Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

File Photo: Winston Blackmore receives a kiss from one of his daughters. Jonathan Hayward via Press Association Images

Two men, including one who has 25 wives and 146 children, convicted of polygamy

The men face up to five years in prison.

TWO MEN, INCLUDING one who has 25 wives and 146 children, were convicted of polygamy in a landmark ruling that upheld Canada’s longstanding ban on the practice.

Winston Blackmore and James Marion Oler, who has five wives, face up to five years in prison after being found guilty in the first real test of the country’s polygamy law, enacted 127 years ago.

Three special prosecutors had been appointed over the past two decades to consider bringing charges against the pair, but they backed down over concerns that the law prohibiting polygamy violated Canadians’ constitutional right to religious freedom.

Those fears were assuaged in 2011 when British Columbia province’s Supreme Court ruled in a reference case that the inherent harms of polygamy justified putting limits on religious freedoms, clearing the way for charges to be filed against Blackmore and Oler three years later.

Canada Polygamy File Photo: Winston Blackmore shares a laugh with six of his daughters and some of his grandchildren. Jonathan Hayward Jonathan Hayward

Judge Sheri Ann Donegan of the British Columbia Supreme Court noted in her ruling that the main defendant, Blackmore, did not deny his polygamy.

“His adherence to the practices and beliefs of the FLDS is not in dispute,” she said.

The two men are senior figures in the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (FLDS), a polygamist religious sect that broke away from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, also known as the Mormon Church.

The sect has been based for nearly 60 years in the remote, mountainous region of British Columbia near the US border where the community grows, raises or hunts its own food and runs a barter economy.

© – AFP 2017

Read: Video footage suggests Russia may be arming the Taliban>

Close
JournalTv
News in 60 seconds