Nuwaubians appear to have vacated
compound
Associated Press/August 9, 2004
Eatonton, Ga. -- Members of the United Nuwaubian Nation of
Moors have apparently vacated land owned by the group in rural
Putnam County and in Athens.
This comes after a federal judge ordered the land, which
includes a 476-acre Putnam County compound and a $750,000 home in
Athens, be turned over to the government.
At its peak, as many as 500 people lived at the compound in
1999, said Putnam County Sheriff Howard Sills. But recently, fewer
than 50 had been living there.
And by Friday, no members of the Nuwaubian group could be seen
at its headquarters near Shady Dale. Left behind were a collection
of monuments, faux pyramids, totem poles and some cats and fish.
Officers from the Putnam County Animal Control office were at
the property rescuing the cats. Workers also were draining a
decorative pond and collecting the fish. A barricade prevents
vehicles from entering.
The religious sect's leader, Malachi York, was sentenced to 135
years in prison in April for child molestation and racketeering.
Prosecutors said he recruited older girls to groom younger girls
for sex with him and used the sect for his financial gain.
"The whole place, like York himself, was nothing but a facade,"
Sills said. "You can see that now. They sort of destroyed some
things. It's a surreal environment with junk, clothes scattered
around and statues about to fall down."
After York's sentencing, a dispute arose over whether he owned
the compound and the home in Athens. But both are now in the hands
of the U.S. Marshals Service.
The Putnam County property has been assessed at nearly $1
million, Sills said.
U.S. District Judge Ashley Royal will decide this Friday
whether to order a new trial for York, Sills said. An attorney
from New York, Jonathan Marks, now is listed as York's attorney.
Sills said York has had 13 different attorneys since his arrest
nearly two years ago.
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