Allen Scarsella took the witness stand in his own defense late Friday to explain why he went to a Black Lives Matter protest in November 2015 and, after a scuffle broke out, ultimately shot five people.
His testimony was cut short, however, by the end of a day that saw his friend and co-defendant Nathan Gustavsson testify for several hours, arguing that Scarsella shot in self-defense. But his testimony also opened him up to what was often blistering questioning from the prosecution. It also revealed a text Gustavsson wrote referring to the protest shooting and saying, "We're all guilty in this."
Gustavsson said in an interview afterward that his decision to testify came after his attorney, family and friends all told him not to. But he said he asked himself if he could live with himself if Scarsella was convicted and he did nothing. The answer was no.
"I can live with myself having done everything I could to help an innocent man," he said.
Scarsella, 24, is charged with felony riot and first-degree assault. Gustavsson, 22, along with Daniel Macey, 27, of Pine City and Joseph Backman, 28, of Eagan, stand charged with second-degree riot and aiding an offender.
Gustavsson's testimony began Thursday, when he told a jury why he, Scarsella and two others went to the Fourth Precinct in north Minneapolis on Nov. 23, 2015, where protesters had set up encampment following the death of Jamar Clark, who was unarmed when he was killed by Minneapolis police officers.
Under questioning by Scarsella's attorney, Peter Martin, Gustavsson said they wanted to live-stream the protest similar to what Scarsella and another man, Julio Suarez, did a few nights earlier. In those videos, Scarsella and Suarez wore masks to the protests, saying they wanted to do "reverse cultural enriching" and "make the fire rise."
Gustavsson said he wanted to sit by one of the fires, talk with people there and listen to music. But when the four arrived, with each person covering his face, he said they quickly realized the encampment had changed since Scarsella had gone. They couldn't blend into the crowd as Scarsella and Suarez had done. The video had changed the camp.