William E. Jessop

William Edson Jessop (born William Edson Timpson) is a leader in the Mormon fundamentalist movement.

In a January 2007 telephone conversation between Jessop and church president Warren Jeffs, Jeffs suggested that Jessop was the rightful leader of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (FLDS Church). In a jailhouse visit with his brother Nephi, Jeffs reportedly stated that "Brother William E. Jessop has been the prophet" of the FLDS Church since the death of Rulon Jeffs.[citation needed]

Family background

Jessop is the son of Alma A. Timpson and one of his wives, Kathy. In the mid-1980s, Timpson had a falling out with FLDS Church leader Leroy S. Johnson and left the FLDS Church to start the schismatic Centennial Park Group. However, his wife Kathy refused to follow him, and she and her children remained with the FLDS Church members. Kathy became the wife of Fred Jessop, and William adopted his stepfather's surname.[citation needed]

Claim to leadership

Prior to his death, Rulon Jeffs had instructed his son Warren Jeffs to ordain William Jessop to be a counselor to Fred Jessop, who was a bishop in the FLDS Church in Hildale, Utah. Warren Jeffs has claimed that when he performed this ordination, he made William Jessop an apostle—the highest priesthood ordination in the church—and that this ordination gave Jessop a right to lead the FLDS Church.[citation needed]

References

  • Carol McKinley, With Warren Jeffs in prison for life, a new “prophet” is trying to seize control of the cult from his family
  • Hilary Hylton, "A New Prophet for the Polygamists?", Time, 2008-07-18
  • Brooke Adams (2007-11-30). "What Warren said to William". Salt Lake Tribune. Archived from the original on 2011-10-01. Retrieved 2009-03-12.
  • "Washington County sends dossiers of select FLDS members to Texas officials", Deseret News, 2008-06-11
Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints titles
Preceded by
Rulon T. Jeffs
Prophet
Warren Jeffs

2002 – present
With: Disputed interruptions by:
Lyle Jeffs (designated acting president)

William E. Jessop (once momentarily successor)
Merril Jessop (once de facto head)
Wendell L. Nielsen (one time head of temporal affairs)
Succeeded by
incumbent
Warren Jeffs
  • v
  • t
  • e
Leaders in the Mormon fundamentalist movement
Recognized leaders[a]Disputed leaders[b]Early fundamentalist leaders
Leaders of the fundamentalist sects
Apostolic United BrethrenFLDS Church
Centennial Park groupLatter Day Church of ChristLeBaron Order
Independents and other leaders
  1. ^ [a] Mormon leaders prior to the start of the fundamentalist movement and recognized by most fundamentalists as legitimate church leaders.
  2. ^ [b] Mormon leaders that made changes to church policies on plural marriage; recognition of legitimacy of leadership varies by fundamentalist group.