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California Mayor Who Allowed Puppet During Public Comment but Stopped Citizen from Praying Warned Action Illegal

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April 22, 2025

News Release
For Immediate Release: 4.22.25
Contact: John Manning, media@firstliberty.org
Direct: 972-941-4453

Swain

(Tarin Swain testifies during public comment at Ventura, California
city council meeting March 18, 2025. Photo courtesy of First Liberty Institute.)

California Mayor Who Allowed Puppet During Public Comment but Stopped Citizen from Praying Warned Action Illegal
Mayor allowed over 100 people to comment, including man with puppet, but told Tarin Swain to stop praying as crowd booed.

Ventura, CA—First Liberty Institute sent a letter to Ventura, California Mayor Dr. Jeannette Sanchez-Palacios after she interrupted and ordered First Liberty client Tarin Swain to stop praying during public comment at a recent city council meeting.  Swain was booed by the crowd and the mayor interrupted her several times.  The letter demands the mayor apologize to Swain, repeal any policy that prohibits prayer, and provide written assurance that the City Council will allow speakers at the podium to engage in prayer.

You can read the letter here.

“Over 100 people spoke, including someone using a puppet, but the one person silenced was our client who simply offered a prayer,” said Erin Smith, Associate Counsel at First Liberty Institute. “It’s gross viewpoint discrimination when the City of Ventura allows all types of expression during public comments except for a religious prayer.  Silencing a private citizen’s prayer during public comment time at a public meeting is abhorrent to the First Amendment.”

Last month, the Ventura City Council hosted a City Council Closed Session/Regular Meeting in the City Council Chambers. Swain signed up to speak during public comment.

As Swain, a devout Christian, stood at the podium to give her comment for the 60 seconds she was allocated like the other 130 commenters, she felt compelled by religious conviction to use part of her time to pray. She had prepared a speech, but bound by her conscience, she began to pray. Immediately the room became chaotic; her prayer was met with booing, hissing, and screaming from the audience. She continued to pray through the disruptions until she was interrupted and told to stop by the mayor presiding over the meeting who told her, “We [the City of Ventura] don’t do prayer.”

The letter states, “Private citizens speak on their own behalf, not on behalf of the government. Therefore, the rules that govern the prayer practices of legislative bodies do not apply to citizens’ public comments. Any concerns about observers believing the City Council has ‘endorsed’ prayers would also be misplaced, as the Supreme Court no longer considers the appearance of endorsement in evaluating Establishment Clause claims. The Establishment Clause is not violated merely because a government entity permits private religious expression or speech.”

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About First Liberty Institute

First Liberty Institute is a non-profit public interest law firm and the largest legal organization in the nation dedicated exclusively to defending religious freedom for all Americans.

To arrange an interview, contact John Manning at media@firstliberty.org or by calling 972-941-4453.

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