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By Lloyd Mackey
THE COURTS could be dealing with the legal status of polygamy "for at least five years," following the arrest last week of Winston Blackmore and James Oler, both of whom are part of the Fundamentalist Latter Day Saints (FLDS) community in Bountiful, BC.
That was the assessment of David Quist, executive director of the Institute of Marriage and Family Canada (IMFC), who noted that the case -- which involves the definition of marriage and allegations of religious persecution -- will likely be taken all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada.
In a press conference soon after his arrest, Blackmore claimed that he and members of his family were being persecuted for their religious beliefs. There are also indications that the law against polygamy, which goes back to the 19th century, could have a much broader reach into various Canadian religions and cultures, if it is ultimately upheld by the courts.
The IMFC, which is currently in the early stages of preparing its response to the case, sees Blackmore's religious persecution complaint as "a not very deep argument," said Quist. "Regardless of which faith, there is not much support for polygamy."
He acknowledged, however, that some Muslims in the Toronto area are said to be using polygamous family structures to claim welfare benefits. "The courts are going to have to consider that at some point," he said.
Quist noted that those who were opposed to same-sex marriage a few years ago said at the time that if it became law, polygamy would also become an issue. "It now has, and, on the way, came three-parent marriage, at least in Ontario," he said, referring to a 2007 court decision that recognized a woman's same-sex partner as the legal parent of her child, in addition to the child's biological father.
The IMFC is looking at the issue "from the social side," said Quist. "In all the research we have seen so far, we have found the best scenario is parenting by a biological mom and dad. Polygamy may look like that, but it is quite different from one mom and dad."
The Evangelical Fellowship of Canada (EFC) is also keeping a "close" eye on the case, said Don Hutchinson, vice-president of legal affairs and public policy for the organization, though they do not plan to intervene at this point, while the case is still moving through the British Columbia courts.
Hutchinson noted that, in 2006, the EFC issued a declaration defining marriage as a lifelong covenant between one man and woman. That statement was eventually signed by leaders from over 40 major religious organizations representing, among others, Catholic, Orthodox and Islamic believers.
"We are interested in seeing exactly how the case progresses," he added. "Even though the Evangelical Fellowship is one of the nation's foremost defenders of religious freedom, we recognize that right to practice one's faith does not grant permission to engage in abusive behaviour."
Hutchinson said he understands why BC Attorney-General Wally Oppal proceeded with the polygamy charges, instead of the sexual-abuse charges that some people have called for. If the case succeeds legally, said Hutchinson, it could well lead to the dismantling of polygamous systems in Canada and the abuses that are seen to result from it.
Ultimately, Hutchinson said the controversial "notwithstanding" clause -- known as Section 33 of the 1982 Charter of Rights and Freedoms -- may give the government an opportunity to deal with polygamy legally, without really cutting away at religion-based rights.
"Section 33 is a cornerstone that recognizes that Canada is a parliamentary democracy," where parliament and the legislatures can respond to the authority of the courts "in a way that the values of a society can be upheld."
Some observers have noted that the law under which the polygamists were charged could affect many other people outside of that narrow community. Rob Breakenridge, writing in the Calgary Herald, noted that Section 293 of the Criminal Code, under which Oppal laid the charges, outlaws not only polygamy but "any kind of conjugal union with more than one person at the same time."
If the charges stick with respect to the Bountiful group, wrote Breakenridge, members of many other Canadian cultural and religious groups could be caught up in the more loosely-worded reference to "any kind of conjugal union". For example, the law could apply to three people, two of whom are in the process of divorce but still-married and one person who is involved in a conjugal relationship with one of the still-married people.
Jim Abbott, Member of Parliament for the Kootenay-Columbia riding in which the Bountiful FLDS community is located, has spoken in the past about the Bountiful issue as one which could pit charter rights against religious freedom.
He was out of the country when the charges were laid, and his office indicated that he will not be back in Canada or available for comment until Parliament resumes toward the end of January.
Related stories:
B.C. polygamist leaders charged in case that will test ban on multiple marriage After decades of controversy and allegations, RCMP swept into the polygamous community of Bountiful, B.C., on Wednesday and arrested two sect leaders, including one who had bragged of multiple wives and dozens of children and all but dared police to stop him. Winston Blackmore and James Oler - leaders of separate, divided factions in the community of about 1,000 people - were each charged with a single count of practising polygamy. Canadian Press, January 7
Polygamy charges in Bountiful Leaders of the two factions in the polygamous community of Bountiful have been charged under the Criminal Code with practising polygamy. In a sensational turn in a 20-year-old debate over the issue of polygamy in Canada, police have charged Jim Oler and Winston Blackmore. Globe and Mail, January 7
Polygamy charges in Bountiful In a legal showdown over Canada's polygamy law that has been 20 years in the making, B.C. Attorney-General Wally Oppal announced charges yesterday against religious leader Winston Blackmore, who has openly talked about having married several young brides, and a rival leader in the religious sect. Globe and Mail, January 8
'Bountiful' sect leaders charged with polygamy Winston Blackmore had told his many children and his many wives in the past that he could be arrested one day and charged with polygamy. But the arrival of eight RCMP officers at Blackmore's home in the polygamous community of Bountiful, B.C., yesterday left the children crying and his wives shocked by the suddenness of the charges after almost two decades of investigations. Toronto Star, January 8
Polygamy showdown Plainclothes police visit Bountiful and charge two fundamentalist Mormon leaders Daphne Bramham, Vancouver Sun, January 8 Also: National Post
Teen relative of charged polygamist leader says many could face charges A teenaged relative of Winston Blackmore says RCMP came to the United States to interview her about her uncle and what it was like to grow up in the polygamous community of Bountiful, B.C. Cindy Blackmore said Thursday that two Mounties flew to her home in Las Vegas late last year to talk to her as part of their investigation in the practice of polygamy and allegations of sexual abuse in the community in southeastern B.C. Canadian Press, January 8
B.C. sect leader calls polygamy charge persecution, political grandstanding Winston Blackmore said there are tens of thousands of polygamists from many different cultures living across the country but his religious sect, which openly practices multiple marriage, is being targeted. Canadian Press, January 8
Bountiful leader calls polygamy charge 'religious persecution' The leader of a polygamous sect in Bountiful, B.C., says he is being persecuted for his religious beliefs and politics is behind the decision to charge him with polygamy. CBC, January 8
Polygamy law faces stiff test under Charter Canada's courts ultimately might have no choice but to rule that polygamy is protected under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, legal experts say. Over the past two decades, four attorneys-general in British Columbia have been reluctant to lay a charge because of a fear that their cases would have no chance of surviving a religious freedom defence under the Charter. Last April, Wally Oppal, the current Attorney-General, said the criminal justice branch believed any prosecution would fail because of a possible violation of the constitutional guarantee of religious freedom. But he also said the only way to test it was to lay a charge and "let the defence worry about the constitutionality issue." Charles Lewis, National Post, January 8
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Sect leader says charges are 'religious persecution' The charges of polygamy laid against Winston Blackmore on Jan. 7 are more than just an attack on his lifestyle -- they are a form of persecution against fundamentalist Mormons, Blackmore said in a public statement made on Jan. 8 at Mormon Hills School. "To us, this is about religious persecution," said Blackmore, who lives in the community a few miles south of Creston. Creston Valley Advance, January 9 Also: Vancouver Sun | National Post
Polygamist alleges persecution Polygamous religious leader Winston Blackmore says he is the victim of religious persecution by a government with an eye on the next provincial election. Globe and Mail, January 9
Legal experts split over constitutionality of Oppal's move against polygamy A day after Attorney-General Wally Oppal fired the opening shots in a long-awaited legal showdown over polygamy, Winston Blackmore was waving the banner of religious freedom from the other side, saying yesterday that the charge against him amounted to religious persecution. But opinions are divided as to how successful that tactic will be, with some experts saying the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms allows "reasonable limits" to religious freedoms, while others maintain Mr. Oppal doesn't have a legal leg to stand on. Globe and Mail, January 9
Bountiful case could force examination of other communities While the discussion about polygamy has largely focused on Bountiful, a longtime Canadian activist says she believes it is also being practised among a minority of Muslims in Canada. Homa Arjomand, a Toronto-based activist who has campaigned against the use of Sharia law to resolve family disputes in Canada, hopes the Bountiful case will open the door to other polygamy investigations. The Province, January 9 Also: National Post
It will be expensive, and guess who will foot much of the bill? With the arrest of two religious leaders from the fundamentalist Mormon community of Bountiful for practising polygamy, British Columbia began a long, complicated and expensive court battle that will almost certainly end up in the Supreme Court of Canada. Daphne Bramham, Vancouver Sun, January 9
A precarious prosecution that is bound for failure Forget about the jokes about HBO's hit series Big Love. Attorney-General Wally Oppal has gone where smart lawyers on his own staff and really smart lawyers in private practice warned him not to go. No matter what may be going on in the bucolic hamlet of Bountiful in southeastern B.C., the police have no place in its bedrooms. Ian Mulgrew, Vancouver Sun, January 9
Polygamy charges may backfire on A-G Oppal Somewhere, right now, Winston Blackmore is probably smiling. The self-styled "Bishop of Bountiful" -- Canada's most high-profile polygamist leader -- is being handed a show-trial platform to prove what he's been saying for years: Taking multiple wives is a religious right and freedom, protected by the Charter. Michael Smyth, The Province, January 9
Why Bountiful took so long If you'd asked me last week, I'd have said that a polygamy prosecution against the leaders of the fundamentalist Mormon community in Bountiful, B. C., had two chances: slim and none. On Wednesday night, the B. C. government -- or, rather, an independent special prosecutor -- finally took the step that has been dithered over for years and charged Winston Blackmore and James Oler under section 293 of the Criminal Code. After giving myself a quick refresher on the legal arguments, I'm no longer so sure about "slim." Colby Cosh, National Post, January 9
The marital confusion the Constitution hath wrought Once we redefined marriage as something not strictly confined to a man and a woman, all bets were off. And with a Charter guarantee of freedom of religion, you knew it was only a matter of time before this particular right got tested by some interest in the multi-religious-cum-cultural polyglot that now comprises Canada. John Oakley, Full Comment, National Post, January 9
Polygamy charges test law, tolerance Winston Blackmore can seem the epitome of grace, even when facing criminal prosecution and a prison sentence of up to five years. He demonstrated this again this week, after his arrest on charges of polygamy. He was firm but pleasant with assembled reporters. He was eager to share the truth about Bountiful, at least as he sees it. Brian Hutchinson, National Post, January 10
Trust, authority and polygamy But to criticize B.C. Attorney General Wally Oppal for laying polygamy charges, rather than (for example) sexual assault charges, is to overlook that it was Oppal's least preferred option. . . . The reason he hasn't brought such charges is because he believes he can't. The age of consent in Canada was, until recently, 14. According to Oppal, the RCMP's investigations at Bountiful's midwifery clinic unearthed no slam-dunk evidence that any of the community's men had had sex with girls under that age. They were looking for probative birth records, in other words, which Arizona prosecutors used in 2006 to put away a polygamist without his victim even testifying. Chris Selley, Full Comment, National Post, January 10
In the name of the mothers ... Women in the polygamous sect of Bountiful, B.C., are exploited and trapped. They require the state's salvation. Or so say the men in government. This week, the government of B.C. charged two men from Bountiful with the crime of polygamy. The province's Attorney-General, Wally Oppal, justified the charges on the basis of his long-standing commitment to ending the "exploitation" of women in Bountiful. That's consistent with the earlier call by a member of the legislative assembly, Bill Bennett, for action to support women "trapped in this polygamous cult." It's too bad, though, that nobody checked first with community wives and mothers. Angela Campbell, Globe and Mail, January 10
Get used to it Blackmore case could lead to legalized multiple marriages Ian Robinson, Calgary Sun, January 11
Religious rivals may get separate trials Move would drive up cost and slow progress of polygamy case against Winston Blackmore and Jim Oler Globe and Mail, January 12
Conflicting legal views on law against polygamy have piled up over the years After more than 60 years of benign neglect toward the fundamentalist Mormon community of Bountiful, it's small wonder people are asking: Why prosecute polygamy now? Why prosecute it at all? Daphne Bramham, Vancouver Sun, January 12
The worst column about polygamy ever And while [Ian Robinson] seems to think he's poked a big hole in the polygamy law -- "Since the province issues marriage certificates, if these so-called marriages have not been recognized by the province, can they, by legal definition, even be described as such?" -- all you have to do is actually read the law to see where, and how disastrously, he went wrong. Chris Selley, Full Comment, National Post, January 13
Bad law makes thousands guilty of polygamy Can the enforcement of a bad law produce a positive outcome? Of course, it's a rather vague hypothetical, doomed by its own illogic: how can a bad law be enforced in the first place? Doesn't that therefore preclude an affirmative answer? A real-world dilemma now confronts us in the criminal case against two of the leaders of a polygamous sect -- cult may be the more accurate word -- in Bountiful, B. C. Rob Breakenridge, Calgary Herald, January 13
Polygamy treats both men and women unfairly Polygamy is about to become the next great moral battleground in the legal war on marriage. And as with gay marriage, the correct and logical conclusion on the issue of polygamy is that it is not a desirable form of marriage, and indeed, threatens society as a whole. And as with gay marriage, I have no doubt that the people who will judge this issue will utterly ignore all of this, and decide the issue on an effort to maximize moral relativism. In other words, the judgment will be designed to be as far from judgmental as possible. Steve Janke, Full Comment, National Post, January 14
Let the people decide Here I am in Canada again, receiving a few free lessons about your charter of rights. Almost every time I am in this otherwise great country, your Charter of Rights and Freedoms is making headlines for the wrong reasons. Reasons that Australians like me will be digesting as the push for an Australian charter of rights unfolds this year. This time it's the story of Winston Blackmore, who has had 26 wives and more than 106 children. Janet Albrechtsen, National Post, January 15
January 15/2009
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