Skip to main content

Winston Blackmore, who is accused of practising polygamy in a fundamentalist religious community, returns to court after a lunch break in Cranbrook, B.C., Tuesday, April 18, 2017.Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press

A decades-long constitutional debate over Canada's polygamy law is set to flare up again Tuesday, six years after a British Columbia Supreme Court ruled plural marriage is a crime.

Winston Blackmore of Bountiful, B.C., is expected to argue the law infringes on his freedom of religion and expression. Blackmore married at least 24 women between 1990 and 2014 and was found guilty of one count of polygamy earlier this year.

Blackmore is the leader of a small community in southeast B.C. that follows the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, a Mormon breakaway sect that condones plural or "celestial" marriage.

The mainstream Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints has renounced any connection to the polygamist group.

This week's proceedings are the latest attempt to test whether Canada's polygamy law violates the Constitution.

The RCMP first investigated Blackmore in the early 1990s and recommended he be charged with polygamy, but the province chose not to because of the constitutional uncertainty.

B.C. appointed a special prosecutor in 2007 who advised against approving charges against Blackmore and his successor, James Oler.

Oler was appointed to lead the community after Blackmore's excommunication by church leader Warren Jeffs, who was based in the United States. Jeffs was later sentenced to life in prison in the U.S. after being convicted of multiple sexual assaults against minors.

In 2008, the provincial government appointed a second special prosecutor who approved legal action against the church leaders, but the court threw out those charges, accusing the province of "special prosecutor shopping."

Three years later, the B.C. Supreme Court offered clarity by ruling in a lengthy reference case that Canada's ban on polygamy is valid and does not unreasonably restrict religious freedoms. The decision found that plural marriage is inherently harmful and must be outlawed to protect women, children and the institution of marriage.

The following year, the provincial government appointed a third special prosecutor who approved charges against Blackmore and Oler in 2014.

Findings of guilt against both Blackmore and Oler won't be entered as convictions until a decision is made in the constitutional debate. Arguments are expected to take until the end of the week.

Both Blackmore and Oler are out on bail. The maximum sentence for a conviction of polygamy is five years in prison, said Crown spokesman Dan McLaughlin.

Blackmore's lawyer, Blair Suffredine, said Monday his client has been attacked for 20 years over religious beliefs that have not been shown to harm anyone.

"It's not fair," Suffredine said. "It's not as if there's any allegation of serious misconduct. The allegation is simply that he has more than one wife, basically, not that there's any complaint from anybody that he's done anything that's hurt anybody."

Suffredine added that his reading of the reference decision is that the court needs to find that actual harm is being caused, not potential harm.

Prosecutor Micah Rankin said Monday in an email that the Crown has not filed a written argument in advance of Tuesday's hearing, but he and his counterpart, Peter Wilson, would submit materials in court during proceedings.

Oler does not have legal representation, but lawyer Joe Doyle was appointed as a friend of the court to ensure Oler receives a fair trial.

A former husband and wife from B.C., Brandon and Gail Blackmore, have been sentenced to 12 months and seven months in jail respectively, for taking a 13-year-old girl to the U.S. to marry the leader of their polygamous sect.

The Canadian Press

Interact with The Globe