Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Gets Go-ahead To Pursue Polygamy Charge Against Bountiful Leader

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jun, 2015 12:57 PM
    VANCOUVER — The B.C. Supreme Court has thrown out a bid by a lawyer for Winston Blackmore to have a polygamy charge against him dismissed.
     
    The leader of a fundamentalist Mormon sect in southeastern B.C. is accused of polygamy for having more than two dozen wives.
     
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Austin Cullen has ruled that the province can proceed with a prosecution against the Bountiful, B.C., leader for historical acts of polygamy dating back more than four decades.
     
    Blackmore's lawyer petitioned the court to dismiss the charge recommended against him in 2012 by arguing that the province appointed a series of special prosecutors until it found one who would recommend a polygamy charge.
     
    Cullen has ruled that the mandate of the most recent special prosecutor was sufficiently different from those of his predecessors and allowed the charge to stand.
     
    Blackmore's most recent marriage took place a full decade before a 2011 reference question concluded that Canada's laws forbidding polygamy did not violate the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Trial By Jury Requested For Man Accused Of Shooting B.C. Mountie In Kamloops

    Trial By Jury Requested For Man Accused Of Shooting B.C. Mountie In Kamloops
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A man accused of shooting a Mountie in Kamloops, B.C., has pleaded not guilty to charges that include attempted murder.

    Trial By Jury Requested For Man Accused Of Shooting B.C. Mountie In Kamloops

    B.C.'s Children In Care Start Behind And Stay There: Children's Representative

    B.C.'s Children In Care Start Behind And Stay There: Children's Representative
    The Growing Up in B.C. report by Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond and Dr. Perry Kendall says life for vulnerable children, including those in government care and aboriginal children and youth, remains challenging.

    B.C.'s Children In Care Start Behind And Stay There: Children's Representative

    B.C. Farmer Wants To Be Reunited With Pig And Horse After SPCA Seizes Animals

    B.C. Farmer Wants To Be Reunited With Pig And Horse After SPCA Seizes Animals
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A lawyer for a lifelong farmer says his client wants a couple of his animals back as pets after 51 of them were seized over concerns they were roaming around the neighbourhood.

    B.C. Farmer Wants To Be Reunited With Pig And Horse After SPCA Seizes Animals

    Ugly Spat Over Cost Of Business Travel Within Top Ranks Of CRTC

    Ugly Spat Over Cost Of Business Travel Within Top Ranks Of CRTC
    It's the latest chapter in an ongoing rift between CRTC chairman Jean-Pierre Blais and Ontario regional commissioner Raj Shoan.

    Ugly Spat Over Cost Of Business Travel Within Top Ranks Of CRTC

    Canada's 'Paramilitaristic' Border Agency Locking Up More Foreigners: Report

    Canada's 'Paramilitaristic' Border Agency Locking Up More Foreigners: Report
    TORONTO — Canada's rising detention of non-criminal foreigners in maximum-security prisons amounts to arbitrary, cruel and inhumane treatment that violates international obligations, a disturbing new report concludes.

    Canada's 'Paramilitaristic' Border Agency Locking Up More Foreigners: Report

    Canada's 'Paramilitaristic' Border Agency Locking Up More Foreigners: Report

    Canada's 'Paramilitaristic' Border Agency Locking Up More Foreigners: Report
    TORONTO — Canada's rising detention of non-criminal foreigners in maximum-security prisons amounts to arbitrary, cruel and inhumane treatment that violates international obligations, a disturbing new report concludes.

    Canada's 'Paramilitaristic' Border Agency Locking Up More Foreigners: Report