Government & Politics

Satanist leader arrested after physical clash inside Kansas Statehouse during Black Mass

A physical altercation inside the Kansas Statehouse Friday ended with Capitol Police arresting Satanic church leader Michael Stewart, capping off a morning of inflammatory religious demonstration.

Stewart punched a man, Marcus Jeremiah Jared Schroeder, who repeatedly attempted to rip a booklet out of his hands while he called out to Satan from the Capitol’s first-floor rotunda. Both men were taken into custody and booked into the Shawnee County Jail, records show.

Satanic Grotto leader Michael Stewart is led away by Capitol police officers after being arrested when he got into an altercation while he attempted to perform the Black Mass ritual inside the Kansas State Capitol on Friday, March 28, 2025, Topeka.
Satanic Grotto leader Michael Stewart is led away by Capitol police officers after being arrested when he got into an altercation while he attempted to perform the Black Mass ritual inside the Kansas State Capitol on Friday, March 28, 2025, Topeka. Emily Curiel ecuriel@kcstar.com

Less than an hour earlier, police apprehended a man who charged at Stewart, throwing himself at his lower body and grappling with him over the communion wafer he was stomping on.

A counter-demonstrator attempts to disrupt a Black Mass ritual as Satanic Grotto leader Michael Stewart, top, conducts the ceremony at the Kansas State Capitol on Friday, March 28, 2025, in Topeka.
A counter-demonstrator attempts to disrupt a Black Mass ritual as Satanic Grotto leader Michael Stewart, top, conducts the ceremony at the Kansas State Capitol on Friday, March 28, 2025, in Topeka. Emily Curiel ecuriel@kcstar.com

Around 30 members of the Satanic Grotto church and their supporters demonstrated in front of the east steps of the Capitol before Stewart entered the building around 11:30 a.m. As he walked in, Lt. Greydin Walker, with the Capitol police, warned Stewart that he could be inside but that law enforcement would have to take action if he “performed any type of event or disruption.”

Satanic Grotto leader Michael Stewart recites a passage from a black book while holding a communion host, as Jaee Frazee holds the book open during a Black Mass ritual near the steps of the Kansas State Capitol on Friday, March 28, 2025, in Topeka.
Satanic Grotto leader Michael Stewart recites a passage from a black book while holding a communion host, as Jaee Frazee holds the book open during a Black Mass ritual near the steps of the Kansas State Capitol on Friday, March 28, 2025, in Topeka. Emily Curiel ecuriel@kcstar.com

In the lead-up to the Black Mass event, Gov. Laura Kelly said no demonstrators — Satanic, Christian or otherwise — would be allowed inside Friday. Dozens of Capitol police officers set up barricades separating the groups and monitored their actions from inside and outside the Statehouse.

As Stewart walked down the hallway, he was followed by a Catholic priest, Shawnee Republican state Rep. Angela Stiens and several other lawmakers, who repeated the words of the “Hail Mary” prayer.

State Rep. Angela Stiens recites a Hail Mary as Satanic Grotto Black Mass participants walk through the hallway of the Kansas State Capitol on Friday, March 28, 2025, in Topeka.
State Rep. Angela Stiens recites a Hail Mary as Satanic Grotto Black Mass participants walk through the hallway of the Kansas State Capitol on Friday, March 28, 2025, in Topeka. Emily Curiel ecuriel@kcstar.com

Hundreds of counter demonstrators who gathered in front of the north and south steps spent Friday morning hoisting signs, singing and shouting into megaphones at Satanists across the lawn.

Efforts to prevent the Black Mass from taking place failed after a Leavenworth District Court judge dismissed a lawsuit brought by Kansas City, Kansas, Catholic Archbishop Joseph Naumann demanding the immediate return of holy items that Stewart was able to prove he purchased online.

Counter-demonstrators stand behind yellow caution tape as attendees participate in the Satanic Grotto’s Black Mass ritual at the Kansas State Capitol on Friday, March 28, 2025, in Topeka.
Counter-demonstrators stand behind yellow caution tape as attendees participate in the Satanic Grotto’s Black Mass ritual at the Kansas State Capitol on Friday, March 28, 2025, in Topeka. Emily Curiel ecuriel@kcstar.com

The House passed a bipartisan resolution earlier this month denouncing the ritual as “an explicit act of anti-Catholic bigotry and an affront to all Christians.”

A group of legislative leaders called on Kelly to ban the event, tightened assembly restrictions inside and outside the Capitol, and asked the Kansas Bureau of Investigation to look into whether Stewart had threatened an unnamed lawmaker.

William Hendrix, a spokesperson for Attorney General Kris Kobach, who showed up Friday to take in the spectacle, said that investigation is ongoing.

Stewart previously told The Star that his group is non-violent but that he was fully prepared to be arrested Friday. In the aftermath of the rotunda altercation, police apprehended Stewart, leading him back downstairs to a room by the visitor center.

Shawnee County Jail records show Stewart was arrested on suspicion of disorderly conduct and unlawful assembly, then released on a $1,000 bond. Schroeder, the man he punched in the face, was also booked on suspicion of disorderly conduct. Schroeder was sentenced last year to serve 90 days in a Wisconsin jail after calling in a false bomb threat to a 2023 Pride event.

Religious clash

Kyle Francis of Rose Hill traveled two hours to protest the Satanic demonstration. He wore military fatigues, a protective vest and a helmet, and held a Knights Templar flag.

“They were a Catholic military organization from about a thousand years ago. They would protect Christians en route to the Holy Land, protect the Holy Land, that sort of thing,” Francis said.

Air Force veteran Mark Mendon of Blue Springs, Missouri, showed up to lend his support to the Satanic Grotto’s cause. He identified himself as an atheist.

“I don’t think any of them believe in Satan. We don’t believe in Satan. It’s more of a separation of church and state, religious rights (movement),” Mendon said.

Attendees participate in the Satanic Grotto’s Black Mass ritual as counter-demonstrators stand behind yellow caution tape at the Kansas State Capitol on Friday, March 28, 2025, in Topeka.
Attendees participate in the Satanic Grotto’s Black Mass ritual as counter-demonstrators stand behind yellow caution tape at the Kansas State Capitol on Friday, March 28, 2025, in Topeka. Emily Curiel ecuriel@kcstar.com

He joined the small group of Satanists as their worship director took out a guitar and began singing: “If you think you’re right, you’re probably wrong. Whatever you believe in, we’re against it.”

Rep. Silas Miller, a Wichita Democrat, was one of the few lawmakers to make an appearance on the Statehouse lawn the morning after the Legislature adjourned for its first recess.

Satanic Grotto leader Michael Stewart recites a passage from a black book during a Black Mass ritual inside the rotunda of the Kansas State Capitol on Friday, March 28, 2025, in Topeka.
Satanic Grotto leader Michael Stewart recites a passage from a black book during a Black Mass ritual inside the rotunda of the Kansas State Capitol on Friday, March 28, 2025, in Topeka. Emily Curiel ecuriel@kcstar.com

Miller, who voted against the resolution condemning the Black Mass, said it’s hypocritical to deny Satanists access to the Capitol when other religious groups are allowed in and a Christian minister leads lawmakers in prayer every morning.

“It’s not a religious freedom issue. It’s a Christian preference issue,” Miller said.

Brandon Fast of Cure Church in Kansas City, Kansas, crossed the police barricade to talk with Mendon, the Air Force veteran.

“I don’t agree with the moral standpoints. I don’t agree with the signage,” Fast said. But as a former atheist who explored a number of faiths before becoming a Christian, he said he does support religious freedom.

“If you think about any conversation — me screaming at you, you screaming at me — it isn’t going to do much,” Fast said. “So if we can come together and have a civil dialogue like this, having open ideas and not condemning each other, not rebuking each other, then conversations can be had.”

Clarification: This story has been updated to better describe an encounter between a Satanic church leader and a counter-protester outside the Kansas Statehouse.

This story was originally published March 28, 2025 at 1:48 PM.

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Matthew Kelly
The Kansas City Star
Matthew Kelly is The Kansas City Star’s Kansas State Government reporter. He previously covered local government for The Wichita Eagle. Kelly holds a political science degree from Wichita State University.
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