Miami Herald

Arrested Miami protesters mostly from Miami-Dade, Broward

- BY MONIQUE O. MADAN, JOEY FLECHAS AND DAVID SMILEY mmadan@miamiheral­d.com jflechas@miamiheral­d.com dsmiley@miamiheral­d.com

The morning after peaceful protests morphed into violent demonstrat­ions in downtown Miami, local officials told the public that most of the “agitators” where “outsiders.”

“Of the 57 people that were arrested, 13 of those 57 live in the City of Miami. OK? So, we have Minnesota, New York. Georgia. People from outside of the county ... [who] were arrested,” said Miami Police Chief Jorge Colina during a

Sunday news conference. “The reason I think that’s significan­t is: Please don’t make the mistake of letting someone from outside suck you in to destroy our city.”

The message was echoed later by Miami Mayor Francis Suarez: “Thirteen of the 57 people arrested came from Miami.”

But according to the Miami-Dade Department of Correction­s, 30 of the 57 are from Miami-Dade and 11 others have addresses in Broward or Palm Beach County.

Juan Diasgranad­os, spokesman for the correction­s department, said only seven of the 57 people arrested are known to have addresses from out of state: three from Minnesota, two from New York and one each from Georgia and Michigan. Six others were listed as homeless and it was unclear where three others were from.

“It’s important to understand that just because their drivers license says one address, doesn’t mean they live there,” Diasgranad­os added. “For example: They could have an address registered out of state and be going to school down here.”

U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, the chairman of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, posted clip of Colina’s comments on Twitter.

Rubio has asserted that “domestic violent extremists have infiltrate­d, hijacked & taken advantage of the protests” around the country.”

The “13 from Miami” referred to by Colina and Suarez referred to those from within the city limits of Miami, a relatively compact area.

Other jurisdicti­ons around the country have made similar claims, that most of those arrested by law officers quelling disturbanc­es were “outsiders” who had come to make trouble. President Donald Trump made similar claims, asserting that agitators from “Antifa,” a loosely organized leftist movement that clashed violently with far right protesters in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, had hijacked the demonstrat­ions, sullying the memory of George Floyd, the Minneapoli­s man whose death at the hands of police in that city unleashed demonstrat­ions from coast to coast.

“Sad,” Trump said in a tweet.

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? A protester passes a police car on fire in downtown Miami on Saturday night.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com A protester passes a police car on fire in downtown Miami on Saturday night.

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