Anagrammy,I agree.He's made numerous trips to Carthage jail, to Nauvoo and the Hill Cumorah and truly believes that he will build "the new Jerusalem and the temple in Jackson County, Missouri" -- and that in the last days he will be released from prison by the lost tribes of Israel and will be revealed as the true prophet.Our modern mainstream LDS "prophets" are tempered somewhat by age, and by those authorities and citizens who surround them. Most LDS folks expect our prophets to give watered-down revelations and to wither and die within 5-10 years after they come to power.But Warren Jeffs is an unstable egomaniac who rules by fear. He has no one to temper his delusions.His favorite wife Naomi is a player. She is cunning. As his scribe she keeps watch over him as he sleeps and writes about him as her all powerful Lord and husband. She writes spectacular tales of his levitating in bed, while circles of flame and pillars of light surround him. She bares witness that he is the prophet.When he disappeared for up to a year at a time from Shortcreek she would be by his side on his road trips across the country. They were both dressed in "gentile" clothing so that they would not attract police attention. Jeffs was convinced that someone was trying to assassinate him. Such paranoia!Here is a photo of them in "gentile" clothing:Naomi Jessop Jeffs was an FLDS "princess" -- daughter of Merril Jessop. When she was 11 she kidnapped a girl of 8 years old, tormented her and held her captive for an entire day by a weed-choked waterway. The whole town searched for this girl.When her sin of "kidnapping" was found out, Naomi was not punished or counseled. The obedient polygs in Short Creek hushed it up.At 17 she became the wife of Rulon Jeffs. Then the wife of his son, Warren Jeffs.She and Warren Jeffs made their way to Mardi Gras on their cross country trip. Warren Jeffs cursed the evil party goers in the crowd for their nudity and drunken ways.Warren Jeffs asked to God "to destroy this wicked generation."Of course, when Hurricane Katrina destroyed New Orleans six months later, Warren Jeffs was convinced that he had summoned the "whirlwind judgment of God."