
The Mississippi politician who traveled to Des Moines in December to destroy the holiday display set up by the Satanic Temple (TST) in the rotunda of the Iowa State Capitol is seeking to have the hate crime charge for his actions dismissed. On Friday, the attorney for Michael Cassidy filed a motion in Polk County District Court arguing, among other things, that the hate crime charge violates Cassidyโs First Amendment rights.ย
The display, which was approved as one of the several holiday displays for 2023, featured candles, a goat-headed figure of reminiscent of Baphomet and a list of TSTโs seven fundamental tenets, which focus on rationality, compassion and the โstruggle for justice.โ The first tenet is, โOne should strive to act with compassion and empathy toward all creatures in accordance with reason.โ The others follow from this premise.ย
Over the past decade, TST has routinely applied to place displays on public property when other religions are invited to do so, in order to defend the ideas of both freedom of religion and freedom from religion. It followed the same procedure to get permission for its display as the group that erected a traditional nativity scene in the rotunda did.
The TST display had become a focus of outrage on rightwing media sites and in related social media circles, especially after Fox News ran a story on it. Gov. Kim Reynolds issued a statement calling the TST display โabsolutely objectionable.โ The governor said she did not support calls to remove the display, and that instead โthe best response to objectionable speech is more speechโ and inviting โall those of faithโ to join her โin praying over the Capitol and recognizing the nativity scene that will be on display โ the true reason for the season.โ
After smashing the display on Dec. 14, Cassidy surrendered to an Iowa State Patrol officer standing nearby.ย

Speaking to the Sentinel, a conservative news and opinion site, immediately afterwards, Cassidy said he attacked and beheaded the statue to โawaken Christians to the anti-Christian acts promoted by our government.โ The Sentinel quotes Cassidy as saying, โmy conscience is held captive to the word of God, not to bureaucratic decree. And so I acted.โ
Cassidy was originally charged in December with fourth-degree criminal mischief, a misdemeanor. The Polk County Attorneyโs Office subsequently amended the charge, after determining that the value of the property damage done by Cassidy was greater than first estimated, and that the motive for his actions meant the criminal mischief charge qualified as a hate crime under Iowa law. That automatically makes the charge a felony.
โEvidence shows the defendant made statements to law enforcement and the public indicating he destroyed the property because of the victimโs religion,โ Lynn Hicks, a spokesperson for the Polk County Attorneyโs Office, said in a statement provided to the Des Moines Register.
Under Iowa Code, criminal mischief is a hate crime when it is โcommitted against a person or a personโs property because of the personโs race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, political affiliation, sex, sexual orientation, age, or disability.โ
The Register reports that in the filing on Friday, Cassidyโs attorney argues the hate crime enhancement of the criminal mischief charge should be dismissed because hate crime laws are unconstitutional.
“Because [it] in this case seeks to punish Cassidyโs thoughts, it cannot withstand constitutional muster as it violates the First Amendment which protects ‘the freedom to think,'” attorney Sara Pasquale wrote in the filing.
The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of hate crime laws in a 1995 decision in a case challenging Wisconsinโs hate crime law. A unanimous court rejected arguments like Pasqualeโs with an opinion written by conservative Chief Justice William Rehnquist. The Iowa Supreme Court has also upheld the validity of the stateโs hate crime law.ย
In the filing, Pasquale calls these decisions โmisguided.โ
Pasquale also argues that even if the stateโs hate crime law is valid, it should not apply to Cassidyโs actions for two reasons. First, because the statutory language uses the word โperson,โ it cannot be used on criminal mischief committed against property owned by an organization. Furthermore, Pasquale said Cassidy’s attack on the TST property doesnโt qualify as a hate crime because TST cannot be considered as having religious beliefs.ย

The Polk County Attorneyโs Office has not yet filed a response to the motion to dismiss the hate crime.
Cassidy began fundraising off his destruction of TSTโs holiday display almost immediately. Itโs also helped give him a higher profile in rightwing news and social media circles.ย
Cassidy isย a former Navy pilot, who grew up in Virginia. He earned an undergraduate degree in history from Virginia Tech University in 2009. In 2018, he received a liberal arts degree from Harvard Universityโs extension service.
He has attempted to launch a political career in Mississippi, unsuccessfully running for office in 2022 and 2023 as a Republican. During his runs for office, Cassidy used the same sort of rhetoric he used describing his decision to travel to Iowa to smash the TST display. As a candidate for Congress in 2022, he told a Mississippi newspaper that โThe United States is going downhill since the removal of Jesus Christ.โ That didnโt stop his political rivals from successfully attacking him as not conservative enough.ย
Cassidy did not make a court appearance on Friday. His trial is scheduled for May.

