Polygamist Leader Wed Girls Under 16, He Tells Larry King

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Polygamist Leader Wed Girls Under 16, He Tells Larry King Polygamist leader wed girls under 16, he tells Larry King Winston Blackmore, head of B.C.'s Bountiful group, says none of his wives are underage now Wency Leung, Vancouver Sun Saturday, December 09, 2006 Winston Blackmore, the leader of the Bountiful polygamist commune in southwestern B.C., told CNN's Larry King Live that he has married girls under the age of 16, and that he was aware of at least one case of inter-marriage between family members. Blackmore, who was investigated by police earlier this year over alleged misconduct, said none of his wives are underage now, but some were "just barely" under 16 when they married. "There's one that was, and one that lied about their age, but that's not unusual for women, is it?" he said. During the interview, aired Friday night, he also told show host Larry King that intermarriage between family members "should not happen." But asked if it did occur, he said he had heard of one case. "I think that's before the court," he said. About 700 people live in the Bountiful commune. In late September, the RCMP submitted a report to the B.C. Crown after a lengthy probe into alleged misconduct by some of Bountiful's residents. The Crown said in October that it was determining whether any criminal offenses had been committed. Blackmore told King he was never a member of U.S. polygamist sect leader Warren Jeffs's Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, though he knew Jeffs and "had quite a bit to do with him." Jeffs was arrested in August and is awaiting trial in the U.S. on charges related to marriages he allegedly arranged between underage girls and older men in both Utah and Arizona. "He hasn't been convicted of anything," Blackmore said. But he said: "I think he should've just faced up and not tried hiding from his problems, because those problems just don't go away." Blackmore said that, unlike Jeffs, he does not have his own church. "I'm just one of a lot of people who believe in the basic, simple fundamentals of our LDS [Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints] faith," he said. The mainstream Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, or LDS, however, disavowed polygamy in 1890. Blackmore has about 20 wives and at least 100 children, though he would not say exactly how many. He said, however, that polygamy is not intended for everyone, but is acceptable if it is directed by God. As for his wives, he said: "I didn't go out courting me up a bunch of wives. These people came into my life." Polygamy is illegal in Canada, but the country hasn't enforced its anti-polygamy law for about 100 years. Blackmore said that it was "biblically sound" for only men in his faith to have multiple marriages, and that, if any of his wives were to take another husband, she would have to leave the society. Blackmore told King that he had been served a $1-million tax bill by the Canadian government. That bill was not for unpaid taxes, he said. Rather, he said, "An auditor came along and they're assessing me because we have lived in a community-style living." [email protected] http://www.canada.com/topics/news/national/story.html?id=87ab93bb-b16c-4ab7-b488-0187b55b70ef&k=71593 .
Recommended publications
  • Download Download
    International Journal for the Study of New Religions 3.1 (2012) 117–122 ISSN 2041-9511 (print) ISSN 2041-952X (online) doi:10.1558/ijsnr.v3i1.117 Book Reviews Saints under Siege: The Texas State Raid on the Fundamentalist Latter Day Saints, edited by Stuart A. Wright and James T. Richardson. New York University Press, 2011, 270pp., pb., $25.00; e-edition, $9.99. ISBN-13: 9780814795293. Keywords anticult movement (ACM), apostates, child abuse, Fundamentalist Latter Day Saints (FLDS), polygamy, Yearning For Zion Ranch Reviewed by Spencer L. Allen, University of Pennsylvania, [email protected]. edu Identifying herself as Sarah Jessop—pregnant mother, abused 15 year old, and the seventh wife of the fictitious Yearning for Zion (YFZ) Ranch resi- dent Dale Barlow—Rozita Swinton’s call to the domestic violence hotline on April 3, 2008, set in motion a rescue mission and Texas state raid that would become the largest state custodial detention of children in U.S. history. As Saints under Siege demonstrates, however, Swinton—a 33-year-old woman from Colorado Springs—may have served as the catalyst for the raid on the 800-member Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (FLDS) community near Eldorado, Texas, and the removal of 439 children from their families, but the raid on the YFZ Ranch was itself inevitable, given the state’s interest in minimizing the presence and influence of the FLDS community in Schleicher County, Texas. Saints under Siege’s strength resides in its multi-author and multi-hermeneutic approach as each chapter consid- ers a distinct set of historical, cultural, and political/legal realities underlying the raid.
    [Show full text]
  • The Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ
    Brigham Young University Law School BYU Law Digital Commons Utah Court of Appeals Briefs 2012 The undF amentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints v. Thomas C. Horne; Bruce R. Wisan; Mark Shurtleff; and Hon. Denise Posse Lindberg; et al. : Brief of Appellant Utah Court of Appeals Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.law.byu.edu/byu_ca3 Part of the Law Commons Original Brief Submitted to the Utah Court of Appeals; digitized by the Howard W. Hunter Law Library, J. Reuben Clark Law School, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah; machine-generated OCR, may contain errors. Rodney R. Parker, Rick Van Wagoner, Frederick Mark Gedicks; Snow, Christensen and Martineau; Attorneys for Appellee. Roger H. Hoole, Gregory N. Hoole; Hoole and King, L.C.; Attorneys for Intervenors. Recommended Citation Legal Brief, The Fundamentalist Church v. Wisan, No. 20120158 (Utah Court of Appeals, 2012). https://digitalcommons.law.byu.edu/byu_ca3/3047 This Legal Brief is brought to you for free and open access by BYU Law Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Utah Court of Appeals Briefs by an authorized administrator of BYU Law Digital Commons. Policies regarding these Utah briefs are available at http://digitalcommons.law.byu.edu/utah_court_briefs/policies.html. Please contact the Repository Manager at [email protected] with questions or feedback. IN THE SUPREME COURT FOR THE STATE OF UTAH THE FUNDAMENTALIST CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY INTERVENORS'BRIEF ON SAINTS, an Association of Individuals, CERTIFIED QUESTION FROM THE UNITED STATES Plaintiff/Appellee, COURT OF APPEALS FOR vs. THE TENTH CIRCUIT BRUCE R.
    [Show full text]
  • Change Comes to Short Creek the Modern West Encroaches on a Fundamentalist Mormon Empire by Sarah Scoles May 1, 2017 | $5 | Vol
    GORSUCH AND THE WEST | SPLITTING THE 9TH CIRCUIT | THE BEAUTY OF DARKNESS High Country ForN people whoews care about the West Change Comes to Short Creek The modern West encroaches on a fundamentalist Mormon empire By Sarah Scoles May 1, 2017 | $5 | Vol. 49 No. 7 | www.hcn.org 49 No. | $5 Vol. 2017 1, May CONTENTS Editor’s note Exploitation and the West High Country News is some- times called an “environmental” magazine, even by folks within our walls. As the editor, though, I humbly disagree. HCN is a magazine of the American West, helping the region tell its own story, of its people and places, through several important lenses. One of those lenses is the West’s fragile, beautiful environment. Another is closely related: its natural resources, from coal, oil and gas, to timber, ranching and recreation. But a third is through the region’s communities — communities shaped by history and heritage, for better or worse. In this issue, we explore one such community — the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter- day Saints. The FLDS, dwindling in membership and with several of its leaders in jail or on the lam, consti- tutes a small corner of the modern West, but it rep- resents an important aspect of the past. The sect is famous for its polygamy, an aspect of Utah life that A girl — who sticks out her tongue when she spots a photographer — rides with others wearing traditional is so important that the Salt Lake Tribune has a re- FLDS prairie dresses in Hildale, Utah. GEOrgE FREY porter essentially dedicated to covering it.
    [Show full text]
  • How Young Is Too Young When a Polygamist Cult Leader
    How Young is Too Young When a Polygamist Cult Leader Intends to Marry You Off to Your First-Cousin?: The ongoing case against Warren Steed Jeffs. By: Brian Daniel Whelan1 Since 2002, Warren Steed Jeffs has been the leader and “prophet” of a polygamous Mormon sect known as the Fundamentalist Latter Day Saints (“FLDS”).2 On June 9, 2005, a Mohave County Grand Jury returned a two-count indictment against Jeffs charging him with two counts of 1 Associate New Developments Editor, Rutgers Journal of Law & Religion; J.D. Candidate December 2007, Rutgers-Camden School of Law; B.A. 2005, University of California at Berkeley. 2 This group separated itself from mainstream Mormonism in 1890 when Utah denounced polygamy. FLDS freely practices polygamy in the towns of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Arizona, which straddle the state line. The sect also maintains groups of followers in Texas, South Dakota, Nevada, British Columbia and Mexico. Associated Press, CNN News, Sect Leader Indicted on Sexual Conduct With Minor, Incest Charges (July 12, 2007) available at http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/07/12/polygamy.charges/index.htm l (last visited Oct. 24, 2007). sexual conduct with a minor and one count of conspiracy to commit sexual conduct with a minor.3 On June 10, 2005, an arrest warrant was issued by the Arizona Superior Court. Consequently, Jeffs fled to avoid prosecution, causing a federal arrest warrant to be issued thereafter on June 27, 2005. Jeffs was eventually captured on August 28, 2006, during a routine traffic stop near Las Vegas, Nevada. Jeffs was then extradited to Utah where he was made to stand trial.
    [Show full text]
  • Warren Jeffs and the Mormon Art of Forgetting
    68-70_Olaiz_Polygamy.qxp 9/29/2006 9:35 AM Page 68 SUNSTONE NEWS AND COMMENTARY traditional marriage” petition bluntly accuses the apostle of practicing “celestial polygamy.”6 As historian Martha Sonntag Bradley explains, despite the abolition of the WARREN JEFFS AND THE practice, we “are left with the same unan- swered doctrinal questions as were Church members a hundred years ago.”7 So the ques- MORMON ART OF FORGETTING tion must be asked: When members of the media mix up Mormons with polygamy, are we upset because we perceive them to be dis- By Hugo Olaiz torting our religion, or because they are throwing a spotlight on an aspect of our reli- gion we desperately want to forget? When we bristle at the possibility that the public will confuse the LDS with the FLDS, does our concern arise from our being aware, at some level, of the many genuine similarities be- tween the LDS of the 1880s and the FLDS of today? ONSIDER, for example, the rhetoric of war that Warren Jeffs used in a C speech to FLDS members captured on tape before he went on the lam: “Our HTTP://WWW.GEORGEQCANNON.COM/ prophet and the Celestial Law, the principle of revelation, are under attack,” Jeffs de- E WAS ONE of the best known not just forgetting that past: We become out- clared. “There is a combined effort in the leaders of polygamy in America and raged when someone dares to remind us of state of Utah and the state of Arizona to come a wanted man. His picture was it.
    [Show full text]
  • The Texas Mis-Step: Why the Largest Child Removal in Modern U.S. History Failed
    William & Mary Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice Volume 16 (2009-2010) Issue 3 William & Mary Journal of Women and Article 2 the Law April 2010 The Texas Mis-Step: Why the Largest Child Removal in Modern U.S. History Failed Jessica Dixon Weaver Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmjowl Part of the Fourteenth Amendment Commons Repository Citation Jessica Dixon Weaver, The Texas Mis-Step: Why the Largest Child Removal in Modern U.S. History Failed, 16 Wm. & Mary J. Women & L. 449 (2010), https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/ wmjowl/vol16/iss3/2 Copyright c 2010 by the authors. This article is brought to you by the William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository. https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmjowl THE TEXAS MIS-STEP: WHY THE LARGEST CHILD REMOVAL IN MODERN U.S. HISTORY FAILED JESSICA DIXON WEAVER* This Article sets forth the historical and legal reasons as to how the State of Texas botched the removal of 439 children from the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints parents residing in Eldorado, Texas. The Department of Family and Protective Services in Texas overreached its authority by treating this case like a class-action removal based on an impermissible legal argument, rather than focusing on the facts and circumstances that could have been substantiated for a select group of children at risk. This imper- missible legal argument regarding the “pervasive belief system” of a polygamist sect that allowed minor females to spiritually marry older adult males sparked questions as to how far the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment and the Fourteenth Amendment go in protecting religious freedom and parental rights.
    [Show full text]
  • Complaint in United States V. Town of Colorado City
    1 Thomas E. Perez Assistant Attorney General 2 Steven H. Rosenbaum (NY Bar #1901958) Jonathan M. Smith (DC Bar #396578) 3 R. Tamar Hagler (CA Bar #189441) Christy E. Lopez (DC Bar #473612) 4 Eric W. Treene (NY Bar #2568343) Lori K. Wagner (VA Bar #39446) 5 Sean R. Keveney (TX Bar #24033862) Jessica C. Crockett (NY Bar #4694972) 6 Anika Gzifa (DC Bar #495394) Matthew J. Donnelly (Ill Bar #6281308) 7 United States Department of Justice Civil Rights Division 8 950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Northwestern Building, 7th Floor 9 Washington, D.C. 20530 Facsimile: (202) 514-1116 10 E-mail: [email protected] Phone: (202) 305-3107 11 Attorneys for Plaintiff United States of America 12 13 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF ARIZONA 14 United States of America, ) 15 ) Plaintiff, ) 16 ) Civil No. v. ) 17 ) Town of Colorado City, Arizona; ) COMPLAINT 18 City of Hildale, Utah; Twin City Power; ) and Twin City Water Authority, Inc., ) 19 ) Defendants. ) 20 ) ) 21 INTRODUCTION 22 1. This action is brought to enforce the Fair Housing Act, Title VIII of the Civil Rights 23 24 Act of 1968, as amended by the Fair Housing Amendments Act of 1988, 42 U.S.C. 25 §§ 3601 et seq; Title III of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000b; and 26 pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 14141. 27 28 2. The Town of Colorado City, Arizona (“Colorado City”), and the City of Hildale, Utah 1 2 (“Hildale”) (collectively, “Cities”), and two utility agencies under the Cities’ control 3 (collectively, “Defendants”) have engaged in and continue to engage in a pattern or 4 practice of conduct that deprives persons of rights, privileges, or immunities secured or 5 protected by the First, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States 6 7 Constitution and the laws of the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • Mediated Constructions and Audience Responses to Polygamist Controversies
    Mediated Constructions and Audience Responses to Polygamist Controversies A dissertation presented to the faculty of the Scripps College of Communication of Ohio University In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy Heather M. Stassen June 2010 © 2010 Heather M. Stassen. All Rights Reserved. This dissertation titled Mediated Constructions and Audience Responses to Polygamist Controversies by HEATHER M. STASSEN has been approved for the School of Communication Studies and the Scripps College of Communication by Roger C. Aden Professor of Communication Studies Gregory J. Shepherd Dean, Scripps College of Communication ii ABSTRACT STASSEN, HEATHER M., Ph.D., June 2010, Communication Studies Mediated Constructions and Audience Responses to Polygamy Controversies (215 pp.) Director of Dissertation: Roger C. Aden This dissertation explores 14 publics that emerged throughout three polygamist controversies from 2006 through 2008. The first two chapters seek to establish a framework through which each controversy is explored. Specifically, warfare, pathogen stress, male absenteeism, and labor distribution are identified as plausible and possible rationales for the practice of polygamy. Subsequently, the history and contemporary role of polygamy in the United States is traced back to Native American culture and the contemporary practice of polygamy within the United States to members of the Fundamentalist Church of Latter Day Saints (FLDS). Additionally, key terms such as controversy, abductive criticism, textual fragments, and publics are defined and situated within the literature. The three analysis chapters reveal 14 publics that emerged throughout the polygamist controversies. An exploration of responses to the premiere of HBO’s fictional drama about polygamy, Big Love, reveals six publics.
    [Show full text]
  • Warren Jeffs and the Abandonment of Tradition Nathan B
    College of William & Mary Law School William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository Popular Media Faculty and Deans 2011 Warren Jeffs and the Abandonment of Tradition Nathan B. Oman William & Mary Law School, [email protected] Repository Citation Oman, Nathan B., "Warren Jeffs and the Abandonment of Tradition" (2011). Popular Media. 241. https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/popular_media/241 Copyright c 2011 by the authors. This article is brought to you by the William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository. https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/popular_media 7/10/13 Nathan B. Oman: Warren Jeffs and the abandonment of tradition | Deseret News Nathan B. Oman: Warren Jeffs and the abandonment of tradition By Nathan B. Oman Published: Sunday, Aug. 14 2011 12:00 a.m. MDT Last week, a Texas jury convicted Warren Jeffs, leader of the polygamist FLDS Church, of two counts of child sexual assault against one of his 12-year-old plural wives. For Americans who are increasingly interested in the religion of the two Mormons running for president, Jeffs' conviction raises what could appear to be difficult questions about modern Mormonism. There is no formal connection between Jeffs' FLDS Church and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, as the Mormon Church is formally known. From 1852 until 1890, however, the Mormon Church did publically teach and practice polygamy as a way of imitating biblical prophets. Given that history, many Americans ask themselves whether Jeffs' cocktail of religious authority, polygamy and child sex represents some dangerous essence concealed within the apparently wholesome veneer of mainstream Mormonism. Latter-day Saints themselves, however, are untroubled by this question.
    [Show full text]
  • Latter-Day Screens Gender, Sexuality & Mediated Mormonism
    LATTER-DAY SCREENS GENDER, SEXUALITY & MEDIATED MORMONISM BRENDA R. WEBER Latter- day Screens Latter- day Screens GENDER, SEXUALITY, AND MEDIATED MORMONISM Brenda R. Weber duke university press durham and london 2019 © 2019 DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS. All rights reserved Printed in the United States of Amer i ca on acid- free paper ∞ Designed by Courtney Leigh Baker Typeset in Minion Pro and Helvetica Neue by Westchester Publishing Services Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available from the Library of Congress. Library of Congress Control Number: 2019943713 isbn 9781478004264 (hardcover : alk. paper) isbn 9781478004868 (pbk. : alk. paper) isbn 9781478005292 (ebook) Cover art: Big Love (hbo, 2006–11). Publication of this open monograph was the result of Indiana University’s participation in TOME (Toward an Open Monograph Ecosystem), a col- laboration of the Association of American Universities, the Association of University Presses, and the Association of Research Libraries. TOME aims to expand the reach of long-form humanities and social science scholarship including digital scholarship. Additionally, the program looks to ensure the sustainability of university press monograph publishing by supporting the highest quality scholarship and promoting a new ecology of scholarly publishing in which authors’ institutions bear the publication costs. Funding from Indiana University made it possible to open this publication to the world. This work was partially funded by the Office of the Vice Provost of Research and the IU Libraries. For Michael and Stacey, my North Stars CONTENTS Acknowl edgments ix Past as Prologue. Latter- day Screens and History ​1 Introduction. “Well, We Are a Curiosity, Ain’t We?”: Mediated Mormonism ​13 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Who's Who in the Warren Jeffs Trial
    Who’s who in the Warren Jeffs trial After more than a year in jail, polygamous sect leader Warren S. Jeffs is finally Warren Steed Jeffs The 51-year-old succeeded his father on trial. Here are the major players: in 2002 as head of the Fundamental- ist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter The prosecution The judge Day Saints. The former private school principal is charged with two counts Brock R. Belnap: Washington County attorney of rape as an accomplice to a marriage he conducted in 2001. The Law degree: Brigham Young University, 1992. bride allegedly objected to the union. Worked for Salt Lake City firm of Fabian & Clendenin until 1987, then joined the Washington County Attorney's Office. He was elected county attorney in 2003. Highlight: Successful 2005 automobile homicide prosecution of Daniel Perez-Avila, who was driving while intoxicated in a 2002 accident that killed his pregnant wife and unborn child. James L. Shumate Fifth District judge presiding over the Warren S. Jeffs trial. Ryan Shaum: Lead prosecutor, Washington County Attorney's Office Law degree: University of Utah, 1975. Law degree: University of Idaho, 1994. Served as Iron County attorney from 1979 to 1982; then Practiced in Twin Falls, Idaho, and then became a defense attorney. joined the County Attorney's Office in 1997. Became circuit judge in 1991 and Highlight: Successful 2007 prosecution of district judge in 1992. Todd Mulder for the murder of St. George coin shop owner Jordan Algood. Highlight: He is known for being prepared, thorough, fair — and talkative. Craig Barlow: Assistant attorney general, children's justice division The witness list Law degree: University of Utah, 1977.
    [Show full text]
  • Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt”
    UNPACKING THE BUNKER Sex, Abuse, and Apocalypticism in “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” Megan Goodwin nbreakable Kimmy Schmidt opens in a dark, sparsely furnished U underground bunker. Four women (three white and one Latina) are decorating a Christmas tree. Their language is stilted, archaic; their dress and demeanor are extremely conservative. They are celebrating Christmas by singing about ending the world to the tune of “O Tannen- baum”: “Apocalypse, apocalypse! We caused it with our dumbness.” These are the members of the Reverend Richard Wayne Gary Wayne’s Spooky Church of the Scary-pocalypse. From the very first scene, viewers of Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt know they’re looking at a cult. These women are isolated. They live in apparent poverty. None of them look related, but they call each other “sister,” sug- gesting a complex family structure. They’re all dressed alike and are very conservative in their appearances—long-sleeved prairie dresses in muted pastels, no makeup, plain shoes. They all live together in a single space. Their singing reveals that they’re concerned about the apocalypse, and the reference to Christmas suggests that it’s most likely an apocalypse informed by Christian traditions. Popular culture has conditioned viewers to expect cult members to look like these women, training audiences through countless television shows, movies, news reports, documentaries, and talk shows.1 And the recognition that these women are in a cult inspires several viewer assumptions, because we all “know” what happens in a cult.2 Among the things, viewers “know” to expect are a charismatic leader and passive, © 2019 Association for Religion and Intellectual Life J U N E 2 0 1 8 .
    [Show full text]