For two days, state and local officials blamed "outside agitators" for the spasm of violence and property damage that erupted when a black man, George Floyd, died after being restrained by a white Minneapolis police officer.
But organizers of Sunday's march on Interstate 35W say the focus on property damage and the alleged involvement of extremist groups is misplaced and is only shifting attention from the tragedy that has inspired thousands to gather peacefully every day for the past week.
"The problem is not some broken windows and some burned buildings, though we do recognize the pain our communities are in," Michelle Gross, president of Communities United Against Police Brutality, said Sunday during a protest at the Capitol. "What is the problem is the fact that cops can kill with impunity."
Gov. Tim Walz continued to suggest Sunday that "it can't be Minnesotans" who would loot and burn homegrown businesses.
Residents took to social media to say they, too, had seen evidence of the involvement of outsiders such as white supremacist groups. President Donald Trump chimed in, alleging in tweets Saturday that the violence was "being led by Antifa and other radical groups." Antifa, short for anti-fascists, is an umbrella term for far-left-leaning militant groups that resist neo-Nazis and white supremacists at demonstrations.
But the evidence of outside involvement is thin.
In St. Paul, police received numerous reports of suspicious vehicles without license plates parked and driving around the city, according to department spokesman Steve Linders. Officers also spotted some of those vehicles.
They investigated an abandoned pickup truck loaded with construction equipment. Callers reported that people had gone to and from the truck, taking items from it.