Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

New monument ready for Capitol

Ten Commandmen­ts set for 2nd try

- BRANDON RIDDLE ARKANSAS ONLINE See

Work was completed this week on a Ten Commandmen­ts monument that will replace the original monolith, which was destroyed within hours of being erected at the state Capitol earlier this year.

Sen. Jason Rapert, R-Bigelow, said Wednesday afternoon that he received confirmati­on “about a day or two ago” that the latest iteration of the monument was finished.

“Obviously, we’re ready to go as soon as possible,” Rapert said of installing the new 6,000-pound, 6-foottall marker on state Capitol grounds. “My hope is for it to be up in a matter of weeks.”

Rapert said the last remaining step is for the Arkansas secretary of state’s office to sign off on the re-installati­on.

The original monument was installed June 27 near the Arkansas Supreme Court building but was toppled less than 24 hours later when Michael Reed, 32, of Van Buren barreled into it with his vehicle in the early morning hours of June 28, authoritie­s said.

The monument shattered into three large pieces and countless smaller shards, and the act was captured on

Facebook Live.

Reed, accused of also destroying a similar monolith in Oklahoma, was arrested by Capitol police a short time later.

He faces charges of defacing objects of public respect, trespassin­g on Capitol grounds and first-degree criminal mischief. He remained at the Pulaski County jail as of Wednesday afternoon.

The Ten Commandmen­ts monument is being paid for using private funds.

In July, the executive producers of the God’s Not Dead movie series donated $25,000 toward the effort. They are currently filming the series’ third installmen­t in the Little Rock area.

Rapert sponsored a 2015 law to erect the monument on the grounds. He called the destructio­n “an act of violence” and urged elected officials

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