After a day of protests and increasing tension across the Twin Cities, Gov. Tim Walz used a widely televised evening news conference to implore everyone to stay home and help restore order to the state's two major urban centers.
"Minnesotans, you must stay at home tonight," Walz said in hopes the curfew would serve its purpose as it remains in effect until 6 a.m. Sunday. "Don't go out, don't go walking, don't drive. … Support our first responders tonight by giving them the space to protect us."
The warning came less than eight hours after Walz ordered a full mobilization of the Minnesota National Guard to combat what he called a "tightly controlled" group of outside agitators, some of them from out of state, who have turned city streets into scenes of looting and arson.
The struggle to control the mayhem could bring another 1,000 National Guard soldiers into the Twin Cities, supplementing a force of 700, already the largest civil policing authority in the state's history. Law enforcement officials said it would be the first full mobilization of the Guard in Minnesota since World War II.
'Destabilize civil society'
"Our cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul are under assault," Walz said, suggesting that a growing number of rioters are part of what he called "an organized attempt to destabilize civil society."
Walz said many people causing destruction and fire in the cities could be from elsewhere. He distinguished the wanton looting and vandalism from the legitimate and mostly peaceful protests that began Tuesday, the day after the death of George Floyd, an unarmed black man who died after being forcibly restrained by Minneapolis police.
It was not clear if the outside groups suspected to be playing a part in the mayhem are made up of white-supremacist agitators, left-wing anarchists, or both.
Authorities said they made about 40 arrests overnight in Minneapolis and St. Paul, mostly for burglary, curfew violations and destruction of property. Hennepin County jail logs showed detainees from Florida, Michigan, Missouri, Illinois and Alaska.