A tense moment in a Pasadena, Texas, courtroom erupted into public outrage this week after Mayor Thomas Schoenbein ordered police to remove a man who openly criticized his leadership and accused him of disrespecting military veterans and the U.S. Constitution.
The confrontation, caught on video and now circulating widely on social media, shows the man standing during a public session and denouncing the mayor for what he described as a betrayal of civic values.
“You spat in the face of the men and women who served this country,” the man declared before security approached him. “You don’t respect the rules of the Constitution!”
Moments later, Mayor Schoenbein called for police intervention. Officers quickly surrounded the man as he continued to speak, prompting him to shout “The mayor is corrupt!” while being escorted from the chamber.
The exchange, which lasted less than a minute, has ignited furious debate online. A Reddit thread discussing the incident under the headline “Mayor has police remove man over criticism of his office” quickly drew hundreds of comments, most condemning the mayor’s actions as authoritarian.
One of the most upvoted reactions captured the mood bluntly:
“The way the other 9 morons just sat there like the useless group they are.”
Others pointed to the broader implications for free speech and civic engagement. “Terrible look for local Pasadena government,” wrote u/darkestsoul. “The speaker wasn’t even being crude. The mayor literally just didn’t want to hear it and had him removed.”
Political undertones were impossible to ignore. When one commenter asked, “Let me guess: Republican mayor?”, another quickly confirmed, “Yup. This is Pasadena, Texas.”
Legal experts and local residents have begun questioning whether the mayor’s actions could violate the man’s First Amendment rights, especially since public comment periods at city meetings are generally protected forms of expression. “And just like that, another lawsuit,” one Redditor quipped, which is a sentiment echoed by others calling the case an “easy win.”
Many online called the ejected speaker “a real patriot” and urged future attendees to continue his message at upcoming meetings, even at the risk of removal themselves. Pasadena’s city government has yet to issue a formal statement on the incident.







