Protests and vigils continued Friday night and early Saturday over Thursday's fatal shooting of 32-year-old Winston Smith by law enforcement in Minneapolis' Uptown area.
Activists blocked traffic at busy Lake Street and Hennepin Avenue during the Friday evening rush hour. Minneapolis police officers on bikes moved in to try to take control of the busy intersection, but protesters later blocked Lake Street again with a makeshift barricade of motorcycles, bike racks and dumpsters. There were some standoffs between protesters and officers throughout the night.
Photos from the scene early Saturday showed dumpster fires in the street and a line of officers standing guard.
Multiple arrests were made after "riotous behavior" near Lake Street and S. Girard Avenue, Minneapolis police spokesman John Elder said.
Earlier, activists held a vigil atop the parking ramp where Smith died after being shot by members of a U.S. Marshals Service task force.
Some Uptown businesses closed early Friday for fear that the vandalism and looting that broke out overnight Thursday might be repeated.
Earlier Friday evening, Smith's family members gathered at the headquarters of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension in St. Paul to call for information and accountability. They demanded the release of any footage of the shooting, although the Marshals Service has said it does not use body or vehicle cameras.
Smith was one of seven children, and had three of his own, his family said. His mother, Tijuana Wilson, said law enforcement officers are killing far too many young Black men.