[Vision2020] Polygamist Sect Draws New Notice in Idaho
Tom Hansen
thansen at moscow.com
Sun Feb 15 08:32:27 PST 2009
Courtesy of today's (February 15, 2009) Spokesman Review.
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Polygamist sect on Idaho-B.C. border drawing new scrutiny
Two leaders facing trial
In the scenic international border region where Idahos Panhandle meets
British Columbia, polygamy is a way of life for hundreds the open secret
thats gone untouched by authorities until now.
The arrests in Canada last month of two fundamentalist Mormon leaders are
bringing renewed interest to their polygamous communities near Creston,
B.C., and loyal followers living just across the border in Idahos
Boundary County.
Winston Blackmore, 52, and James Oler, 44, who now head factions of the
Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in Canada, face
prison terms if convicted of violating that countrys polygamy laws. They
are scheduled to enter not-guilty pleas this week in Creston. Their trials
likely are months away.
Their polygamist sect has been living in the southeast corner of British
Columbia for almost 60 years without legal challenge by Canadian
authorities. Two FLDS schools, with some students from Boundary County,
get almost $1 million a year from the Canadian government.
The move into North Idaho by FLDS members began in 2003 after a leadership
split in the Canadian community.
By conservative estimates, there are at least a half-dozen polygamous
families about 100 men, women and children living in Boundary County,
even though polygamy is banned by the Idaho Constitution. One ex-member
says the number in Boundary County could approach 300.
The FLDS community of Bountiful, B.C., is the polygamy capital of
Canada that countrys dirty secret where underage marriages and child
abuse have gone untouched, according to author and Vancouver Sun columnist
Daphne Bramham, who has written extensively about the sect.
She and other experts are uncertain why the criminal case was brought with
the dawning of 2009, but increased media coverage and public interest
appear to have put pressure on politicians.
Theres a greater realization now within the local community around
Bountiful that whats going on out there isnt right, Bramham said last
week.
For a very long time, people were content to believe that because the
young women they saw in town with all the children were happy and healthy,
everything was OK. The businesspeople were also content to take Winston
Blackmores word that everything was OK especially since Blackmore and
his companies were spending considerable amounts of money in the
community.
That changed, Bramham said, with the recent departure of Jane Blackmore,
Winstons first and only legal wife. She is a well-respected midwife who
has received civic recognition.
When she left and spoke out about 15- and 16-year-old girls having
babies, people listened and paid attention, said Bramham, who wrote about
the group in The Secret Lives of Saints.
Already the landmark criminal case is drawing national attention in
Canada, with legal scholars saying it will test that countrys polygamy
laws.
Blackmore the father of more than 100 children with at least 19 wives,
including three living in Boundary County with their children says hes
being persecuted for practicing his religious freedom.
His attorney says because same-sex marriages are legal in Canada, having
multiple wives should be, too.
Others support the view of former Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau,
who is remembered for saying the government has no business in peoples
bedrooms.
Former members of the sect, however, say the government has an obligation
to investigate and prosecute child neglect and abuse, including reports
that teenage girls some as young as 14 are forced into arranged
marriages with men 40 and 50 years old.
If Blackmore and Oler are convicted of practicing polygamy in Canada, no
one is ready to predict what impact that may have on their followers in
Boundary County, where polygamous households are common knowledge.
Elsewhere, there are an estimated 10,000 FLDS members living in the
adjoining communities of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Ariz.; in
Eldorado, Texas; in Edgemont, S.D.; and in the tiny Colorado communities
of Cotopaxi, Florence and Mancos.
Followers adhere to the early-day teachings of the Mormon Church. The only
way to heaven, they believe, is if men have multiple celestial wives,
bearing as many children as possible. They dont celebrate Christmas, nor
do they condone rock music, comic books, cartoons or makeup.
The teenage daughter of one couple will become the plural wife of
another man and live in a household where, in some situations, his older
daughters call her mother.
The genetic inbreeding of families has caused numerous babies to be born
with an extremely rare and disabling genetic disease and a high infant
mortality rate, the Phoenix New Times reported in 2005, citing a study by
a pediatric neurologist.
The FLDS is a racist polygamous cult and a hate group, according to
the Southern Poverty Law Center, which is credited with dismantling the
Aryan Nations headquarters in North Idaho.
The modern-day LDS church renounced polygamy in 1890, allowing Utah to
gain statehood. The church denounces the FLDS movement, even though plural
marriage theology remains in its doctrine and covenants. Elder Quentin
L. Cook, an apostle and spokesman for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-
day Saints, said modern-day Mormons have nothing whatsoever to do with
this polygamous sect.
Warren Jeffs, the FLDS now-imprisoned prophet, has preached to his
followers that black people are the descendants of Cain, cursed with
black skin and selected by God to be the servants of servants.
FLDS members in Utah are suspected to have ties to the Little Shell
Pembina Band of North America, an anti-government, anti-tax extremist
group, according to the Anti-Defamation League.
Blackmore in line to lead FLDS.
Winston Blackmore, a Canadian citizen, was in line to lead all the FLDS
communities in the United States and Canada following the 2003 death of
Rulon Jeffs, who held the position of the churchs prophet. But Jeffs
son, Warren Jeffs, pulled a coup, then attempted to excommunicate
Blackmore, who had risen to power in the Canadian community.
Meanwhile, the other Canadian FLDS leader, Oler, remained aligned with
Warren Jeffs, who made frequent visits to Boundary County and Bountiful.
Jeffs made the FBIs Top 10 fugitive list after being charged in Utah and
later convicted of being an accomplice to rape for arranging marriages
between underage girls and older men. He faces similar trials in Texas and
Arizona.
After Jeffs arrest, Texas child-welfare authorities last year raided the
FLDS Yearning for Zion compound in Eldorado. More than 400 children were
taken into protective custody. Of 53 girls ages 14 to 17 taken in the
raid, 31 either were pregnant or had children, authorities said.
Most of the children were returned after the Texas Supreme Court ruled the
state lacked evidence they were in imminent danger of abuse.
Jeffs and five other men still face criminal charges related to sexually
abusing underage girls in Texas. Those Texas families have relatives
living in Idahos Panhandle and in nearby Bountiful.
Shem Johnson: bishop south of the 49th parallel
The FLDS leader in North Idaho is Shem Erick Johnson, who is said to have
remained loyal to Blackmore after he and Oler split the 1,000 members of
the Bountiful community into competing factions, each with its own
government-supported school.
Johnson, a 40-year-old Bonners Ferry businessman, is described in a church
publication as the FLDS bishop south of the 49th parallel. He reportedly
has four wives. He is said to have taken his fourth wife last March when
she turned 18.
Johnson, who lives on a rural estate north of Bonners Ferry, didnt
respond to repeated requests for an interview.
But his name turns up in a lot of public records. He owns nine parcels of
land in Boundary County, totaling 134 acres. Johnson owns homes on four of
the properties, and he appears to have set up a large schoolhouse complex
on one of them.
He is also a licensed pilot, Federal Aviation Administration records show,
and stores his six-passenger Cessna in a $60,000 hangar he owns on leased
land at the Bonners Ferry airport.
Records on file in Washington County, Utah, show a marriage license was
issued in 1989 in that FLDS community to Shem Erick Johnson and Margo
Wyler. But in a notarized deed filed in December in Kootenai County and
signed by Johnson, he claims he is an unmarried man.
Margo Johnson is manager of Boundary HomeSchool, an Idaho nonprofit that
Johnson incorporated in March 2003 in Boundary County, listing himself as
the principle.
Shem Johnson also is listed as the president of S & L Underground, a
general contractor licensed to do business in Washington, Idaho, Montana
and Arizona.
In public records filed in Arizona last year, Margo Johnson lists herself
as the construction companys secretary. She listed the same home address
near Bonners Ferry used by Shem Johnson.
In 2005, S & L Underground bought three portable classrooms for $15,000
from the Boundary County School District, other public records show. The
classrooms were moved to property Johnson owns, but its unclear if they
are being used as classrooms for FLDS children or for other purposes.
Still other public records show that in the past few years, S & L
Underground has gotten millions of dollars in public works contracts,
including $1.32 million in water line jobs from the city of Bonners Ferry.
The general contractor also has been awarded bids by the city of Troy,
Mont., the Worley, Idaho, highway district and the Idaho Department of
Transportation.
In 2005, S & L Underground was awarded a $1.9 million contract by the city
of Coeur dAlene to build a replacement 2 million gallon water reservoir
on Tubbs Hill.
About that same time, Johnson rented various houses in Coeur dAlene and
bought a house on Peach Tree Drive in Hayden. Last December, he
transferred the deed for that residence to Sarah E. Johnson, identified
only as an unmarried woman.
Some contractors who have lost public works contracts to S & L Underground
ask if the company has been successful at underbidding them because
Johnson employs members of his church and pays them less.
It does make me wonder if they are using kids, young men from their
church, so they can pay them anything they want, said Charlie Kramer,
owner of Kramer Crane and Construction, in Naples, Idaho. His company lost
a November 2004 city of Bonners Ferry contract to S & L.
Stephen Boorman, city administrator in Bonners Ferry, said the city, like
other governmental entities, is obligated to award its public contracts to
the lowest bidder. He and city water officials in Coeur dAlene praised
the quality of work done by Johnson and his S & L crew.
Any contracts involving federal funds would be subject to a federal law
that requires workers to be paid certain prevailing wages and subject
to certified payroll audits.
Former mayor didnt know group was in North Idaho
While the number of FLDS followers in North Idaho appears to be growing,
their presence hasnt caught the attention of many residents.
Darrell Kerby, the 57-year-old former mayor of Bonners Ferry, has lived
his entire life in that community. He didnt realize polygamists were his
neighbors until he recently read Jon Krakauers book Under the Banner of
Heaven, which details the history of Mormon fundamentalists.
I had no idea that there was this polygamist group here, and Im guessing
a lot of people still dont know about them, Kerby said.
While mayor, Kerby contacted his counterpart in Creston. The two men,
along with Idaho legislative leaders and local officials, met with a
Creston-based citizens group, Altering Destiny Through Education.
Everybody got their eyes opened, he said.
State legislators and the Idaho attorney generals office promised action,
but nothing happened.
Kerby said law enforcement is in a confounding situation. Although
polygamy is illegal, the Idaho Legislature changed state law a few years
ago, no longer recognizing common law marriages. The only legal
marriages in Idaho are those between a man and a woman, backed with a
state-issued license. Marriage partners must be 18, or 16 with parental
approval.
Investigating potential crimes within the FLDS community is further
compounded, Kerby said, because members of the group are secretive,
midwives tend to home births, and many infants dont immediately have
birth certificates.
Idaho state welfare officials reportedly have investigated potential
benefits fraud by FLDS members, but no criminal cases have materialized.
Meanwhile, federal law enforcement agents are watchful for human
trafficking cases involving teenage girls in the group, transferred from
FLDS communities in Canada to those in the United States. But so far,
there have been no federal prosecutions in the United States.
In Boundary County, officials and people on the street respond with
sheepish grins and shoulder shrugs when asked, Why arent authorities
investigating the group?
Rich Stephens, chief deputy of the Boundary County Sheriffs Office, said
the law enforcement agency stands ready to investigate and make arrests if
a member of the FLDS community comes forward to report a crime.
Boundary County Sheriff Greg Sprungl declined interview requests, as did
Boundary County Prosecutor Jack Douglas.
The sheriff and prosecutor are looking the other way regarding the
practice of polygamy in their community, asserts former sheriff candidate
Allen Gemmrig.
Theres a tolerance policy with these polygamists by the sheriffs
department, said Gemmrig, who ran an unsuccessful campaign last fall to
become sheriff.
Sprungl, the incumbent who was re-elected, knows or should know theres a
huge problem up here with this polygamy cult, Gemmrig said, referring to
underage girls involved in arranged marriages. What he says
is, Polygamists? What polygamists? 
The way law enforcement works up here is it depends on who you know up
here, Gemmrig said. Its the old boys club. You know go along, get
along.
His wife, Heather, a lifelong resident of Boundary County, agreed.
She said because of the tolerance policy in Boundary County, she
believes theres a good chance that more FLDS members will move to the
county if Blackmore and Oler are convicted and sent to prison.
Theyll come down here because they know they wont get prosecuted, she
said. This is a great place to hide.
Bramham, the author who has written about the Canadian polygamists, says
its too soon to say what will happen if Blackmore and Oler are
convicted.
Blackmore, she said, is very confident that Canadas anti-polygamy law
will not withstand a constitutional challenge. Like the United States, the
Canadian Constitution guarantees religious freedom, but there are limits.
What has never been tried in a Canadian court, however, is whether
polygamy is one of those limits, Bramham said.
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Seeya round town, Moscow.
Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho
"For a lapsed Lutheran born-again Buddhist pan-Humanist Universalist
Unitarian Wiccan Agnostic like myself there's really no reason ever to go
to work."
- Roy Zimmerman
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