This is one way to break the Ten Commandments.

An Arkansas man was arrested early Wednesday after police said he rammed his vehicle into a newly installed stone monument of the Ten Commandments at the Arkansas Capitol grounds. The man also streamed the toppling of the one-day-old structure live on Facebook.

Capitol authorities identified the driver as 32-year-old Michael Tate Reed of Van Buren, Arkansas. He was arrested immediately after the crash.

The six-foot monument was left in multiple pieces. It had just been installed the day before on the Capitol grounds in Little Rock.

On the brief Facebook video posted to Reed's page early Wednesday, the Capitol dome is seen through the windshield. A radio voice is heard in the background, saying, "Where do you go when you're faced with adversity and trials and challenges?"

Then a man's voice, believed to be Reed's, is heard yelling "Freedom!" The Dodge Dart he's driving bolts into the 6,000-pound monument at about 21mph.

An arrest report (PDF) said the suspect was booked at 7:30am local time on suspicion of "defacing objects of public interest," criminal trespass, and criminal mischief. Another Facebook video published Wednesday before the crash showed Reed speaking about Jesus and the separation of church and state.

Three years ago, a Ten Commandments replica outside Oklahoma's Capitol was also toppled when Reed crashed into it. He was not formally charged and instead was treated for mental health issues.

In the latest incident, Reed reportedly set up a GoFundMe campaign to raise $20,000 to purchase a new vehicle after the caper.

Monuments of the Ten Commandments on public property always spark controversy. On Tuesday, the day the monument was installed, the American Civil Liberties Union said the monument was unconstitutional and threatened to sue.

The US Supreme Court ruled in 2005 that it is constitutional to have a Ten Commandments monument on the grounds of the Texas Capitol. The Arkansas monument that Reed allegedly destroyed is a replica of the Texas monument.

Following the destruction of the Oklahoma replica, meanwhile, lawmakers in the Sooner State installed another one. But the replacement monument was ordered off the grounds when the Oklahoma Supreme Court ruled that it violated the state's constitution forbidding lawmakers from funding religion.

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