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British Columbia

Bountiful sect members face polygamy, child-related charges

Several members of the same family in Bountiful, B.C., face polygamy and child-related charges, the latest attempt to prosecute members of the isolated religious community.

Charges are latest attempt to prosecute members of the isolated religious community

Bountiful sect members face polygamy charges

10 years ago
Duration 2:30
Charges are latest attempt to prosecute members of the isolated religious community

British Columbia'sCriminal Justice Branch has approved polygamy and child-related charges against several members of the same family in an isolated religious community in Bountiful, B.C.

Winston KayeBlackmore and his brother-in-law James MarionOler are facing polygamy charges. Oler is alleged to have hadfour wives between 1993 and 2009, while WinstonBlackmoreis accused of marrying 24 women between 1990 and 2014.

Oler and two others, Blackmore's son Brandon JamesBlackmoreand his wifeEmily RuthCrossfield, are also alleged to have unlawfully removeda child under 16 from Canada "with the intention that an act be committed outside Canada that would be an offence against Section 151 (sexual interference) or152 (invitation to sexual touching)," according to a Criminal Justice Branch news release.

Special prosecutor Peter Wilson"declined to approve" other charges, such as alleged offences of sexual exploitation. The standard for approving charges "was not metin relation to these offences," said the release.

Many residents of Bountiful follow the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, orFLDS, which, unlike the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, holds polygamy as a tenet of the faith.

James MarionOlerandWinstonKayeBlackmore are leaders of two factions of the FLDS and were charged with similar polygamy offences in 2009.

Two young girls of the polygamous community of Bountiful walk past the mountains at Bountiful near Creston, B.C., in April 2008. (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)

The prosecution of that case fell through, after the first special prosecutors recommended against charges over concerns that a ban on polygamy violated the right to religious freedom.

The new charges against Oler, Brandon Blackmore and Emily Crossfield allegingthe removal of children from Canada are thought to relate to girls being taken across the Canada-U.S. border to be married.

According to special prosecutor Peter Wilson, the latest report he received fromRCMP in January 2014 contained material that was "new and derived from investigations in the United States that involved members of the FLDScommunities in Arizona, Texas and Utah."

The new charges of child removal "are based primarily on new information that came to light as a result of investigations that unfolded in the United States," writes Wilson.

The first court appearance in the case is scheduled for Oct. 9, 2014 in Creston provincial court.

Polygamyinvestigation began in 2005

The new chargesare just the latest stage in a decade-long effort byRCMP and the B.C. government to prosecute members of the isolated religious community for polygamy.

Students play basketball on April 28, 2008, in the polygamist community of Bountiful near Creston, B.C. (Joe Sales/Associated Press)

The RCMP investigation into allegations of polygamy in the isolated, rural community in southeastern B.C. began in 2005 and included interviews with 90 people in B.C., Utah, Idaho and Nevada.

But after the investigation, B.C.'s Crown prosecutors remained reluctant to lay polygamy charges for fear they would be declared unconstitutional on the basis of religious freedom.

Former B.C. attorney general WallyOppal then appointed special prosecutors Richard Peck and later Len Doust, who both recommended the government get a court ruling on the constitutionality of Canada's anti-polygamy laws.

In June 2008,Oppal hired a third special prosecutor, Terrence Robertson, to review the results of the latest police investigation and consider charges against men in the polygamous community.

The following year, Robertson recommended polygamy charges against Blackmore and Oler.

However, in September 2009,a B.C. courtthrewout the polygamy charges against thetwo religious leaders,rulingOppal was wrong to ask Robertson to take the case after the first two prosecutors decided the men should not be charged.

The government then asked the B.C. Supreme Courtto rule on the constitutionality of the polygamy ban.

During lengthy hearings, the court heard evidence that teenage girls in Bountiful were taken across the Canada-U.S. border to be married.

InNovember 2011, Chief Justice RobertBaumanupheld the polygamy ban, ruling it infringedon some sections of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, but also that thecriminalizationof polygamy is justified.

Baumanalso suggestedthe law shouldnt be used to criminalize minors who find themselves married into polygamous unions.

In 2012,the B.C. government appointedWilsonas the next special prosecutor for the case.

Bountiful chargestimeline

2005
Polygamy investigation by RCMP begins.

2007
First special prosecutor Richard Peck recommends against charges.
Peck recommends province asks courts whether polygamy is constitutional.
Then B.C. Attorney General Wally Oppalappoints second special prosecutor Leonard Doust.

2008
Doust recommends against charges, agrees with Peck.
Oppal appoints third special prosecutor Terrence Robertson.

Jan. 2009
Robertson recommends charges.
WinstonBlackmoreand JamesOlercharged withpolygamy.

Sept. 2009
Charges againstBlackmoreandOlerthrown out.
B.C. Supreme Court rulesCrown acted improperly by "special prosecutor shopping".

Oct. 2009
Province asks B.C. Supreme Court to examine the constitutionality of polygamy.

2011
B.C. Supreme Court rules that the polygamy law is constitutional.
RCMP begin investigationof allegations Bountiful"child brides" being taken to U.S.

2012
Peter Wilson is appointed special prosecutor.

2014
Wilson recommends charges.
WinstonBlackmoreand JamesOlercharged with polygamy again.
Oler, BrandonBlackmoreand EmilyCrossfieldcharged with unlawfully removing two children from Canada back in 2004.