Your information is incorrect. William Law committed adultery. Then he was excommunicated. At that point, all bets are off. William Law was a loose cannon. Though he apparently didn’t agree with polygamy (which we’ll never know what his stance really was as he was excommunicated - having another wife was apparently not beyond him as he stepped out and started up relations outside the bonds of marriage - adultery, so it wasn’t too far beyond him.), he did want to be sealed to his wife which Joseph wouldn’t do on account that he committed adultery. We have an eye witness account that it was Mrs Law that beckoned Joseph to come talk to her, not Joseph seeking to talk to Mrs. Law. Whatever she proposed to Joseph, he rebuffed it. After that, it was her word against Joseph’s word and William had already had enough of Joseph. He took matters into his own hands. William Law’s journals say Joseph made advances at his wife, but the evidence suggests otherwise. This situation is not much different that the story of Joseph of Egypt and Potifer’s wife.
William Law had been kicked out of the inner circle and was in a steady downward spiral making a very bitter man out for revenge. You say Joseph incited the riot, but I think it’s more likely that William Law incited the riot. Who should be blamed for the fire? The person who lit the fire or the person who tried to put it out?
Joseph Smith didn’t have to publicly explain why he was defaming anyone. His MO was to deny the allegations and accuse the woman of being a whore or prostitute and accused men who had issues with it of adultery.
When Martha Brotherton went public with Smith proposing marriage, her allegations were denied in the Nauvoo
Wasp and she was called a “mean harlot”.
When Nancy Rigdon went public with Smith’s advances, Smith’s friend Stephen Markham swore out an affidavit stating that Mrs. Rigdon was “guilty of unlawful and illicit intercourse”. Orson Hyde made a speech in Nauvoo and stated that Mrs. Rigdon was “notorious in this city” and the equivalent of “a public prostitute”.
Sarah Pratt was given the same treatment when her rejection of Smith’s proposal went public. Sarah said that, “If any woman, like me, opposed his wishes, he used to say: ‘Be silent, or I shall ruin your character. My character must be sustained in the interests of the church’… In his endeavors to ruin my character, Joseph went so far as to publish [an] extra-sheet containing affidavits against my reputation.”
When Melissa Schindle published her affidavit of Smith’s advances towards her, the
Wasp called her “a harlot”.
When Jane Law turned down Joseph Smith, she and William were excommunicated, but adultery was not mentioned as being the reason. The reason was apostasy. The accusations of adultery came later. It was a month later when William filed a law suit against Joseph Smith for for living “in an open state of adultery” with Maria Lawrence that Smith accused William of adultery.
Here we see a pattern of Smith and his friends accusing the men and women who rejected and went public with Smith’s polygamy of adultery or being “loose”. Everyone around Smith was sexually immoral, but he was clean and pure as the driven snow. I’m sure Smith wanted his polygamy to be kept a secret. That is why he threatened women who rejected him with slander. He wanted to keep them quiet. Not all of them did.
Why don’t you explain how Smith’s polygamous marriages were completely sexless when the reason God commands polygamy is to have children? It is clearly stated in LDS scriptures as I posted above. So did he violate God’s commandment when it came to polygamy? Or was he a pioneer in in vitro fertilization?