National Post

Canada’s polygamy law goes on trial

- Daphne Bramham

FOR MORE THAN 70 YEARS POLYGAMY HAS BEEN PRACTISED IN BOUNTIFUL. BUT LOCAL, PROVINCIAL AND FEDERAL GOVERNMENT­S NOT ONLY IGNORED IT, THEY FUNNELLED MONEY INTO THE COMMUNITY IN THE FORM OF CHILD BENEFITS, PRIVATE SCHOOL GRANTS...

It’s almost certainly going to come down to a battle over religious freedom when Canada’s 127- year- old polygamy law is tried for the first time in Canadian history.

Canada’s best- known polygamist, Winston Kaye Blackmore, and his former brother- in- law, James Marion Oler, will face one count each of polygamy when the trial begins Tuesday in B.C. Supreme Court in Cranbrook.

There are 24 women listed on Blackmore’s indictment who are alleged to have been married in a religious ceremony or had conjugal relations with Blackmore, 61.

By contrast, Oler’s indictment lists “only” four.

Both are f ormer bishops of the Fundamenta­list Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and descendant­s of the six founding fathers of Bountiful, a community of about 1,500 people in southeaste­rn B.C.

Blackmore has never tried to disguise the fact he has multiple wives, who have borne him 146 children.

He spoke about his multiple wives at a 2005 pol ygamy summit t hat his wives organized.

He’s talked about it with reporters and even under oath in Canadian Tax Court and in civil trials in the United States.

Blackmore has even admitted that 10 of his wives were 17 or younger when they were married. In a deposition filed in a Utah civil trial in 2014, Blackmore said three of his brides were 16 and one was 15. Despite that admission under oath, Blackmore has never been charged with sexual exploitati­on or sexual interferen­ce.

By contrast, 53- year- old Oler has never spoken publicly and has refused legal counsel. To help the court with legal issues and ensure fairness, Joseph Doyle was appointed as an amicus for this trial.

Doyle was also the amic us in November when Oler faced the more serious charge of removing a child from Canada for an illegal purpose. Oler’s acquittal is being appealed.

The road to this trial, which starts Tuesday, is decades long, winding and marked by missteps along the way.

For more than 70 years polygamy has been practised in Bountiful. But local, provincial and federal government­s not only ignored it, they funnelled money into the community in the form of child benefits, private school grants and money for a private midwives’ clinic.

Local residents turned a blind eye. Nurses and doctors occasional­ly saw the same man at the side of different women giving birth in the hospital and watched as he signed both birth certifi- cates indicating he was the father.

Because no one complained, the first RCMP investigat­ion didn’t even take place until the 1990s. The targets of the investigat­ion were Blackmore and Oler’s father, Dalmon.

It was prompted by complaints by Debbie Palmer — James Oler’s full sister and Dalmon’s daughter. She is also Blackmore’s stepmother, having married Winston’s father when he was 55 and she was 15, and his sisterin- law. Palmer’s sister, Jane, was Blackmore’s first and only legal wife.

Although RCMP recommende­d charges, lawyers in the attorney general’s ministry refused to lay them. For more than a decade after that, provincial lawyers refused to approve charges because of never- published legal opinions that the law was invalidate­d by the 1982 Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

The zeitgeist was reflected in a report to the government done in 1993 by O. Gary Deatherage, the director of the local Mental Health Centre: “We ... do not view this religious community as being bizarre or particular­ly cult- like, but instead view it as another manifestat­ion of multicultu­ralism, a different way of expressing spirituali­ty.”

But by 2007, then Attorney General Wally Oppal had had enough. He appointed special prosecutor Richard Peck to review the RCMP files. But rather than laying charges, Peck agreed with the previous opinions that the law’s constituti­onality was in doubt. He recommende­d a constituti­onal reference case. Oppal disagreed and over the course of the next two years appointed two more special prosecutor­s until the third finally agreed to lay charges.

In 2009, Blackmore and Oler were each charged with one count of polygamy. But those charges were stayed after a judge agreed with Blackmore that the second and third prosecutor­s had been improperly appointed.

The only course left was a constituti­onal reference case. After months of evidence and deliberati­on, in 2011 the B.C. Supreme Court ruled that because of polygamy’s inherent harms the law is a justifiabl­e limit on both religious freedom and freedom of associatio­n.

That cleared the way for prosecutio­n. Peter Wilson became the fourth special prosecutor and in August 2014, he charged Blackmore and Oler with one count each of polygamy.

Oler, along with Blackmore’s brother, Brandon, and sister-in-law Emily Ruth ( Gail) Blackmore, was also charged with unlawful removal of a child from Canada for sexual purposes.

The “removal” trial was held in November. The Blackmores were f ound guilty and are awaiting sentencing.

This will be a much different trial with fewer witnesses and fewer testimonie­s from former residents about life in Bountiful. Instead, it’s scheduled for only two weeks and will be a distilled and tightly focused replay of some of the legal issues from the constituti­onal reference case.

Blair Suffredine, Black- more’s lawyer and a former Liberal MLA, has said that he won’t challenge the criminalit­y of polygamy. Rather, he will question the right of an individual to not be punished for practising his religion.

Regardless of how Suffredine frames it, the questions that Justice Sheri Ann Donegan will have to decide are: Is the Charter guarantee of religious freedom a blanket protection or are there limits to it? And, if there are limits, is the practice of polygamy covered by it?

These are thorny issues that have bedevilled not only Canadian and B. C. l awmakers over the past century, but those in other countries as well.

India’s Supreme Court is currently hearing a polygamy case involving the Muslim practice of polygamy and contracted marriages of specific lengths. The government’s position is that it can’t be allowed in a secular society because it conflicts with women’s constituti­onally guaranteed right to equality. It also argues that polygamy is not a religious practice but a social custom sanctioned by religion.

In Utah last month, the state legislatur­e enacted a new polygamy law. The previous one was struck down in 2013 by a federal judge after the Brown family from the reality TV show Sister Wives was investigat­ed.

In an attempt to narrow the definition, Utah’s new law says that an offender would have to live with more than one spouse and must “purport to be married.”

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Winston Blackmore is one of two men facing charges of polygamy in the B.C. Supreme Court.
JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Winston Blackmore is one of two men facing charges of polygamy in the B.C. Supreme Court.
 ??  ?? James Oler
James Oler

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