El Dorado News-Times

Man acquitted for destroying 2nd Ten Commandmen­ts monument

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LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — A man who destroyed a Ten Commandmen­ts monument outside of Oklahoma's state Capitol was acquitted Thursday of destroying another one three years later outside of Arkansas', with the judge citing evidence that the man suffers from a mental disease or defect.

Pulaski County Circuit Judge Chris Piazza ruled that Michael Tate Reed must return to the state hospital in Little Rock for additional evaluation­s that could lead to his release.

Reed has been held in the state hospital since late last year after Piazza ruled he wasn't fit to proceed to trial.

Reed, 33, didn't speak during the brief hearing. He wore a multi-colored jacket and a T-shirt that quoted Ephesians 6:11 from the Bible: "Put on all of God's armor so that you will be able to stand firm against all strategies of the devil."

A state hospital evaluation presented in court Thursday said that Reed lacked the capacity to follow the law when he knocked over the 6,000pound (2,700-kilogram) monument in June 2017 with his car.

A replacemen­t monument now stands in its place, protected by four concrete posts.

Reed destroyed a similar monument in Oklahoma City in 2014, but Oklahoma prosecutor­s didn't charge him after concerns were raised about his mental health.

The Arkansas state hospital evaluation said Reed was suffering from schizoaffe­ctive disorder at the time he destroyed Arkansas' display, and that he suffered from delusions and hallucinat­ions.

Under Piazza's order, the hospital must perform another evaluation within 30 days and issue a report on whether his release would create a "substantia­l risk" of bodily injury to another person or serious property damage. Within 10 days of that report, another hearing must be held to determine whether Reed should remain in the hospital.

"Mr. Reed described being in a manic state and hearing a voice, which he believed was God, tell him to destroy the monument," the report said. "He describes feeling a weight come over him, explaining 'I couldn't think of anything except destroy it now.'"

Reed's attorneys said he's substantia­lly improved since receiving treatment in the state hospital.

"He's night and day from where he was when we started," Robert Hodge, an attorney for Reed said. "He's a lot better than he was, for sure."

A 2015 law required Arkansas to allow the privately funded monument on the state Capitol grounds.

Two separate lawsuits were filed in federal court last week seeking the display's removal by groups who call it an unconstitu­tional endorsemen­t of religion by the state government.

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