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Utah judge with 3 wives fights for job

Ithaca 37

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I'd like to hear opinions on this!

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (AP) -- A judge will ask the state Supreme Court on Wednesday to let him stay on the bench after a commission that oversees judges ordered him dismissed because he has three wives.

Those pursuing the case against Judge Walter Steed say his plural marriage creates a conflict: After taking an oath to uphold the law, he shouldn't be breaking it.

"You can't have it both ways," said Colin Winchester, the executive director of the state's Judicial Conduct Commission.

The commission issued an order seeking Steed's removal from the bench in February, after a 14-month investigation determined Steed was a polygamist and as such had violated Utah's bigamy law.

Bigamy is a third-degree felony in Utah punishable by up to five years in prison, but Steed's attorney, Rod Parker, said Utah's attorney general and the Washington County prosecutor have declined to prosecute his client.

Steed has served for 25 years in the southern border town of Hildale, handing down rulings in drunken driving and domestic violence cases. Parker contends the bigamy statute is only enforced in rare cases, such as when someone has been duped into marrying someone who already has a wife.

"There is no allegation that it's affecting his performance on the bench," Parker said. "It really is truly only about his private conduct."

The complaint against Steed was filed with the commission in November 2003 by Tapestry Against Polygamy, an advocacy group founded by ex-polygamous women who organized to help others leave the handful of secretive religious colonies that adhere to the practice.

Plural marriage was an original tenet of the mainline Mormon church, but the faith abandoned the practice as a condition of statehood in 1890. About 30,000 polygamists, who split from the main church into various fundamentalist sects more than 100 years ago, are believed to be living in Utah.

Steed legally married his first wife in 1965, according to court documents. The second and third wives were married -- or "sealed" as the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints refers to it -- to him in religious ceremonies in 1975 and 1985.

The three women are biological sisters and no one in the family was expecting that the second and third marriages would be civilly recognized.

"I think it's an equal protection problem," Parker said.

The state Supreme Court's chief justice, Christine Durham, opted not to place Steed on administrative leave during the investigation.

http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/11/02/polygamous.judge.ap/index.html
 
If a third degee felony has been committed, how could he still be a judge?
 
Can him, won't get into my thoughts on his religious affiliation here. If it was any other felony would he still be serving on the bench?
 
Wait a minute. He's a felon, but it hasn't affected his performance? Let's see...a child molester may function perfectly well in his/her profession, but may be a monster outside of work...so I guess it's ok to allow the child molester to stay at his job as long as it doesn't affect his performance.

Makes perfect sense to me! :BLEEP: |oo
 
You guys are looking at this all wrong.

Any man who is strong enough to have three wives and maintain his sanity may be exactly what we want dealing with thieves and murders and child molesters. Think about it..!!!

:cool:
 
danr55 said:
You guys are looking at this all wrong.

Any man who is strong enough to have three wives and maintain his sanity may be exactly what we want dealing with thieves and murders and child molesters. Think about it..!!!

:cool:


danr, did you mean to say "any man who is stupid enough" he lost his sanity on the first wife, you would have to be crazy to get two more,
 
John, It was a joke.. kind of.. but Draftstud has a point.. If they are three good lookin' ladies, the guy is obviously nuts..

:cool:
 
There's a shocker, for once I'm not in the minority opinion. :eek:

While I'm not morally opposed to polygamy or polyandry if a person thinks they can handle it, in this country it's a felony. Case closed. Must be some judge if he is that fudgy on the law. :rolleyes:
 
We do not get to pick and choose-unfortunately-but still.
If I went before the judge and explained that my 'out of the mainstream' religion promotes speeding, would he cut me some slack?
 
I was just reading a longer article on this case. I found that there is a twist in this case. The man has not been convicted of polygamy. Yes polygamy is a felony, but he has been neither officially convicted nor accused of this felony in a court of law.

Therefore, do they have the right to remove him from the bench for a crime they seem unwilling to actually accuse him of?

Kind of an interesting question.
 
"The three women are biological sisters and no one in the family were expecting the second and third marriages to be civilly recognized." C'mon, the guys a judge, he knows the law...on the other hand, charge him or leave him alone.

..reminds me of the judge in Oklahoma a few years back who was removed for allegedly stimulating himself at the bench during trials.

....you might be a redneck if...
 
I think you've all lost sight with the facts presented in front of you and lost sight of whats between the lines. 3 Mother-inlaws, I wonder if he applies the Penal code to them? :D
 
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