Close X
Sunday, November 10, 2024
ADVT 
National

British Columbia Government Faces Off With Bountiful Leader Over Polygamy

The Canadian Press, 08 Jun, 2015 10:22 AM
    VANCOUVER — The leader of a fundamentalist religious commune in British Columbia's southern interior will square off in court today against the provincial government over whether the province has the right to charge him with polygamy.
     
    Winston Blackmore filed a petition in late February asking the B.C. Supreme Court to quash the criminal charge, arguing that B.C.'s attorney general improperly appointed Peter Wilson, the special prosecutor who recommended the charge.
     
    The court threw out an earlier attempt to prosecute the head of the remote, Mormon breakaway community of Bountiful after Blackmore's lawyer Joe Arvay successfully argued the government couldn't keep appointing successive prosecutors until it got the recommendation it wanted.
     
    In 2007, special prosecutor Richard Peck concluded that polygamy was the root cause of Bountiful's alleged issues. But instead of recommending charges he suggested a constitutional question be referred to the courts to provide more legal clarity.
     
    The province responded by appointing another special prosecutor, who recommended charges in 2009. They were ultimately dismissed after Blackmore's lawyer persuaded the court that Peck's initial decision should be final.
     
    That prompted the B.C. government to launch a constitutional reference case, which ended in 2011 when a B.C. Supreme Court judge concluded the law making polygamy illegal doesn't violate the religious protections in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
     
    A year later, then-Attorney General Shirley Bond appointed Wilson as a special prosecutor. He approved charges against Blackmore, alleging the leader had 24 wives. Wilson also recommend a polygamy charge against James Oler, who leads a separate faction in Bountiful and has an alleged four wives.
     
    Arvay countered with the same argument used three years earlier — that Wilson's appointment was improper and that the province was bound to follow the initial special prosecutor's decision.
     
    In late April the province filed documents in court defending its right to seek a polygamy charge against Blackmore.
     
    "(The judge) expressly found that the successive appointment of special prosecutors is authorized ... where there has been a change in circumstances,"' read the submission.
     
    The province said it is justified in reopening the case against Blackmore because of new police evidence collected from a fundamentalist ranch in Texas, as well as more constitutional certainty following the 2011 court decision that confirmed polygamy violated the Criminal Code.
     
    Oler was also charged alongside Emily Crossfield and Brandon Blackmore with unlawfully removing a child from Canada for sexual purposes.
     
    None of the allegations have been proven in court.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lawyers Explain Lawsuit Potential To Passengers In Air Canada Crash Landing

    Lawyers Explain Lawsuit Potential To Passengers In Air Canada Crash Landing
    HALIFAX — Lawyers for one of the class-action lawsuits filed on behalf of people involved in a plane crash at Halifax's airport in March held a meeting for passengers Wednesday to explain why they may wish to sign on to the legal case.

    Lawyers Explain Lawsuit Potential To Passengers In Air Canada Crash Landing

    SURREY-DELTA SHOOTINGS: Arrests & Charges Laid Against Surrey's Chandanjot Gill And Munroop Hayer

    SURREY-DELTA SHOOTINGS: Arrests & Charges Laid Against Surrey's Chandanjot Gill And Munroop Hayer
    Eighteen-year-old Chandanjot Singh Gill faces several firearms charges and one count of trafficking, while 21-year-old Munroop Hayer has been charged with possession for the purpose of trafficking. Both men are from Surrey.

    SURREY-DELTA SHOOTINGS: Arrests & Charges Laid Against Surrey's Chandanjot Gill And Munroop Hayer

    Alleged Case Of Road Rage Prompts Criminal Charges Against 37-Year-Old man On Vancouver Island: RCMP

      COMOX, B.C. — Mounties on Vancouver Island have arrested a 37-year-old man over what they say is an apparent case of road rage.

    Alleged Case Of Road Rage Prompts Criminal Charges Against 37-Year-Old man On Vancouver Island: RCMP

    Expert Drops Out Of 'Biased' Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline Review

    Expert Drops Out Of 'Biased' Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline Review
    Robyn Allan, former CEO of the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia, says she is withdrawing as an expert intervener because the panel is biased and the outcome is predetermined.

    Expert Drops Out Of 'Biased' Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline Review

    University Of B.C. Gives 95-year-old Practising Lawyer Honorary Doctorate

    University Of B.C. Gives 95-year-old Practising Lawyer Honorary Doctorate
    VANCOUVER — Sixty-four years after she walked across the stage to collect her law degree, Constance Isherwood was back at the University of British Columbia for yet another ceremony.

    University Of B.C. Gives 95-year-old Practising Lawyer Honorary Doctorate

    Victoria Man Wants Pit-Bull Cross That Mauled His Small Dog Destroyed

    Victoria Man Wants Pit-Bull Cross That Mauled His Small Dog Destroyed
    Paul Johnston says his three-year-old Maltese-poodle cross named Cooper was attacked during a hiking trip northwest of the city.

    Victoria Man Wants Pit-Bull Cross That Mauled His Small Dog Destroyed