Utah Senate votes to decriminalize polygamy among consenting adults
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[February 19, 2020]
By Jennifer Dobner
SALT LAKE CITY (Reuters) - The Utah state
Senate voted unanimously on Tuesday effectively to decriminalize
polygamy among consenting adults, reducing penalties for a practice with
deep religious roots in the predominantly Mormon state.
The bill, which would treat the offense of plural marriage as a simple
infraction on par with a parking ticket, now moves to the Utah House of
Representatives, where it is likely to face greater resistance.
The bill swiftly cleared the Republican-controlled Senate on a vote of
29-0 with little discussion.
Under current law, polygamy - typically involving a man who cohabitates
with and purports to marry more than one wife - is classified as a
third-degree felony, punishable by up to five years in prison.
If the Senate bill becomes law, punishments for plural marriage would be
limited to fines of up to $750 and community service.
However, fraudulent bigamy - in which an individual obtains licenses to
marry more than one spouse without their knowledge, or seeks to wed
someone underage without her consent - remains a felony.
The chief sponsor of the measure, Senator Deirdre Henderson, said the
intent of the bill is not to legalize polygamy but to lower the
penalties so those from polygamous communities who are victims of crimes
can come forward without fear of being prosecuted themselves.
It also would make it easier for otherwise law-abiding polygamists to
obtain access to critical services such as medical or mental health
care, education or even employment without fear, she said.
Opponents of decriminalization say the current law should not be changed
because polygamy is inherently dangerous and harmful to women and
children, particularly young girls, some of whom have been forced into
marriages with older men.
REMNANT OF PRE-STATEHOOD
Polygamy is a remnant of the early teachings of the Utah-based Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, whose members fled persecution over
the practice to settle the Utah territory in 1847. The church disavowed
polygamy in 1890 as a condition of Utah statehood, and today members of
the faith found to be practicing plural marriage are excommunicated.
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The Utah state capitol is pictured on the first day of the
legislative session in Salt Lake City, Utah, January 27, 2014.
REUTERS/Jim Urquhart
Fundamentalist Mormons, said to number more than 30,000 across the
western United States, believe they are adhering to the truest form
of Mormon doctrine, which promises polygamists glorification in
heaven.
Utah’s history of felony punishment for polygamy has never halted
its practice entirely but rather driven it to the fringes of
society, creating a culture of fear that allows perpetrators to
thrive, Henderson said.
“The solution to the problem is increased societal integration,
which can only come through decriminalizing otherwise law-abiding
polygamists,” Henderson said during a preliminary debate on the bill
last week.
Critics, however, say the measure wrongly frames polygamy as a human
rights issue.
“Proponents of this bill attempt to piggyback on the success of the
gay rights movement by promoting the narrative that this initiative
is about consenting adults doing what they will,” the anti-polygamy
group Sound Choices Coalition said in a statement. “This has nothing
to do about consenting adults or gay rights. It’s all about
weaponizing God.”
In 2013, Kody Brown, patriarch of the polygamist family featured on
the “Sister Wives” television reality show, challenged the law after
being investigated for bigamy by Utah County prosecutors. No charges
were filed.
A federal judge struck down the anti-polygamy law as
unconstitutional. But a federal appeals court reversed the ruling
and the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the case.
(Reporting by Jennifer Dobner in Salt Lake City; Editing by Steve
Gorman, Matthew Lewis and Dan Grebler)
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