![]() ![]() ![]() authorities had difficulty finding evidence. Blackmore was charged with polygamy, said B.C. Wally Oppal, who was attorney-general when Mr. The release of information about the age of the brides raised questions yesterday about why authorities did not pursue a charge of sexual exploitation, which involves sexual touching by a person in a position of authority over the victim. "That's wrong," he said before walking away. Blackmore denied that he married four 15-year-old girls. In a brief exchange outside the court today, Mr. He reviewed our information and provided clarification and information." "At that point in time, through information from a number of sources, we had compiled a list of individuals thought to be wives and his children. Blackmore came to the clinic and she showed him the list compiled by the police, Constable Livingstone said. She finished her education in 1998 and moved on to take training as a midwife in 1995, travelling to Short Creek, an FLDS community on the border of Utah and Arizona, to get practical experience delivering babies.Mr. The next day at 9 a.m., they were married.Īt 30 years old, she went to Selkirk College and took a nursing program based on a FLDS blessing she received as a young teenager where she was told that she would administer to the sick in the last days. She learned she’d marry Winston Blackmore at 10:30 p.m. She completed her high school diploma through distance education before getting married and having six children.ĭuring her childhood, she was raised by a religious culture in school, church and at home that demanded submission to priesthood-head authority - the father or husband of the family unit - and that plural marriage was necessary to reach the highest glory of heaven.Īfter pressure from her father, she agreed to be married and taken to a conference to see the prophet who would determine a husband for her based on divine instruction. Jane Blackmore grew up in the Creston area and went to elementary school up to Grade 9. Jane Blackmore also testified that Oler, her brother, also had plural wives and had attended the birth of at least one child from two wives. FLDS religious doctrine dictates that marriages that are sealed for time and eternity on earth are sealed in the afterlife, while marriages sealed in time only are valid only while the spouse is alive. Jane Blackmore also testified that some of Winston Blackmore’s marriages were to widows and sealed for time only instead of time and eternity. That had a direct result on the family life, Jane Blackmore said, as some of Winston’s wives supported Jeffs and left the relationship to live in the United States. The ensuing power struggle split the Bountiful community, as half declared support for Jeffs, while the other half declared for Blackmore. In 2002, Rulon Jeffs, the FLDS prophet at the time, passed away, with his son Warren and Winston Blackmore vying for the church leadership. However, the FLDS prophet Leroy Johnson- who conducted the ceremony - also wedded Winston Blackmore to his new bride’s sister as well, claiming divine inspiration. One ceremony even included a planned marriage between Winston Blackmore and a new wife, who had travelled up from the United States with her younger sister. Jane Blackmore said she was sometimes asked for approval on the marriages, while she didn’t find out about others until after the ceremony had occurred. Jane Blackmore, who was born and raised in the FLDS faith, testified she knew when she was first married to Blackmore that other wives were likely to follow, as the religious doctrine dictates that a man must have three wives to advance in the church and attain the highest level of celestial glory. Jane Blackmore left Bountiful and her relationship with Winston Blackmore in 2003, but testified that her former husband married over 25 women during the course of their relationship. Jane Blackmore married Winston Blackmore in 1975 in two ceremonies the first as a celestial marriage through the FLDS church in Rosemary, Alberta, and the second a few months later in a legal ceremony in Bonner’s Ferry, Idaho. The first legal wife of a member of the polygamous community south of Creston testified about her marriage and and life as a sister wife with up to two dozen other women.Ĭalled by special prosecutor Peter Wilson, Jane Blackmore testified in the trial of Winston Blackmore and James Oler, who are both facing polygamy charges based on multiple marriages sanctioned by their faith in the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (FLDS) - a breakaway sect from the mainstream Mormon church. ![]()
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