Michael Robert Solomon had been training for this — the moment, he said, "when the [expletive] hits the fan."
As protests grew chaotic in the days after George Floyd died in Minneapolis police custody, Solomon, a 30-year-old New Brighton man, joined a cadre of others clad in military garb and carrying assault rifles. They deployed around small businesses and in neighborhoods around the city and braced for an onslaught.
Solomon was there on behalf of the "Boogaloo Bois," a loose-knit anti-government extremist movement that advocates armed revolution. Its adherents merge the in-person paramilitary activities of far-right militias with widespread mobilization on social media platforms such as Facebook. They appeared en masse earlier this year at gun rights protests in Virginia and at rallies against COVID-19 restrictions around the country. The Boogaloo Bois have since achieved greater prominence — and with it new law enforcement scrutiny — amid the unrest over Floyd's killing.
In Minnesota, references to the Boogaloo Bois appear throughout dozens of leaked secret state and federal law enforcement bulletins related to the late-May and early June rioting. The Star Tribune reviewed those bulletins and found Solomon singled out by name in one, which warned that he and others were armed and prepared to shoot police if they approached a Minneapolis home where they staged.
"We know we have a target [on us], that's why we don't meet up in big groups because we know we're probably going to get raided," Solomon said in an interview. "We know a lot of us are probably going to die."
In June, a man linked to the movement was charged with killing two law enforcement officers in California. Near Las Vegas, three alleged Boogaloo Bois were arrested for allegedly trying to firebomb a Black Lives Matter protest. But to date, none of the more than a dozen federal criminal cases filed in Minnesota linked to the riots mention the Boogaloo movement or other groups.
Solomon rejects any accusation linking him or the roughly 250 Boogaloo Bois he said are in Minnesota to white supremacy. At one point during the protests, Solomon was pictured raising his fist in solidarity with several Black men wearing Black Lives Matter shirts. He insists the animus of Minnesota's Boogaloo Bois is directed at the police.
The Boogaloo Bois were one of several groups from across the ideological spectrum that were closely watched by state and federal authorities during the Floyd protests, according to more than 60 private law enforcement bulletins. The documents were made available through the massive "Blue Leaks" data dump last month by a group called Distributed Denial of Secrets, a data transparency collective.