Los Angeles Times

Ten Commandmen­ts slab toppled

A driver in Arkansas yells ‘Freedom!’ as he slams into the just-installed monument.

- By Kurtis Lee kurtis.lee@latimes.com Twitter: @kurtisalee

The 6-foot-tall stone monument engraved with the Ten Commandmen­ts — a capstone of sorts to years of debate in Arkansas over the separation of church and state — was erected with little pomp on the lush grounds of the state Capitol. Less than 24 hours later, the monument came crumbling down after a Dodge Dart plowed into it.

On Wednesday, as maintenanc­e crews cleaned up the debris, many summed up the incident as the latest chapter in an ongoing nationwide battle over the separation of church and state. Across the country — at state legislatur­es, city council hearings and school board meetings — questions about whether the Ten Commandmen­ts should be displayed have led to legal battles and stark debate over the role of religion in public life and interpreta­tions of the 1st Amendment.

The violence was captured in a Facebook Live video posted by the man charged with ramming the monument, Michael Tate Reed. In the video, Reed can be heard yelling, “Oh, my goodness — freedom!” as his car slams into the 6,000pound granite slab.

“This really was a horrifying surprise,” said Arkansas state Sen. Jason Rapert, who in 2015 sponsored the Ten Commandmen­ts Monument Display Act, which called for erecting the monument on the Capitol grounds in Little Rock. “It’s truly an act of violence toward the people of Arkansas.”

Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson, a proponent of the monument’s placement, voiced dismay on Twitter over its destructio­n, saying that “resorting to property destructio­n is never the answer to a policy disagreeme­nt. Very troubling that a Capitol monument is destroyed.”

Moments after the incident early Wednesday, police arrested Reed, 32, and booked him into Pulaski County Jail. He was being held on preliminar­y charges of defacing objects of public interest, criminal trespassin­g and first-degree criminal mischief.

Authoritie­s in Oklahoma on Wednesday afternoon identified Reed as the man arrested in 2014 for ramming his car into a similar Ten Commandmen­ts monument outside the state Capitol in Oklahoma City.

Reed was taken to a hospital where he received mental health treatment, but was never formally charged in that case, according to the Tulsa World. The paper reported he was released from the hospital in January 2015 under an agreement with the Oklahoma County district attorney’s office for continued treatment and therapy.

In Arkansas, Republican­s, who for years have controlled both chambers of the Legislatur­e, overwhelmi­ngly approved Rapert’s bill in 2015. The measure called for the monument to be erected outdoors on the state Capitol grounds and, among other things, cited a 2005 U.S. Supreme Court decision that said the Ten Commandmen­ts monument on state grounds in Texas did not violate the 1st Amendment.

At its core, the Supreme Court ruling in Van Orden vs. Perry found that, although the Ten Commandmen­ts tablets are a religious symbol, they “have an undeniable historical meaning” and that Texas had erected various monuments on state grounds representi­ng key themes in the state’s political and legal history.

Since the bill’s passage, a private foundation raised nearly $26,000 for the Arkansas monument and its installati­on. Last month, a state panel gave final approval to its design and location.

The monument’s design, apparently influenced by Van Orden vs. Perry’s emphasis on history, included not just the text of the Ten Commandmen­ts, but the words, “Presented to the people of Arkansas by the American History and Heritage Foundation.”

“I’m born and raised in the Bible Belt,” Republican state Sen. Dave Wallace said Wednesday. “I, for certain, don’t see anything wrong with it.”

Other people, however, saw plenty of problems.

“I didn’t want it there, and I still definitely don’t want it there,” Anne Orsi, president of the Arkansas Society of Freethinke­rs, said Wednesday. “With that being said, I don’t agree with the monument’s destructio­n…. There needs to be more discussion on the issue.”

Orsi said that too much legislatio­n is rooted in religious belief, pointing toward Republican efforts in her state to, among other things, pass “bathroom bills” that require people in public schools and government buildings to use bathrooms and locker rooms that correspond with their birth gender.

Her group, along with the American Civil Liberties Union of Arkansas, planned to file a lawsuit to have the statue taken down, arguing that it violates the 1st Amendment by condoning a faith.

“The ACLU remains committed to seeing this unconstitu­tional monument struck down by the courts and safely removed through legal means,” Rita Sklar, executive director of ACLU of Arkansas, said in a statement.

Randall Balmer, a professor of religion at Dartmouth College who has written about the separation of church and state, said debate over the issue is ongoing and amplified at a time when partisansh­ip and polarizati­on are at extraordin­ary highs in the country.

“Will this change?” he said of the polarizati­on. “It’s unlikely.”

The Supreme Court’s ruling in Van Orden vs. Perry has not stopped debate, or lawsuits, on public displays of religious material.

Last year, officials in Itawamba County, Miss., removed a Ten Commandmen­ts plaque hanging inside the courthouse. Its removal came after the Wisconsin-based nonprofit group Freedom From Religion Foundation threatened litigation.

In 2015, followers of the Wicca faith sued the town of Bloomfield, N.M., over a 3,000-pound Ten Commandmen­ts monument on the City Hall’s front lawn. The group viewed it as a government­al endorsemen­t of religion. A district court judge eventually ruled the monument should be removed on the grounds that it violated the 1st Amendment.

For Rapert, he said Wednesday’s destructio­n is symbolic of the current political climate in the country.

“When people don’t agree with others it seems they just lash out.”

 ?? Jill Zeman Bleed Associated Press ?? “THIS REALLY was a horrifying surprise,” Arkansas state Sen. Jason Rapert said of the destructio­n of the monument on the state Capitol grounds in Little Rock.
Jill Zeman Bleed Associated Press “THIS REALLY was a horrifying surprise,” Arkansas state Sen. Jason Rapert said of the destructio­n of the monument on the state Capitol grounds in Little Rock.
 ?? Jill Zeman Bleed Associated Press ?? A PRIVATE foundation raised nearly $26,000 for the 6,000-pound granite monument and its installati­on.
Jill Zeman Bleed Associated Press A PRIVATE foundation raised nearly $26,000 for the 6,000-pound granite monument and its installati­on.
 ?? Pulaski County Sheriff's Office ?? MICHAEL Tate Reed was arrested. Police say he rammed a similar monument in 2014.
Pulaski County Sheriff's Office MICHAEL Tate Reed was arrested. Police say he rammed a similar monument in 2014.

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