Food stamps, a Ford Pickup and John Deere equipment.
KELOLAND News is learning more about accusations that led to the arrest of a South Dakota religious leader.
Seth Jeffs appeared in Federal Court Wednesday afternoon in Rapid City.
Before the hearing, a federal judge unsealed court documents detailing what led to the arrest of a religious leader in South Dakota.
Seth Jeffs is the Bishop of a congregation of FLDS members.
The compound is located in the southern black hills, just west of Pringle.
Between 2011 and 2013, he's accused of telling members to use their food stamps illegally and how to avoid getting caught by the government.
According to the documents, he and other leaders in other states used $13,000 of the food stamp money to make payments on John Deere equipment.
The papers show that more than $30,000 went toward payments for a Ford F-350 pickup.
The documents also show the group spent nearly $17,000 on paper products.
Ten years ago, back in 2006, the FBI was looking for Warren Jeffs - he was on its 10 Most Wanted list and because he had one of his compounds located in the Black Hills, there was reason to believe he might be hiding out there; so KELOLAND News sent Don Jorgensen and a photographer out to the compound to investigate.
The polygamist sect isn't on any tourist map. In fact, it was extremely difficult to find.
Locals had to tell us how to get there, but warned us we wouldn't see anything from the road.
When we got there, the entire compound was surrounded by barbed-wire fence and had 'no trespassing' signs posted at the front gate.
Even though Warren Jeffs was wanted by the FBI, local authorities back then said there was no reason to issue a search warrant, nor did they have any reason to believe Warren Jeffs was even there.
Based off some information Don Jorgensen had gotten, he and his photographer found a back way to get closer to the compound, but had to quietly hike through the hills to see it.
They were told to be careful, because the fundamentalists had guns.
They scouted out the area the day before.
"Familiarize ourselves with the landscape and some of the people up here, knowing who we could trust and who we couldn't trust, most everyone we run into is very friendly, but very few people wanted to talk about the fundamentalists," Jorgensen reported.
One person wasn't afraid to talk. Flora Jessop was a former fundamentalist and was forced to marry her cousin when she was just 16. She talked about how she escaped and why she was fearful.
"These boys' mission is to cleanse all the wicked off of the North American continent, so the second coming can happen," Jessop said in a 2006 interview.
Jessop also couldn't figure out why the FBI hadn't found one of its 10 Most Wanted.
"You can find one cow with mad cow disease in the middle of a million cows, but you can't find a 6'4" goofy lookig SOB wandering around with women dressed like they're from the 18th Century, how hard are they looking," Jessop said.
Warren Jeffs was eventually arrested and convicted of sexual assault and aggravated sexual assault of children in connection with a raid of the FLDS Church in Texas, where he's now serving life in prison, plus 20 years.