As we reported on Tuesday, the Washoe County School Board meeting saw numerous protesters in attendance.

They were asking for select books to be banned from school libraries, even though there was nothing on the agenda that concerned this topic.

"I want to make clear that Washoe County School District values a culture of respect."

That was part of Board Trustee Adam Mayberry's opening statements at yesterday's meeting.

The board room was packed out the door with protesters.

Quickly, tensions rose as Pastor John Amanchukwu took the stand.

He's a pastor who has spoken at many school board meetings across the country.

As he read through American Psycho there were multiple swings of the gavel and calls for him to stop, before board members called a recess.

School police then asked him to leave multiple times.

After the pastor stayed in the meeting for a few minutes, he left of his own free will and the meeting continued.

Another recess was called after more disruptions and more commentators were asked to leave.

Washoe County says they have rules in the beginnning of each agenda. In meetings they prohbit profanity, vulgarity and personal attacks.

The school district sent us this statement: 

"The law is clear that because a public meeting is a limited public forum, there is no First Amendment right to stay in a meeting and disrupt the business of the public body.  The Office of the Attorney General recommends that the chair of a public meeting provide at least one warning to a disruptive member of the public who refuses to follow the clearly articulated view point neutral restrictions on the agenda.  After at least one warning, Chair Mayberry gave multiple warnings to each person last night, a person can be removed from the meeting as disruptive, and it is not a violation of the First Amendment.  If a person refuses to leave the meeting chamber, that person can be arrested for a criminal violation."

In addition, the school district wants to remind that parents can restrict what their student can check out from school libraries.