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Posted: 6:47 PM- ELDORADO, Texas - An FLDS woman choked back tears today as she described how her 13-month-old baby was taken from her at the San Angelo Coliseum.

The woman, who identified herself as Velvet, 31, was among 64 women who left the coliseum, some to go stay with their babies of 12 months and younger. Velvet said she does not know where her child is tonight.

"She's still nursing. She's never had a bottle before. I need her back," Velvet said.

Today's exodus included the women and 63 children. Seventeen women with babies 12 months and under were to be taken to a care facility with their children.

Texas Child Protective Services workers separated 47 women from their children. Of those, 40 went to another, undisclosed location, and seven returned to the polygamous Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints' ranch in Eldorado.

As this evening, 260 children remained at the coliseum and will be moved out in coming days, officials said. On Tuesday, 111 children 5 and older left San Angelo for foster homes across the state, a CPS spokeswoman said.

On Wednesday, Tom Green County District Judge Barbara Walther reversed an earlier decision and asked CPS to keep the youngest babies with their mothers and to keep mothers with children over 12 months old in close proximity to them.

This evening, however, another woman, Ruth, who spoke at the gate to the ranch, said all her children - twins just over 12 months old, and a 2- and 4-year-old - were taken away. Ruth and Velvet also said that CPS workers told them that if they chose to return to the ranch, they would not see their children again.

Earlier today, CPS spokesman Darrell Azar denied those allegations, saying the separations had no bearing on the outcome of the case.

Velvet said she returned to the ranch because she doesn't trust the CPS, claiming workers had lied to her all along.

CPS attorney Gary Banks told the judge Wednesday that siblings would be kept together. But Ruth, 34, said her twins were not being placed with the older children.

She also said that when the CPS workers took the children, the older ones cried, saying, "Mother, Mother, don't let them take us away, we want to be with you.' "

Asked what was like to be back on the ranch without her children, Ruth said, "I can't even imagine life without my children. It's very emotional to come here and not have them with me."