Black Lives Matters Minneapolis is a hodgepodge group: a law professor with a long track record of outspokenness, a diversity coordinator for the city of Minneapolis and a veteran labor organizer.
Among the rest are students, teachers and community activists.
But the group's goals broadly remain the same: Bringing awareness to the issue of police violence against blacks.
The group is planning its biggest event yet at 1 p.m. Monday, when leaders plan to take over the busy intersection of University and Snelling avenues in St. Paul and then march to the Capitol to commemorate Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
The group is calling the demonstration "#ReclaimMLK" and it is shaping up to be more boisterous and unpredictable than a long-standing MLK Day breakfast and march re-enactment at Macalester College earlier in the day.
Organizers said the protest was planned to coincide with MLK Day because his "life's work was the elevation, honoring, and defense of black lives."
Black Lives Matter Minneapolis, like its counterparts around the country, first sprouted in the wake of police shootings of unarmed black men that drew national attention and outrage. They say that many of the same tensions between police and blacks exist in Minneapolis and St. Paul, but without adequate response from local political leaders.
"We have a related policing crisis in this county where black men and children are being gunned down," said Lena Gardner, a spokeswoman for the group. "We are raising the tension in the country so that it can no longer be ignored."