The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ten Commandmen­ts monument installed at Arkansas Capitol

ACLU plans to file suit; Satanic Temple wants statue, too.

- By Andrrew DeMillo and Jill Bleed

Workers LITTLE ROCK, ARK. — installed a Ten Commandmen­ts monument outside Arkansas’ Capitol on Tuesday, two years after lawmakers approved a measure permitting the privately funded statue on state grounds.

The 6-foot-tall, 6,000pound monument was installed on the southwest lawn of the Capitol with little fanfare and no advance notice. A 2015 law required the state to allow the display near the Capitol, and a state panel last month gave final approval to its design and location.

“We have a beautiful Capitol grounds, but we did not have a monument that actually honored the historical, moral foundation of law,” Republican Sen. Jason Rapert, who sponsored the measure requiring the monument’s installati­on, said.

The American Civil Liberties Union said it plans to file a lawsuit in federal court challengin­g the display, calling it an unconstitu­tional endorsemen­t of religion by the state. The group said it did not have a timeline for filing the lawsuit.

“Whatever they may say, the defenders of the Ten Commandmen­ts monument, the fact is the text of the Ten Commandmen­ts cannot be separated from its religious significan­ce as the text calls individual­s to adhere to moral precepts and uniquely religious obligation­s,” Rita Sklar, executive director of the ACLU of Arkansas, said. Plans for Arkansas’ monument sparked a push by the Satanic Temple for a competing statue of Baphomet, a goat-headed, angel-winged creature accompanie­d by two children smiling at it. Efforts to install that display, however, were blocked by a law enacted this year requiring legislativ­e approval before the commission could consider a monument proposal. Arkansas’ monument is a replica of a display at the Texas Capitol that was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2005. The court that year struck down Ten Commandmen­ts displays in two Kentucky courthouse­s. The Oklahoma Supreme Court ordered the removal of a Ten Commandmen­ts display from that state’s Capitol in 2015.

 ?? JILL ZEMAN BLEED / AP ?? A 6-foot-tall, privately funded Ten Commandmen­ts monument is seen on the Arkansas Capitol grounds Tuesday in Little Rock after it was installed by workers two years after lawmakers approved it.
JILL ZEMAN BLEED / AP A 6-foot-tall, privately funded Ten Commandmen­ts monument is seen on the Arkansas Capitol grounds Tuesday in Little Rock after it was installed by workers two years after lawmakers approved it.

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