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Man banned from Disney after holding 'Trump 2020' sign on Splash Mountain

Disney's park rules prohibit "unauthorized events, demonstrations or speeches, or the usage of any flag, banner, or sign for commercial purposes, or to incite a crowd."

ORLANDO, Fla. -- A man claims he was wrongfully given a trespassing warning and permanently banned from all Disney parks after holding up a Trump 2020 banner on Splash Mountain at Walt Disney World in Orlando.

Dion Cini said he doesn't think it was fair he got kicked out and subsequently banished from the park because "the rules are clear."

"I was on the ride and you are allowed to hold up a sign; people do it all the time," Cini said.

Cini claims that it was the context of the sign, not the safety concern, that alerted Disney staff.

"The trespass they gave me said not to incite a crowd not because it was dangerous," Cini said. "I will fight this since the trespassing warning was written fictitiously."

He included that a police officer there "said it was ridiculous" that they asked him to be escorted off, even claiming that 40 Disney cast members escorted him off the property.

Cini sent a photo of the trespassing ticket he claims he was issued by the Orange County Sheriff's Office.

A Walt Disney World spokesperson said the ban "isn't about the content of the banner or a political issue", but instead was "a result of repeatedly not following park rules."

Cini reportedly flew a Trump banner at the park earlier in the year.

"When the first banner was hung at the Magic Kingdom earlier this fall, we temporarily paused his ticket that day so that we could have a conversation to reiterate our park rules," a Disney spokesperson said.

The spokesperson also said park officials told the guest he would be permanently prohibited from entering the parks if he violated park rules again.

In Disney's resort park rules, one of the listed prohibited activities included states, "unauthorized events, demonstrations or speeches, or the usage of any flag, banner, or sign for commercial purposes, or to incite a crowd."

A Disney spokesperson said confirmed Cini was "permanently prohibited from visiting our property and entering our parks."

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