Utah mother charged with international kidnapping claims she was saving kids from 'end of times'

Utah mother Elleshia Anne Seymour, who believed she was saving her kids from "the end of times," is facing federal kidnapping charges after she fled to Croatia with her four children.

Utah mother Elleshia Anne Seymour, who believed she was saving her kids from "the end of times," is facing federal kidnapping charges after she fled to Croatia with her four children. (Kendall Seymour)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Elleshia Seymour, 35, faces federal kidnapping charges and state custodial charges after fleeing to Croatia.
  • She took her four children without permission from their fathers, citing "end of times" beliefs, prosecutors said.
  • Seymour was extradited to Utah and made her first federal court appearance Monday.

SALT LAKE CITY — A Utah mother, who believed she was saving her kids from "the end of times," is facing federal kidnapping charges after she fled to Croatia with her four children.

Elleshia Anne Seymour, 35, of West Jordan, is accused of traveling to Europe with her four children without court approval or permission from the fathers of the children. On Jan. 28, she was indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of international parental kidnapping and passport fraud. She made her initial federal court appearance Monday.

West Jordan police started urgently searching for the four kids in December after Kendall Seymour — father to the three oldest children — realized something was wrong when they didn't show up to daycare. He had last seen the children a week prior when he dropped them off at school the week of Thanksgiving, which was the start of the mother's scheduled custody time.

"Seymour did not notify the father of her intent to travel internationally with the children as required by the custody order," federal prosecutors said.

The father told police he believed Seymour may have taken the children out of the country and forged his signature on the passport applications because he found passport-related envelopes in the trash at her apartment and other evidence that indicated she had left the country.

Elleshia Seymour was charged in 3rd District Court on Dec. 16 with four counts of custodial interference, a third-degree felony. A warrant was issued for her arrest as, according to charging documents, she "recently discussed obtaining passports and leaving the country, expressing concerns about biblical events and the 'end of times'" with her ex-boyfriend.

Investigators located surveillance footage at the Salt Lake airport showing Seymour and the kids boarding a one-way flight to Croatia with a layover in Amsterdam. In a voicemail to her other ex-husband — the father of the youngest child — she claimed she was in France looking for a permanent residence.

"Seymour reminded him she had to get the children out of the country because the 'end time is coming.' Seymour allegedly told her ex-husband and father of the fourth child she wanted him to join them and asked him not to let the three children's father know where she was," federal prosecutors said.

Kendall Seymour said he was initially unaware of any of these beliefs and was concerned "she's not in the right mind." While there were no signs of the "doomsday" beliefs when they were married, he found a TikTok account where she was posting increasingly extreme religious messages.

With posts titled "Urgent Word," "Brace Yourself," "Zombies," and "US Decimated," she spoke of darkness consuming America, urged followers to "get provisions," and warned that Salt Lake City would soon be destroyed. Police said witnesses they spoke to indicated Seymour had "previously suffered from emotional breakdowns and hallucinations."

On Jan. 16, Seymour was arrested by Croatian authorities. The children were found in a state-run Croatian orphanage.

"It sounds like she met this other American citizen in Croatia under the pretense that she was bringing the kids here legally," Kendall Seymour said. Once the American citizen living in Croatia heard the news about the children, the police were called, and their mother was taken into custody by Croatian authorities, the father said.

He was then contacted by Croatian police, who were holding the kids in a children's home in the country. Croatian police at first would not release his children until documentation from the U.S. had been checked and rechecked. He stayed in the country for eight days trying to get them released.

On Feb. 1, he announced on a GoFundMe* that he and the four children were on their way home.

Seymour was extradited to Utah from Croatia on June 12 and was booked into the Davis County Jail. She has a detention hearing scheduled next week in federal court and an initial appearance for the state charges on July 13.

"The safe return of the children remains our highest priority. We are deeply grateful to our federal and international partners for their tireless efforts in bringing about this successful outcome," said U.S. Attorney Melissa Holyoak for the District of Utah. "Our work is not finished — we will continue to pursue justice in the case against Seymour."


*KSL.com does not assure that the money deposited to the account will be applied for the benefit of the persons named as beneficiaries. If you are considering a deposit to the account, you should consult your own advisers and otherwise proceed at your own risk.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Cassidy Wixom, KSLCassidy Wixom
Cassidy Wixom is an award-winning reporter for KSL. She covers Utah County communities, arts and entertainment, and breaking news. Cassidy graduated from BYU before joining KSL in 2022.
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