COREY BULLOCK AND TREVOR CRAWLEY
The Globe and Mail
April 12, 2017
A single trial will be held for two men from Bountiful, B.C., who are charged with polygamy.
The lawyer for Winston Blackmore, who is accused of having two dozen wives, asked the court to hold separate trials for the men in arguments earlier this week.
Justice Sheri Ann Donegan dismissed the request Wednesday, ruling she wanted to “balance the interests of the public and the accused,” and was not persuaded that the trial needed to be separated.
Donegan told the court in Cranbrook that she’ll announce her full reasons on April 18, before the trial for Blackmore and James Oler begins.
Oler is accused of polygamy for allegedly having four wives.
None of the allegations have been proven in court and the case is being heard by judge alone.
Blackmore’s lawyer, Blair Suffredine, told the court on Tuesday that the polygamy charges involve separate and different allegations, with no factual overlap.
If tried together, evidence against Oler could be prejudicial against Blackmore and vice versa, he said.
“The sins of one are being alleged against the other,” Suffredine told the court on Tuesday.
Peter Wilson, a special prosecutor appointed by the provincial government, argued that expert evidence was going to be called from witnesses in the United States and that it wouldn’t make sense to have them come to Canada again for a second trial.
“It’s undesirable and contrary to the interests of justice to run the same trial twice,” said Wilson.
Blackmore and Oler are connected to the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints community of Bountiful in southeastern British Columbia.
The legal history of case goes back to the 1990s when the RCMP began investigating allegations that people in the community were practising polygamy.
Three special prosecutors have been appointed to assess charges since 2007, and a constitutional reference case was launched after charges were thrown out in 2009. A B.C. Supreme Court judge later ruled that the polygamy charges were constitutionally valid.
Wilson was the third special prosecutor hired and in August 2014, Blackmore and Oler were charged with polygamy.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/british-columbia/judge-refuses-to-split-trial-of-two-bc-men-accused-of-polygamy/article34690701/
The Globe and Mail
April 12, 2017
A single trial will be held for two men from Bountiful, B.C., who are charged with polygamy.
The lawyer for Winston Blackmore, who is accused of having two dozen wives, asked the court to hold separate trials for the men in arguments earlier this week.
Justice Sheri Ann Donegan dismissed the request Wednesday, ruling she wanted to “balance the interests of the public and the accused,” and was not persuaded that the trial needed to be separated.
Donegan told the court in Cranbrook that she’ll announce her full reasons on April 18, before the trial for Blackmore and James Oler begins.
Oler is accused of polygamy for allegedly having four wives.
None of the allegations have been proven in court and the case is being heard by judge alone.
Blackmore’s lawyer, Blair Suffredine, told the court on Tuesday that the polygamy charges involve separate and different allegations, with no factual overlap.
If tried together, evidence against Oler could be prejudicial against Blackmore and vice versa, he said.
“The sins of one are being alleged against the other,” Suffredine told the court on Tuesday.
Peter Wilson, a special prosecutor appointed by the provincial government, argued that expert evidence was going to be called from witnesses in the United States and that it wouldn’t make sense to have them come to Canada again for a second trial.
“It’s undesirable and contrary to the interests of justice to run the same trial twice,” said Wilson.
Blackmore and Oler are connected to the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints community of Bountiful in southeastern British Columbia.
The legal history of case goes back to the 1990s when the RCMP began investigating allegations that people in the community were practising polygamy.
Three special prosecutors have been appointed to assess charges since 2007, and a constitutional reference case was launched after charges were thrown out in 2009. A B.C. Supreme Court judge later ruled that the polygamy charges were constitutionally valid.
Wilson was the third special prosecutor hired and in August 2014, Blackmore and Oler were charged with polygamy.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/british-columbia/judge-refuses-to-split-trial-of-two-bc-men-accused-of-polygamy/article34690701/
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