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		Satanist leader's attempt to hold Black Mass in Kansas Statehouse sparks 
		chaos and 4 arrests
		[March 29, 2025]  
		By JOHN HANNA 
		TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The leader of a small group of self-described 
		satanists and three other people were arrested Friday following a 
		scuffle inside the Kansas Statehouse arising from an effort by the 
		group's leader to start a Black Mass in the rotunda.
 About 30 members of the Kansas City-area Satanic Grotto, led by its 
		president, Michael Stewart, rallied outside the Statehouse for the 
		separation of church and state. The group also protested what members 
		called the state's favoritism toward Christians in allowing events 
		inside. Gov. Laura Kelly temporarily banned protests inside, just for 
		Friday, weeks after Stewart's group scheduled its indoor ceremony.
 
 The Satanic Grotto's rally outside drew hundreds of Christian 
		counterprotesters because of the Grotto's satanic imagery, and its 
		indoor ceremony included denouncing Jesus Christ, who Christians believe 
		is the Son of God. About 100 Christians stood against yellow police tape 
		marking the Satanic Grotto's area. The two groups yelled at each other 
		while the Christians also sang and called on Grotto members to accept 
		Jesus. Several hundred more Christians rallied on the other side of the 
		Grotto's area, but further away.
 
 Kelly issued her order earlier this month after Roman Catholic groups 
		pushed her to ban any Satanic Grotto event. The state’s Catholic Bishops 
		called what the group planned “a despicable act of anti-Catholic 
		bigotry” mocking the Catholic Mass. Both chambers of the Legislature 
		also approved resolutions condemning it.
 
		
		 
		“The Bible says Satan comes to steal, kill and destroy, so when we 
		dedicate a state to Satan, we’re dedicating it to death," said Jeremiah 
		Hicks, a pastor at the Cure Church in Kansas City, Kansas.
 Satanic Grotto members, who number several dozen, said they hold a 
		variety of beliefs. Some are atheists, some use the group to protest 
		harm they suffered as church members, and others see Satan as a symbol 
		of independence.
 
 Amy Dorsey, a friend of Stewart's, said she rallied with the Satanic 
		Grotto to support free speech rights and religious freedoms guaranteed 
		by the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment, in part because Christian 
		groups are allowed to meet regularly inside the Statehouse for prayer or 
		worship meetings.
 
 Before his arrest, Stewart said his group scheduled its Black Mass for 
		Friday because it thought the Kansas Legislature would be in session, 
		though lawmakers adjourned late Thursday night for their annual spring 
		break. Stewart said the group might come back next year.
 
 “Maybe un-baptisms, right here in the Capitol,” he said.
 
		
		 
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            A priest and a group of Kansas legislators and visitors to the 
			Statehouse pray the Catholic rosary on the ground floor in response 
			to an attempt by the Satanic Grotto from the Kansas City area to 
			hold a "Black Mass" inside, Friday, March 28, 2025, in Topeka, 
			Kansas. (AP Photo/John Hanna) 
            
			 
            Video shot by KSNT-TV showed that when Stewart tried to conduct his 
			group's ceremony in the first-floor rotunda, a young man tried to 
			snatch Stewart's script from his hands, and Stewart punched him. 
			Several Kansas Highway Patrol troopers wrestled Stewart to the 
			ground and handcuffed him. They led him through hallways on the 
			ground floor below and into a room as he yelled, “Hail, Satan!”
 Stewart’s wife, Maenad Bee, told reporters, “He’s only exercising 
			his First Amendment rights.”
 
 Online records showed that Stewart, 42, was jailed briefly Friday 
			afternoon on suspicion of disorderly conduct and having an unlawful 
			assembly, then released on $1,000 bond.
 
 The Kansas Highway Patrol, which provides security at the 
			Statehouse, said two others who entered the building with Stewart 
			also were arrested for unlawful assembly, Jocelyn Frazee, 32, and 
			Sean Anderson, 50. Frazee had no bond set; information for Anderson 
			was not available online.
 
 Witnesses and friends identified the young man trying to snatch away 
			the Black Mass script as Marcus Schroeder, who came to 
			counterprotest with fellow members of a Kansas City-area church. 
			Online records show Schroeder, 21, was arrested on suspicion of 
			disorderly conduct, with his bond also set at $1,000.
 
 A friend of Schroeder's, Jonathan Storms, said he was trying to help 
			a woman who also sought to snatch away Stewart's script and “didn't 
			throw any punches.”
 
 The woman, Karla Delgado, said she came to the Statehouse with her 
			three youngest children to deliver a petition protesting the Black 
			Mass to Kelly's office. Delgado said she approached Stewart because 
			he was violating the governor's order and Highway Patrol troopers 
			weren't immediately arresting him. She said in the ensuing 
			confusion, her 4-year-old daughter was knocked to the ground.
 
 “When we saw that nobody was doing anything — I guess just in the 
			moment of it — it was like, ‘He’s not supposed to be allowed to do 
			this,’ so we tried to stop him," she said.
 
			
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