mrscottyl
Member
macike said:Actually this seems like a bad case to go after. You are dealing with media celebs. The people involved are not committing fraud against the government (welfare, et el). The kids are not in danger. There seems to be no neglect. There does not appear to be any child in any way. The actions of the kids seem to show there does not seem to be problems. The sister wives are likable people. The husband seems a little over the top since he is in sales, he just might rub a few people the wrong way.
Overall this would seem like a loser of a case for the DA/state attny.
For the most time, they do not go after cases they cannot win on a slam dunk.
And on the flip side of the argument, this is a case that they almost have to prosecute because it is being publicly done. Understand that I am not justifying the insane laws of Utah, but rather pointing out how that it is technically a crime, and one flaunted in front of the authorities faces. Just as if someone did a reality based show on how they pick pocketed people. The authorities would have to prosecute then.
And the legal authorities have been known to snoop around enough until they find something, or in the case of Texas, fabricate something.
And this also puts Utah in a precarious position in another regard as well: if they do not prosecute the Browns, then that will only encourage more people to come "out of the closet" to use a horrible metaphor, which would only diminish the law even more. However, if they do prosecute, then they run the very serious risk of losing the law(s) entirely, meaning that there would be possibly an influx of polygamists into the state, which is a possibility even if they do not prosecute.
Imagine if every family or individual on this group decided to move to Utah and set up residence by the end of next year. 2 things would happen that would be catastrophic to the status quo there:
1) They would have so many polygamists there including the Mormon polygamists that they could not really enforce the laws if they are still on the books, bringing even more attention to Utah for polygamy.
And
2) It would further dilute the base of both the LDS church as well as the political power-base that the church has. Imagine all the polygamous couples and the pro-polygamy individuals who are not LDS (remember, if you practice polygamy or even publicly support it, they do not consider you a member of the LDS church), and how we would vote not necessarily for the their approved candidates, as well as networking together to change laws and even posing the risk of having LDS people join our ranks in the pro-polygamy arena.
Money, Power, Control - three things the LDS church does not want to lose, but in this situation, it is a lose-lose situation for them. The fuse is lit, so the question is how long until it goes off?
Scott