show. He was the founder of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in 1986. Rulon’s views were influenced by those he had extracted from Mormonism, and he founded a radical religious cult that branched off from the Mormon Church. However, there was one major distinction between the two: Rulon’s Church promoted polygamy.
On Wednesday, June 8 Netflix released the show, which has indeed captured many viewers’ attention. As a result, many people want to know more about Roy Jeffs and his cause of death. Well, we’ve got you covered.
Previously, we touched on Diane Weyermann.
Keep Sweet: Pray and Obey, the horrifying Netflix documentary that details the atrocities and capture of polygamist cult leader and child assaulter Warren Jeffs doesn’t come with adequate trigger warnings. Though filmmaker Rachel Dretzin’s (@rdmerlin) four-part series is at times difficult to watch, the first-hand tales from survivors are nothing short of incredible.
Roy Jeffs, a former member of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, was born on June 5, 1992, and died on May 29, 2019. His father Warren Jeffs, the self-proclaimed prophet, had 54 children, and he was one of them.
After leaving the FLDS, Roy became one of the first of his father’s children to accuse him of sexual abuse. Warren Jeffs, Roy’s father, sexually and psychologically assaulted him as a child. He was determined to convey his experience to help other family members break out of the organization led by their father, who is serving a life sentence in Texas for sexually assaulting young women he deemed brides.
In 2015, Roy Jeffs told the Associated Press that his father had an iron fist over the group headquartered along the Utah-Arizona state boundary, segregating families and prohibiting items like movies and bicycles. Roy was one of the first to accuse the polygamous sect prophet of sexually abusing children.
Roy Jeffs died when he was 26 years old, just eight days before his 27th birthday, on Tuesday, May 29, 2019. The cause of his death was suicide. Jeffs committed suicide at his Salt Lake City residence. Funeral services were held at Larkin Sunset Gardens Mortuary in Sandy, Utah, on June 8, 2019. His family set up a GoFundMe account to help with burial expenses.
During his childhood, despite being denied access to television and toys, Jeffs reported a joyful childhood spent with his mother landscaping and gardening. However, he felt neglected and ostracized by his father, and he witnessed his mother’s psychological torture (who was not one of his favored wives).
His father began to isolate him from the rest of the family and town when he was around ten years old. When Jeff was 12 years old, he and his mother had transported away for the first time. At the age of 14, three days after his father’s imprisonment in 2006, he was taken to a Wyoming ranch without his mother. He was transferred from a hiding place to the compounds, which served as a haven for him.
In 2015, Roy Jeffs exposed and told The Associated Press that his father ruled over the group situated along the Utah-Arizona border with an iron grip, separating families and prohibiting items like movies and bicycles. Roy Jeffs’s mother remained in the group, and his sister Richard said the entire separation from her was very hard for him.
He was allowed to rejoin his family at the YFZ Ranch, but he only stayed for three weeks due to his father’s admission that he was attracted to some of his father’s wives (who were close to his age). He believed the confession was required since God had disclosed all of his life’s details.
Before you leave, check out Warren’s net worth.
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