US Supreme Court won’t hear ‘Sister Wives’ bigamy law appeal

FILE - In this file photo, Kody Brown poses with his wives at one of their homes in Las Vegas. The Supreme Court said Monday it won't hear an appeal from the family on TV's "Sister Wives" challenging Utah's law banning polygamy. The decision ends the family's long legal fight to overturn a seldom used and unique provision of Utah's law that the Browns and other polygamous families contend has a chilling effect by sending law-abiding plural families into hiding because of fear of prosecution. Las Vegas, Nevada, July 10, 2013 | Photo by Jerry Henkel/Las Vegas Review-Journal, via AP, St. George News

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — The U.S. Supreme Court said Monday it won’t hear an appeal from the family on TV’s “Sister Wives” challenging Utah’s law banning polygamy.

The decision ends the family’s long legal fight to overturn a seldom used and unique provision of Utah’s law that the Browns and other polygamous families contend has a chilling effect by sending law-abiding plural families into hiding because of fear of prosecution.

The provision bars married people from living with a second purported “spiritual spouse” even if the man is legally married to just one woman, making it stricter than anti-bigamy laws in other states.

The reality TLC cable channel TV show follows the lives of Kody Brown, his four wives and all their children. When it debuted in 2010, it was considered ground-breaking by offering viewers a glimpse into how a plural family navigates the unique complexities of the arrangement.

Utah prosecutors say they generally leave polygamists alone but that they need the ban to pursue polygamists for other crimes such as underage marriage and sexual assault. Only 10 people were charged with violating the law between 2001 and 2011, prosecutors say.

The Utah Attorney General’s Office declined comment on the Supreme Court’s denial of the case, which the justices issued without comment.

The saga between the Browns and Utah officials began in September 2010 when the first episode aired of the TLC show, “Sister Wives.” A county prosecutor opened an investigation, leading the Browns to leave their longtime home of Lehi, Utah, in 2011, to settle in Las Vegas where they still live today.

That same year, the Browns filed a lawsuit calling the opening of the investigation government abuse. The case was closed without filing any charges.

In 2013, the Browns scored a key legal victory when a federal judge in Utah ruled the law violated polygamists’ right to privacy and religious freedom.

But an appeals court in Denver decided last year that the Browns could not sue because they were not charged under the Utah law. It did not consider the constitutional issues. That ruling will now stand.

The Brown’s attorney, Jonathan Turley, said in a statement posted on his blog that he and the family are disappointed but not surprised because the high court is on a pace to hear less than 1 percent of the 7,500 appeals it is likely to receive this term.

Turley emphasized that an appeals court ruling was not made based on the merits of the Browns’ assertion that Utah’s law violates their rights of speech and religion.

“Our victory in Salt Lake City will remain as a cautionary decision for legislators who wish to marginalize or sanction this community in the future,” Turley said. “It has been a long road for all of us and it is not the end of the road. Plural and unconventional families will continue to strive for equal status and treatment under the law.”

Kody Brown is legally married to Robyn Brown, but says he is “spiritually married” to three other women. They live together in a plural relationship and belong to a religious group that believes in polygamy as a core religious practice. Their show continues to air on TLC.

About 30,000 polygamists live in Utah, according to court documents. The mainstream Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints abandoned the practice in 1890 and strictly prohibits it today.

Written by: BRADY McCOMBS and SAM HANANEL, Associated Press

Email: [email protected]

Twitter: @STGnews

Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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5 Comments

  • utahdiablo January 23, 2017 at 8:46 pm

    This is just the beginning , as with all the welfare fraud ( 12 Million from 2011 to 2015 here in southern Utah alone ) being thrown on we the American taxpayers to help fund polygamist families? …..get ready for the new DOJ to come after you d…* hard real soon as this isn’t going away… no way no how
    *Ed. ellipses

  • wilbur January 24, 2017 at 1:03 pm

    If homosexuals have a right to marriage, then it seems immanently fair for men and women to have multiple partners.

    After all, this is not just a Judaeo-Christion nation.

    • comments January 24, 2017 at 2:17 pm

      moral relativism

    • ladybugavenger January 24, 2017 at 2:29 pm

      Oh yes! Many have multiple partners lol. Did you mean multiple marriages? the consequences of homosexuality and multiple partners are AIDS and STD’s if you want that risk then by all means have at it! Ask Charlie Sheen, it was all fun and games until he got HIV. It’s a scary reality.

      • wilbur January 24, 2017 at 3:06 pm

        “partners” s/b marriage partners.

        /sorry

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