The first three defendants to stand trial for demonstrating on Interstate 94 last summer in the wake of Philando Castile's death pleaded guilty Tuesday.
Adam Burch, Zachary Kolodziej and Elise Sommers each pleaded guilty to misdemeanor public nuisance and unlawful assembly.
They said afterward that they had proceeded to trial as an act of solidarity with Castile's cousin, Louis Hunter, who was the only protester that night to be charged with a felony. The Carver County attorney's office, which handled the case while Ramsey County pursued a case against the officer who killed Castile, dropped felony riot charges against Hunter last week, saying that there was insufficient evidence to proceed.
Several protesters charged in connection with the July 9, 2016, demonstration signed a pledge to refuse a plea deal until Hunter's case was dropped. The first three of 21 went to trial Tuesday.
"I don't think we ever came into the courtroom with the intention that our individual cases would be dismissed or found not guilty," said Burch, 29, of Minneapolis.
Burch, Kolodziej and Sommers were also given identical sentences. All three cases, which were tried separately, were heard before Ramsey County District Judge G. Tony Atwal Tuesday morning.
Atwal sentenced each to 30 days in jail but stayed the sentence in lieu of a year of probation. He also ordered them to pay a $100 fine and $86 in fees and costs. Each defendant received credit for their time in jail.
Given a chance to address the court, the three stood up for their actions, calling it a necessary reaction to a system that unfairly targeted black people and people of color.