KING:
Would you like to see the state to clamp down on it?
HINCKLEY:
I think I leave that entirely in the hands of the civil officers. It's
a civil offense. It's in violation of the law. We have nothing to do
with it. We're totally distanced from it. And if the state chooses to
move on it, that's a responsibility of civil officers.
KING:
President Hinckley, when the press pays attention to it, it does affect
you, certainly, in a public relations sense?
HINCKLEY:
It does, because people mistakenly assume that this church has something
to do with it. It has nothing whatever to do with it. It has had nothing
to do with it for a very long time. It's outside the realm of our responsibility.
These people are not members. Any man or woman who becomes involved
in it is excommunicated from the church.
KING:
Prosecutors in Utah are quoted as saying -- they told "The Salt Lake
Tribune" -- that it's difficult to prosecute polygamists because of
a lack of evidence; that ex-wives and daughters rarely complain about
it. Do you see that as a problem?
HINCKLEY:
Well, it's secretive. There's a certain element of secretiveness about
it. I suppose they have some difficulty -- they say they do, in gathering
evidence.