
UNLV forward
Joe Darger scored 18 points yesterday in leading the Runnin' Rebels to a 71-58 win over Kent State in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. Darger, a junior, is a good player, but what interests me about him isn't his game, it's his family.
Darger's father is a polygamist. His dad has two wives. One wife has 10 children and the other has eight. Although Joe Darger doesn't talk to the media about his family, his father, John Darger, has spoken proudly about his polygamist lifestyle, about how he supports both his wives, and about how all his children are growing up to be well-adjusted young people, as Joe Darger is, from all accounts.
But make no mistake: Darger's father is a criminal. He's flagrantly violating the law, in both his home state of Utah and every other state, and
the Utah attorney general's web site makes clear that it's a law Utah takes seriously. If the authorities choose to, at any time, they'll have absolutely no trouble proving his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt and throwing him in prison. If Darger's father is thrown in prison, would that be OK with you?
If it wouldn't, you're in the minority: Polls consistently show that most Americans believe polygamy should be illegal. President Bush and most members of Congress believe we should amend the Constitution to ensure that marriages like those of Darger's father will remain illegal.
The criminalization of polygamy will remain the law of the land, and John Darger will remain a criminal. And the longer Joe Darger is on American television sets during March Madness, the bigger target his father will become.