'Sister Wives' clan uses same-sex
marriage ruling in polygamy case
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[August 28, 2015]
(Reuters) - The stars of the reality
television show "Sister Wives" used the U.S. Supreme Court's recent
same-sex marriage ruling to support their case against Utah's polygamy
ban, court records show.
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The filing with the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals by Kody
Brown and the four women he considers his wives - Meri Brown,
Janelle Brown, Christine Brown and Robyn Sullivan - came in response
the Utah Attorney General's appeal of a lower court's ruling in
their favor.
Wednesday's filing referred to the Supreme Court's June ruling
legalizing same-sex marriage nationwide, saying that Utah's position
against plural families relies on outdated law.
"This case is about criminalization of consensual relations and
there are 21st century cases rather than 19th century cases,"
attorney Jonathan Turley said in the 79-page filing. "It is clear
that states can no longer use criminal codes to coerce or punish
those who choose to live in consensual but unpopular unions."
Polygamy is illegal in all 50 states. But Utah's law is unique in
that a person can be found guilty not just for having two legal
marriage licenses but also for cohabiting with another adult in a
marriage-like relationship when they are already legally married to
someone else.
U.S. District Judge Clark Waddoups ruled in 2013 that the
cohabitation section of the law violated both the First Amendment's
clause on religious rights and the Fourteenth Amendment's due
process clause to protect personal liberty. The Attorney General's
office later appealed that ruling.
Waddoups also ruled that Utah County Attorney Jeff Buhman violated
the constitutional rights of Brown and his women when he
investigated them for bigamy.
Representatives for the Attorney General's Office could not be
immediately reached for comment on Thursday.
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Utah is the headquarters state of The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, or Mormons, which abandoned polygamy in 1890 as
Utah was seeking statehood. Some sects and breakaway groups,
however, follow the early theological doctrine of plural marriage,
thought to bring exaltation in heaven.
The TLC television network first aired "Sister Wives" in 2010 and it
begins a new season next month.
The Brown family and their 17 children, who formerly lived in Lehi,
Utah, but now are in Las Vegas, are members of the Apostolic United
Brethren, a Utah-based church that follows plural marriage doctrine.
In contemporary polygamous marriages, a man is typically legally
married to one woman and the others are considered spiritual wives.
(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Editing by Daniel
Wallis and Bill Trott)
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