Close X
Sunday, January 26, 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

    Tories To Support NDP Motion To Ban Pay-To-Pay Fees Charged By Big Banks

    Tories To Support NDP Motion To Ban Pay-To-Pay Fees Charged By Big Banks
    Finance Minister Joe Oliver says the government is backing the motion to get rid of so-called pay-to-pay fees because people feel they are being nickeled and dimed by the big banks.

    Tories To Support NDP Motion To Ban Pay-To-Pay Fees Charged By Big Banks

    RCMP Officer Testifies In Case Of Man Accused Of Having Chemical Stockpile

    RCMP Officer Testifies In Case Of Man Accused Of Having Chemical Stockpile
    The woman's complaint in January prompted a search for Phillips and evacuations in two Halifax-area communities where chemicals were found, including what a police hazardous devices technician described as 750 bottles and other containers.

    RCMP Officer Testifies In Case Of Man Accused Of Having Chemical Stockpile

    Tie Between Two B.C. Doctors Forces Second Vote For Leader Of Professional Group

    Tie Between Two B.C. Doctors Forces Second Vote For Leader Of Professional Group
    Dr. Brian Day was declared the winner last week by just one vote, but the group's CEO Allan Seckel says there was another vote that should have been counted.

    Tie Between Two B.C. Doctors Forces Second Vote For Leader Of Professional Group

    Judge Nearly Declared Mistrial In Terror Case Over Crown's 'American' TV Closing

    The trial of a husband and wife accused of plotting to blow up the B.C. legislature came close to being declared a mistrial over the Crown's closing address, which the judge said was so inflammatory and inappropriate it took her breath away.

    Judge Nearly Declared Mistrial In Terror Case Over Crown's 'American' TV Closing

    Judge Tosses Band's Bid To Block Sale Of B.C. Rail Corridor To Local Governments

    Judge Tosses Band's Bid To Block Sale Of B.C. Rail Corridor To Local Governments
    KELOWNA, B.C. — A B.C. Supreme Court judge has dismissed a bid by the Okanagan Indian Band to block the sale of a rail corridor.

    Judge Tosses Band's Bid To Block Sale Of B.C. Rail Corridor To Local Governments

    Names Released Of 2 Whistler Cyclists, 1 Passenger Killed In Weekend Sea-To-Sky Highway Crash

    Names Released Of 2 Whistler Cyclists, 1 Passenger Killed In Weekend Sea-To-Sky Highway Crash
    Fifty-three-year-old Kelly Blunden and 50-year-old Ross Chafe were riding with a group along the Sea-to-Sky Highway when they were hit around noon on Sunday.

    Names Released Of 2 Whistler Cyclists, 1 Passenger Killed In Weekend Sea-To-Sky Highway Crash