Workers and volunteers in downtown Minneapolis swept up glass, boarded up buildings and assessed the emotional toll of another night in a summer of civil unrest Thursday after rioters damaged more than 40 buildings overnight, this time sparked by a false rumor that police had killed a man.
More than 1,000 uniformed personnel including 400 National Guard members and 250 State Patrol troopers stood ready to quell potential disturbances Thursday night as an 8 p.m. curfew fell upon both Minneapolis and St. Paul. Windows and doors on dozens of businesses and office buildings had been covered in plywood or otherwise barricaded for protection.
Well into the evening, Nicollet Mall remained peaceful with only a few people on the streets. A caravan of National Guard and law enforcement patrols traversed the corridor, warning over a loudspeaker that those who did not disperse would be arrested.
Authorities were vigilant about confronting stragglers and ordering them home, while volunteers with outreach organizations such as MAD DADS helped facilitate rides home by bus or vehicle. A Domino's pizza delivery driver called out to a stranger and her three young girls, offering the family a ride.
In Minneapolis, law enforcement arrested 30 people within the first hour, according to police spokesman John Elder. They seized one illegal gun. St. Paul had reported no arrests late Thursday.
The destruction, tension and law enforcement presence that began Wednesday night was reminiscent of the aftermath of George Floyd's death three months earlier — in that case, the killing of a Black man at the hands of Minneapolis police spurring protests, both peaceful and violent, across the country.
Before curfew took effect, local and state leaders urged people to stay home Thursday night. Gov. Tim Walz said his concern was "safety and security and bringing peace into the city."
The unrest had erupted Wednesday evening after officers on Nicollet Mall approached a man implicated in a killing a few hours earlier in the day at a nearby parking ramp. Suspect Eddie Frank Sole Jr., 38, quickly ducked into a doorway and killed himself with a shot to his chin as bystanders scrambled for cover.