CRANBROOK, B.C. — The first legal wife of a man accused of polygamy has testified in B.C. Supreme Court about her marriage and life as a sister-wife with up to two dozen other women.
Jane Blackmore took the stand in a courtroom in Cranbrook, B.C., on Tuesday in the trial of Winston Blackmore and James Oler, who are each charged with one count of polygamy.
Winston Blackmore is the head of a religious group in Bountiful, a community in southeastern B.C. where residents are known for practising a faith that condones plural marriage.
He is accused of marrying 24 women, and Oler allegedly has four wives.
Jane Blackmore told the court that she grew up in the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, a group that broke away from the mainstream Mormon church at the turn of the 20th century.
After pressure from her father, she agreed to be married and was taken to see a prophet who would determine a husband for her based on divine instruction.
Blackmore said she learned at 10:30 p.m. on May 3, 1975 that her husband would be Winston Blackmore and they were married at 9 a.m. the next day.
Jane Blackmore told the court that she knew other wives were likely to follow because the FLDS faith dictates that a man must have three wives to advance in the church and attain the highest level of celestial glory.
Blackmore said she was sometimes asked to approve the marriages, but there were other unions she didn't learn about until after the ceremony had occurred.
She testified that there was one instance where a young woman who was marrying Winston Blackmore travelled up from the United States with her younger sister.
Jane Blackmore told the court that the man conducting the ceremony claimed divine inspiration and married both sisters to Winston Blackmore.
Jane Blackmore left Bountiful and her relationship with Winston Blackmore in 2003, but testified that her former husband married over 25 women during the course of their relationship.
She also testified that Oler, her brother, had multiple wives and that she had attended the births of children he had with two of those wives.
The criminal trial has been more than 25 years in the making, with RCMP first investigating allegations that residents of the isolated, religious community were practising plural or "celestial'' marriage in the early 1990s.
The trial is being heard by a judge alone and is expected to last at least two weeks.