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Navy vet charged with hate crime for smashing satanic statue in Iowa Capitol gets support from conservatives

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Navy vet charged with hate crime for smashing satanic statue in Iowa Capitol gets support from conservatives

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Navy Reserve veteran Michael Cassidy received wide-spread support from conservatives and other notable figures after being charged with a hate crime for destroying a satanic statue that was erected at the Iowa state Capitol.

Notable figures like Elon Musk and Chaya Raichik, creator of Libs of TikTok, came to Cassidy’s defense after news of him being charged broke on Tuesday. Many who spoke out in support of Cassidy, lamented how left-wing protesters, who destroyed and vandalized statues of American historical figures, didn’t face the same stiff penalties that Cassidy now faces. 

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Local Iowa outlets reported that Polk County prosecutors accused Cassidy – who destroyed the statue in December ­– of violating the state’s hate crime statute and charged him.

NAVY VET DEFENDS BEHEADING IOWA CAPITOL’S SATANIC BAPHOMET STATUE: ‘CHRISTIAN CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE’

The Christian man who destroyed a statue of Baphomet at the Iowa state Capitol in December was recently hit with a hate crime charge for the offense. (Rep. Jon Dunwell)

The statue, depicting the horned demon Baphomet, was erected in the Capitol building by the Satanic Temple of Iowa as a religious display and therefore allowed to be there during the holidays under state rules.

After destroying the statue, Cassidy was initially cited for criminal mischief in the fourth degree and released after he told security that he had destroyed the statue. The felony hate crime charge was added Tuesday because according to a spokesman for the Polk County Attorney’s Office, the evidence indicated that Cassidy destroyed the statue for religious reasons.

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“Evidence shows the defendant made statements to law enforcement and the public indicating he destroyed the property because of the victim’s religion,” Polk County Attorney’s Office spokesperson Lynn Hicks said.

The new charge means that Cassidy faces up to five years in prison. One of his lawyers, R. David Younts, told Fox News Digital, “It is deeply disappointing that my client is being targeted with this type of charge. His nonviolent actions were motivated by his sincere and deeply held religious faith. 

“Nothing he did was targeted at any specific individual or organization. I hope that as the DA’s office carefully reviews the facts of this case they will dismiss the charge,” Younts added.

THE RISE OF THE SATANIC TEMPLE IN 2023

The statue of Baphomet was erected in the Capitol building by the Satanic Temple of Iowa last December. (Getty Images)

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The official Libs of TikTok X account came to Cassidy’s defense and called out a perceived double standard in the U.S. justice system. 

Mentioning the Black Lives Matter rallies of 2020, it stated, “Violent activists tore down dozens of statues including Columbus, Thomas Jefferson, and George Washington. None were held accountable or charged with a hate crime. Michael Cassidy knocks over a Satan statue made out of household items and gets charged with a hate crime.

“Welcome to America’s 2-tier-justice system. The police state made it clear who they worship. Wokeness and Satanism is the new religion,” the account added. 

Tesla CEO and X owner Elon Musk weighed in on Cassidy’s legal charge, asking, “What has become of America?”

“It’s okay to hate Satan,” The Blaze columnist Auron MacIntyre wrote. 

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Pro-Trump influencer “DC Draino” mentioned a double standard here as well, posting, “Under the Biden regime: Razor wire is good for stopping Americans but bad for stopping illegal aliens. Statues of US Presidents can be torn down but touching statues of Satan is a hate crime. Violent criminals aren’t arrested but defending yourself will get you locked up. Insane.”

Libertarian commentator “Sal the Agorist” noted, “Destroy a statue of Robert E. Lee & you’ll get political points on MSM. Behead a statue of Satan & you’ll get charged with hate crime.”

The Post Millennial editor-in-chief Libby Emmons made a similar point, writing, “Statues of Jefferson, Washington were both torn down bc of hatred of white men. But the guy who tears down a statue of Satan is charged with a hate crime.”

“It’s now a crime in America to hate Satan,” conservative digital strategist Greg Price said. 

“It was never mentioned that the trans Nashville shooter who specifically targeted Christian children committed a hate crime, but knocking over a statue of Satan is. America has fallen and we’re left to pay the price,” former NCAA athlete and anti-trans activist Riley Gaines wrote. 

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“Hate crime?!?!? Are you kidding me. Satan has NO PLACE in our state capitol,” conservative commentator Graham Allen said. 

Fox News Digital’s Jeffrey Clark contributed to this report.

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Illinois

Illinois lawmakers approve statewide regulations for electric bikes, scooters, skateboards

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Illinois lawmakers approve statewide regulations for electric bikes, scooters, skateboards


New legislation in Illinois means new rules for electric bikes, scooters, and similar devices. Supporters of the legislation said the goal is to prevent injuries and fatalities, but some e-bike riders question the additional cost that would be involved.

Benjamin Rodriguez, who recently bought an electric bike, said he knows the responsibility that comes with enjoying a ride.

“For a lot of the bikers that are going very fast on these e-bikes, e-scooters, especially along the lakefront, make it dangerous for other regular cyclists, because most of the time they’re just zipping along. They’re not paying attention,” he said.

The Illinois Secretary of State’s Office said injuries and fatalities involving these types of devices increased 300% nationwide between 2019 and 2022. With that in mind, Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias said the passage of Senate Bill 3484 is a priority for public safety.

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“Some of these devices have become faster, more powerful, and more dangerous than we could have ever have imagined, especially even just a couple of years ago,” he said.

Right now, there’s no statewide regulation in Illinois on high-speed electric bikes.

Senate Bill 3484, which was passed by state lawmakers at the end of their spring session, would require the owners of those devices statewide to only ride on the street, not on sidewalks, not in bike lanes, and not on bike paths.

Riders also would be required to have a valid driver’s license, title, registration, and insurance for their bikes.

“That may be a little too over the top, because you’re already paying several thousand dollars for these vehicles, but at the same time there needs to be some type of regulation to say where they could ride, how fast they could go, because they should be obeying the speed limits as well,” Rodriguez said.

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When it comes to electric skateboards, electric unicycles, and high-speed electric scooters, the legislation would require operators to be at least 16 years old, and go no faster than 28 mph on a sidewalk. Those devices would be allowed on bike lanes, bike paths, and roads with speed limits of up to 35 mph. They could only be used on roads with a speed limit of more than 35 mph if there is a bike lane.

Dr. Michelle Macy, a pediatric emergency physician at Lurie Children’s Hospital, said she’s seen minor injuries, but also severe ones.

“Head injuries that are severe enough that someone’s lost consciousness and needs to have a breathing tube and spend days and weeks in the intensive care unit,” she said.

The legislation now goes to Gov. JB Pritzker. If he signs the bill into law, or allows it to go into effect without his signature, it would take effect on Jan. 1, 2027.

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Indiana

Kelsey Mitchell eclipses 5,000 career points in Fever victory.

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Kelsey Mitchell eclipses 5,000 career points in Fever victory.


The Indiana Fever defeated the Atlanta Dream Thursday night, 83-71 in their first game of the Commissioner’s Cup.

The Fever (5-4) were led by Kelsey Mitchell who finished with 25 points, and reached the 5,000 career points milestone Caitlin Clark finished with 17 points and 8 assists, while Aliyah Boston finished with 19 points and 7 rebounds.

The Dream (6-3) were led by Allisha Gray and Jordin Canada who finished with 13 points a piece. Angel Reese finished with an 11 point, 10 rebound double-double in the loss..

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Here’s what happened:

Kelsey Mitchell finishes with a game-high 25 points in the Fever victory.

Fever 83, Dream 71, F

Fever rookie Raven Johnson hits a three in the corner to bring the lead back to 12.

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Fever 77, Dream 65, 2:19 left 4Q

Cunningham connects on another triple, her second tonight. She forces a Dream timeout.

Fever 71, Dream 57, 3:53 left 4Q

Angel Reese travels underneath, which is met by a great applause from the Fever faithful.

Fever 65, Dream 55, 6:37 left 4Q

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Clark’s impressive on-ball defense leads to a Dream miss with two seconds left.

Fever 62, Dream 51, End of 3rd

The Fever guard reached the milestone with 2:54 remaining in the third quarter.

The Fever are on a 9-0 run, Clark now has 12 points.

Fever 51, Dream 43, 3:23 left 3Q

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Clark scores a fadeaway off one foot, just the Fever’s second field goal so far in the quarter.

Fever 42, Dream 38, 6:54 left 3Q

A Boston foul sends Naz Hillmon to the line, she sinks both.

Fever 40, Dream 36, 8:17 left 3Q

Clark and Boston with a stellar defensive position to end the half, a double team preventing a Dream shot attempt as time expired.

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Fever 38, Dream 29, Halftime

Kelsey Mitchell gets two more with a step back in the midrange.

Fever 36, Dream 27, 1:30 left 2Q

Boston finishes through contact underneath, and Clark gets her fifth assist of the night.

Fever 25, Dream 21, 4:50 left 2Q

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Clark creates separation, and knocks down her first triple of the night.

Fever 18, Dream 15, 8:34 left 2Q

Angel Reese intercepts Caitlin Clark’s path underneath at the buzzer, preventing a final Fever shot attempt.

Fever 15, Dream 15, End of 1st

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Sophie Cunningham knocks down a triple for her first bucket of the night.

Fever 12, Dream 10, 1:37 left 1Q

Caitlin Clark scores her first bucket of the night, a 20-foot step back jump shot.

Dream 6, Fever 6, 5:48 left 1Q

Indiana starts the game 0/4 from the field, struggling on the offensive end.

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Dream 4, Fever 0, 7:58 left 1Q

The Fever play six games during the Commissioner’s Cup, an in-season tournament with a championship to decide who wins a $500,000 prize pool. The Fever won the Cup last season, defeating the Minnesota Lynx 74-59 in the championship.

Here’s who the Fever play in the tournament:

  • June 4: Fever 83, Atlanta Dream 71, F
  • June 6: at New York Liberty, 8 p.m., CBS
  • June 8: at Washington Mystics, 8 p.m., Peacock
  • June 11: vs Chicago Sky, 7 p.m., Prime Video
  • June 13: at Connecticut Sun, 6 p.m., Peacock
  • June 16: vs Toronto Tempo, 7 p.m., USA Network

The Indiana Fever play the Atlanta Dream at 7:00 p.m. ET Thursday, June 4th, at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.

TV: The game is being streamed on Prime Video.

Watch the Fever game on Prime Video

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Watch the Fever vs. the Dream on Prime Video or WNBA League Pass.

Watch Fever vs Dream on Prime Video

Caitlin Clark is listed as probable (back), once again. Damiris Dantas is also listed as probable, for personal reasons.

  • Caitlin Clark averages 20.1 points, 8.1 assists and 4.0 rebounds per game, making 39.3% of her field goals, 33.3% of her 3-pointers and 95.1% of her free throws.
  • Brian Haenchen, IndyStar, Fever 90-86: “I am not as concerned with the final score as I am with how the Fever look in getting there. Sure, a win would be nice, but after that debacle of a road trip, a competitive loss with signs of improvement defensively (and a bounce back offensively) would still be encouraging. That said, I think the home court advantage — paired with some of those improvements (I’m not looking for things to improve overnight, but do suspect we’ll see positive steps) — pushes Indiana over the top in this one.”

Check out Caitlin Clark jerseys, hoodies and more

Find Fever tickets on StubHub

  • 0, Kelsey Mitchell
  • 2, Myisha Hines-Allen
  • 3, Raven Johnson
  • 8, Sophie Cunningham
  • 7, Aliyah Boston
  • 10, Lexie Hull
  • 12, Damiris Dantas
  • 13, Justine Pissott
  • 14, Grace VanSlooten
  • 21, Makayla Timpson
  • 22, Caitlin Clark
  • 23, Bree Hall
  • 25, Monique Billings
  • 52, Tyasha Harris

  • May 9: Dallas Wings 107, Fever 104 (Recap, Clark stats)
  • May 13: Fever 87, Los Angeles Sparks 78 (Recap, Clark stats)
  • May 15: Washington Mystics 104, Fever 102, OT (Recap, Clark stats)
  • May 17: Fever 89, Seattle Storm 78, (Recap, Clark stats)
  • May 20: Fever 90, Portland Fire 73, (Recap, Clark injury)
  • May 22: Fever 90, Golden State Valkyries 82, (Recap, Clark stats)
  • May 28: Golden State Valkyries 90, Fever 88, (Recap, Clark stats)
  • May 30: Portland Fire 100, Fever 86, (Recap, Clark Stats)
  • June 4: Fever 83, Atlanta Dream 71, (Recap)
  • June 6: at New York Liberty*, 8 p.m., CBS
  • June 8: at Washington Mystics*, 8 p.m., Peacock
  • June 11: vs Chicago Sky*, 7 p.m., Prime Video
  • June 13: at Connecticut Sun*, 6 p.m., Peacock
  • June 16: vs Toronto Tempo*, 7 p.m., USA Network
  • June 18: vs Atlanta Dream, 7:30 p.m., Prime Video
  • June 20: at Atlanta Dream, 1 p.m., ABC
  • June 22: vs Phoenix Mercury, 8 p.m., USA Network
  • June 24: vs Phoenix Mercury, 7 p.m., USA Network
  • June 27: vs Los Angeles Sparks, 8 p.m., CBS
  • July 5: at Las Vegas Aces at T-Mobile Arena, 7 p.m., ESPN
  • July 8: at Los Angeles Sparks, 10 p.m., USA Network
  • July 9: at Phoenix Mercury, 10 p.m., Prime Video
  • July 12: at Las Vegas Aces, 9 p.m., NBC
  • July 15: vs Golden State Valkyries, 8 p.m., USA Network
  • July 17: vs Seattle Storm, 7:30 p.m., Ion
  • July 18: vs New York Liberty, 8 p.m., CBS
  • July 22: vs Connecticut Sun, 8 p.m., USA Network
  • July 28: at Seattle Storm, 9:30 p.m., ESPN
  • July 31: at Portland Fire, 10 p.m., Ion
  • Aug. 2: at Minnesota Lynx, 1 p.m., ABC
  • Aug. 6: vs Las Vegas Aces, 7 p.m., Prime Video
  • Aug. 8: at Chicago Sky (United Center), 3 p.m., ABC
  • Aug. 11: vs New York Liberty, 7:30 p.m., ESPN
  • Aug. 14: vs Dallas Wings, 7:30 p.m., Ion
  • Aug. 16: at Atlanta Dream, 7 p.m., ESPN
  • Aug. 18: at Toronto Tempo (Scotiabank Arena), 7 p.m., ESPN
  • Aug. 20: at Dallas Wings (American Airlines Center), 8 p.m., Prime Video
  • Aug. 22: at New York Liberty, 7 p.m., Prime Video
  • Aug. 23: at Chicago Sky, 7 p.m., NBC
  • Aug. 28: vs Connecticut Sun, 7:30 p.m., Ion
  • Sept. 18: at Toronto Tempo, 7:30 p.m., Ion
  • Sept. 20: vs Washington Mystics, 4 p.m., NBA TV
  • Sept. 22: vs Minnesota Lynx, 8 p.m., ESPN
  • Sept. 24: at Minnesota Lynx, 8 p.m., USA Network

Get IndyStar’s Indiana Fever and Caitlin Clark coverage sent directly to your inbox with our Caitlin Clark Fever newsletter. Subscribe to IndyStar TV: Fever for in-depth analysis, behind-the-scenes coverage and more. 



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Iowa

Doctor fights sanctions, saying he’ll be ‘run out of practice’ by Iowa board

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Doctor fights sanctions, saying he’ll be ‘run out of practice’ by Iowa board


DES MOINES, Iowa (IOWA CAPITAL DISPATCH) – A former central Iowa physician who allegedly admitted using cocaine daily before entering treatment is arguing in court that efforts to suspend his license threaten his livelihood and would be “the kiss of death” for his medical practice in California.

According to the Iowa Board of Medicine, Dr. Chad Becker, who once practiced at UnityPoint Health’s Iowa Methodist Medical Center in Des Moines, admitted routinely consuming an excessive amount of drugs and/or alcohol prior to 2022, resulting in a referral to the Iowa Physician Health Program for treatment.

According to the board, Becker ultimately chose not to comply with the program’s requirements and so the issue of his substance abuse was referred back to the board in November 2022.

In February 2026, the board ruled a license suspension of 90 days was warranted, as was an $8,000 civil penalty. Becker is now seeking judicial review of that suspension as well as the board’s subsequent refusal to grant him a new hearing on the matter.

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In court papers filed Wednesday, Becker said he is currently working as a full-time emergency room physician in California. He stated that after the Iowa board’s disciplinary action was reported to the National Practitioner Data Bank, which tracks physician discipline across all 50 states, the federal Drug Enforcement Administration became involved and a DEA investigator demanded he sign a “voluntary surrender” of his DEA registration to handle controlled substances.

“They claimed that it was because my DEA registration had not been ‘retired’ after my Iowa medical license had expired,” Becker said in a sworn affidavit. He said he has refused to sign the document, and the DEA is now “reconsidering the situation” due to his demand for a hearing on the matter.

“I could lose my career over this,” Becker told the court in his affidavit. “I am sure my career would have been over if I had a lifetime NPDB report that said the federal DEA and the Department of Justice had revoked my DEA registration for ‘admitted’ violations of federal narcotics laws.”

He said his current employer, after learning of the report to the NPDB, “invoked an immediate review of my employment situation,” but has agreed to temporarily delay taking any credentialing or privileging action “to see where this process goes.”

Becker said his “employer group” has applied for privileges at a hospital but has been notified that the hospital “is now in a deep review of my application for privileges due to the NPDB report.” Becker is asking the court “to at least temporarily void” the medical board’s report to the National Practitioner Data Bank pending further orders of the court.

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“I do not understand why the Iowa Board of Medicine seems so adamant in interfering with my practice in California when they know there were serious issues with the way the whole matter was handled over all these years in Iowa over the complaints by my long-time ex-girlfriend and my ex-wife,” Becker told the court. “It would be horrible if I am run out of practice due to these preliminary notices and actions.”

Board charges resulted in suspension

The dispute centers on the March 2025 action by the board in which Becker was charged with two counts of misconduct: substance abuse and committing a practice harmful or detrimental to the public. The board alleged Becker’s substance abuse had created a risk of harm to the public and that it did, in fact, create the “actual harm of providing care while impaired.”

Initially, the board alleged Becker’s substance abuse created the “actual harm of providing care while impaired,” although it later reversed itself on that point.

Becker then entered rehabilitation, according to the board, and began working as a physician in California. It was during his treatment there, the board alleges, that Becker acknowledged he had been using cocaine daily, along with other substances.

At a hearing on his disciplinary charges, the Iowa board presented evidence that Becker admitted to hallucinating while at work and to needing fluids prior to work shifts. Becker countered that using fluids to minimize his hangovers “just showed he was not impaired while working,” according to the board’s summary of the hearing evidence.

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In a brief filed with the court last week, the Iowa Board of Medicine contends that “Becker’s addiction was uncontrolled in that it was escalating without any treatment and routinely fed by use within 24 hours of a shift. Dr. Becker did not have a couple of momentary slips during the course to post-rehabilitation maintenance care; he was slowly sliding into the proverbial pit of addiction having never even made it to rehabilitation in the first instance.”

A hearing on the matter is expected to be held June 5, 2026, according to court records.

Copyright 2026 IOWA CAPITAL DISPATCH. All rights reserved.



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