Sec. 53a-190. Bigamy: Class D felony.
               	 		
      Sec. 53a-190. Bigamy: Class D felony. (a) A person is guilty of bigamy when he 
marries or purports to marry another person in this state if either is lawfully married; 
or so marries or purports to marry another person in any other state or country in violation 
of the laws thereof, and knowingly cohabits and lives with such other person in this 
state as husband and wife.
      (b) It shall be an affirmative defense to the charge of bigamy that at the time of the 
subsequent marriage or purported marriage: (1) The actor reasonably believed, based 
on persuasive and reliable information, that the prior spouse was dead; or (2) a court 
had entered a judgment purporting to terminate or annul any prior disqualifying marriage 
and the actor did not know that such judgment was invalid; or (3) the single person did 
not know that the other person was legally married.
      (c) Bigamy is a class D felony.
      (1969, P.A. 828, S. 192; 1971, P.A. 871, S. 47; P.A. 92-260, S. 73.)
      History: 1971 act substituted "A person" for "Any person" for conformity with other statutes; P.A. 92-260 made 
technical changes.
      Annotations to former section 53-221:
      Former statute cited. 129 C. 572. Cited. 142 C. 178.
      Cited. 22 CS 180. Omission, since 1875, of language declaring bigamous marriage to be null and void at most merely 
left validity of such marriages to be determined by general principles of common law. 26 CS 259.