Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

British Columbia

B.C. special prosecutor given OK to charge polygamists

The province of B.C. has opened the door for charges to be laid against polygamists after Attorney General Shirley Bond said the province will not appeal a court decision that found the anti-polygamy law to be constitutional.
Winston Blackmore, a religious leader in the polygamous community of Bountiful located near Creston, B.C., told a tax court in January that he had 22 wives and at least 67 children. By deciding not to appeal a court decision that maintains the constitutionality of anti-polygamy laws, the B.C. government has opened the door for charges to be laid against alleged polygamists. (Jonathan Hayward/CP)

The British Columbia government has cleared the way for a special prosecutor to lay polygamy charges in a case linked tothe small southeastern B.C. community of Bountiful.

Peter Wilson was appointed by the province's criminal justice branch earlier this year to examine possible charges related to the movement of teen brides across the U.S. border to marry much older men.

At the time,he was not given the mandate to consider polygamy charges, despite a landmark court decision last November that concluded the anti-polygamy law is constitutional.

The government is now expanding Wilson's powers, Attorney General Shirley Bond said on Monday.

Bond announced that the province will not ask a higher court to reviewlast year's B.C. Supreme Court decision, whichfound that the harm polygamy causes to women and children outweighs the law's violation of the right to religious freedom.

Bond'sannouncement means thatcharges could be laid against polygamists.

Bond saidthe province's lawyers believethe lower court ruling is powerful enough to support criminal charges against those in polygamous relationships without getting the opinion of a higher court.

She said the province weighed the consideration to appeal against the impact of more court proceedings involving people engaged in polygamy.

"The true victims of polygamy are the women and children this trial court decision protects," Bond said in a statement.

Wilson will now independently review any information brought forward from the ongoing RCMP investigation to determine if the evidence warrants going ahead with polygamy or other charges, Bond said.

Teen smuggling investigated

Even before the polygamy decision was released last year, Mounties sent investigators to the United States when criminal allegations surfaced during the court case.

The court heard that more than two dozen girls as young as 12 were shipped south to marry older men, including Warren Jeffs, the once-powerful leader of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.

Jeffs has since been sentenced to life in prison for sexually assaulting two teenage girls.

Two leaders of a breakaway Mormon sect in Bountiful were charged in 2009 with practising polygamy, but those charges were thrown out on a technicality. The case, involving Winston Blackmore and James Oler, triggered the constitutional reference and uncovered the movement of the child brides.

Blackmore is also fighting allegations in federal Tax Court that he should have claimed an extra $1.5 million in income over five years starting in 2000.

Blackmore believes his community should have special tax status, such asHutterite communities have in Canada.

He told the Tax Court in January that he had 22 wives and at least 67 children.