We’ve said it before, and we will no doubt have many occasions to say it again in the future.
This article goes through the judge’s opinion in some depth to show why that judge is not a “doddering old fool”, as TST’s owner claimed in response to the judgment against them, but rather how The Satanic Temple fails its donors and supporters again and again with sloppy or intentionally threadbare legal work.
If you’re looking for a shorter explanation, “The Satanic Temple is malicious but also incredibly incompetent” is sufficient in general for most things — but keep in mind that that’s doubly true in a space with an eventual requirement of evidence for claims, with standards of basic decorum, and of course where “technicalities” require one to actually know and cite the law accurately to succeed.
Litigation is supposed to be where TST excels, after all — the arena on which so much of TST’s mythical efficacy rests — and their supposed proficiency is supposed to justify hundreds of grand in unaccounted charitable donations to TST every year from around the country just to facilitate their ability to bring suits.
But when you actually look behind the curtain, and examine their courtroom performance as it actually exists on record and not merely in their childish press releases, TST comes off less as a group of canny but unorthodox legal strategists, and more as a clown car of snake oil salesmen with an at best hypothetical grasp on the law as it exists.
But even that falls a bit short here.
What began as The Satanic Temple, Inc. v. Hellerstedt (also known as “Ann Doe I” or the “satanic abortion loophole” case) ends with TST getting roasted for being sloppy and lazy in its filings but raising hundreds of thousands of dollars along the way.
If you remember back to September 2021 or much of 2022, The Satanic Temple was being held by popular press as a beacon for religious liberty challenged to abortion and “the last best hope” for abortion access.
There will be no follow up from those same reporters or outlets.
That lack of followup consistently works in the Temple’s favor, allowing it to launder a reputation as cheeky legal geniuses by word of mouth and sheer inertia.
Let’s lift the curtain and show what actually happened, as we understand it.
TST sued us from April 2020 to September 2024, and we are still here.