Judge to rule on constitutionality of polygamy law

Judge to rule on constitutionality of polygamy law
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Summary A judge's decision Wednesday could challenge Canada's ban on polygamy.

In a case involving a small, polygamous community in British Columbia, Robert Bauman, chief justice of the provinces supreme court, will rule on whether the current criminal ban violates religious freedoms set out in Canadas bill of rights and therefore is unconstitutional.If he decides that the criminal ban is unconstitutional, Parliament might have to eventually decide whether Canada repeals the ban and becomes the only Western country to legalize polygamy.But the ruling Conservative Party has a majority in Parliament and is thought likely to block any legalization of plural marriage.Monique Pongracic-Speier, lawyer for the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association, stressed Baumans decision is only an opinion and could be appealed up to the Supreme Court by any participant.This is not a process in which that provision is struck down, she said.Parliament could repeal the law, change it or decide not to enforce it, she said.The constitutional reference arose after another judge threw out polygamy charges against British Columbians Winston Blackmore and James Oler in September 2009.The men are rival bishops of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (FLDS) in Bountiful, a polygamous community of about 1,000 residents who have been investigated repeatedly during the past two decades but avoided prosecution until they were charged with polygamy in January 2009.Blackmore was accused of having at least 19 wives, and Oler at least 3.FLDS members practice polygamy in arranged marriages, a tradition tied to the early theology of the Mormon church. The mainstream church renounced polygamy in 1890, but several fundamentalist groups seceded in order to continue the practice.Blackmore has long claimed religious persecution and denial of a constitutional right to religious freedom.Speaking to The Associated Press, he said: Our faith and religion is just as important to us as anyone elses is to them. Historically for our kind of people, persecution has refocused our determination to keep the faith.Audrey Vance of Altering Destiny Through Education lives near Bountiful and has supported many of the women and children. She said upholding the law is meant to safeguard equality for women and prevent the abuse of children.She wants to see the law used against the men.They cant prosecute all of them; theres too many, Vance said. Id like to see them prosecute the leaders ... I dont want to see the women victimized.When the case against Blackmore and Oler fell apart in 2009, the provinces new attorney general asked the court to examine the law so that the justice system could have clarity about whether Canadas law barring multiple marriages is constitutional.In dismissing the original case against Blackmore and Oler, Justice Sunni Stromberg-Stein said the provinces attorney general had gone prosecutor-shopping in order to charge the two men after previous prosecutors recommended not charging them.Provincial and federal government lawyers argued before Bauman that polygamy is inherently harmful, leading to physical and sexual abuse, teenage brides, human trafficking and other crimes. These outweigh any claim to religious freedom, the governments say.Lawyer Kieran Bridge, who represents the group Stop Polygamy in Canada, said if the criminal law is upheld the next step is prosecutions.I think removing the uncertainty about the validity or invalidity of the law will go a long way towards removing any roadblocks to prosecutions. That was the biggest hurdle, Bridge said.But Pongracic-Speier didnt expect criminal prosecutions to begin immediately if the ban was upheld.In the court case that ended in April, Lawyers for Bountiful residents and civil liberties advocates argued the law violates the religious guarantees in Canadas constitution, and rejected the argument that polygamy is inherently bad.The case included testimony from academic experts, former polygamist women and current plural wives for polygamy.

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