PHOTOS, VIDEO: Scores attend Satanic Temple rally at state Capitol

Scores of people attended a rally held by the Satanic Temple in Little Rock on Thursday, Aug. 16, 2018, and the group's 7-and-a-half-foot-tall Baphomet statue also made an appearance.
Scores of people attended a rally held by the Satanic Temple in Little Rock on Thursday, Aug. 16, 2018, and the group's 7-and-a-half-foot-tall Baphomet statue also made an appearance.

Scores of people attended a rally held by the Satanic Temple in Little Rock on Thursday, and the group's 7-and-a-half-foot-tall Baphomet statue also made an appearance.

Planned by the Satanic Temple and Satanic Arkansas — which is not affiliated with the national organization — the event took about two months to put together, organizer Ivy Forrester said. Forrester, like several at the rally, gave a pseudonym instead of her real name.

The event was scheduled to last from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., but supporters and protesters showed up shortly before the start time, and many attendees left before 3 p.m.

The rally was prompted by the reinstallation of a Ten Commandments monument at the Capitol in April, the group said.

The statue of Baphomet, a part-man, part-goat deity who is seated and accompanied by two smiling children, can't be installed under a 2017 law that requires legislative sponsorship for consideration of any monument.

The Satanic Temple has said it will sue the state, claiming religious discrimination. But when the Satanic Temple tried to join a case the ACLU had already brought against the state, the ACLU asked the court to bar the intervention. A judge has not yet ruled whether the Satanic Temple can join the case.

The Ten Commandments monument was sponsored by Republican Sen. Jason Rapert and installed quietly in 2017. Less than 24 hours after its installation, a man drove his car into the monument, smashing it to pieces. The same man also destroyed a Ten Commandments monument outside of Oklahoma's state Capitol.

The Satanic Temple had originally tried to install its Baphomet statue there, but Oklahoma's Supreme Court ruled the Ten Commandments monument was unconstitutional, and it was taken down. The Satanic Temple then suspended its Oklahoma campaign.

In an online statement, Rapert said he respected the protesters' First Amendment rights but also called them "extremists" and said "it will be a very cold day in hell before an offensive statue will be forced upon us to be permanently erected on the grounds of the Arkansas State Capitol."

Many rally-goers dressed in black, some wearing horns or armor. Shouts of “Hail Satan” and the sound of bagpipes resounded during the speeches.

Speakers included Conway pastor Chad Jones and Lucien Greaves, spokesman for the Satanic Temple.

Jones’ speech was interrupted by a masked protester who called him a “liar” and an “agent of Satan.” The man took off his mask while speaking and walked away with police officers alongside him.

Throughout the event, members of the Knights Party, a white nationalist group, held Christian and Confederate flags behind the crowd, while across the street a group of Christians held signs showing Bible verses. One woman stood next to a cross bearing the word “repent.” A man stood alone, preaching, throughout most of the proceedings.

The Satanic Temple describes itself as a "non-theistic religious organization dedicated to Satanic practice and the promotion of Satanic rights."

According to The Associated Press, about 150 people attended the rally, which had a substantial police presence. Authorities declined to give an official crowd estimate.

The Associated Press and Arkansas Democrat-Gazette deputy editor Jillian Kremer contributed to this story.

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