More than 1,000 people marched through downtown Minneapolis on Wednesday night in a show of solidarity with those protesting in Baltimore over the death of a black man after he was injured while in police custody.
While Baltimore erupted in rioting after Monday's funeral for Freddie Gray, the Minneapolis march organized by Black Lives Matter Minneapolis remained peaceful.
Organizers said they wanted to show support for "the people of Baltimore who are currently under a curfew enforced by the National Guard after days of protests demanding justice for Freddie Gray," who died April 19 of spinal cord and other injuries sustained while in police custody.
Other solidarity marches were held Wednesday in cities across the country, including Boston, New York and Houston.
In Minneapolis, hundreds of people began gathering at 5:30 p.m. at Gold Medal Park overlooking the Mississippi River.
They eventually wound their way through downtown along Washington Avenue and across the Hennepin Avenue bridge with hundreds of additional protesters joining their ranks. Minneapolis police officers stayed ahead of the demonstration, closing streets and the bridge before protesters got there.
Black men carrying a black coffin led the march.
"We have a lot of work to do, and we are not immune to the problems that have plagued major cities in the last few months," Nekima Levy-Pounds, a University of St. Thomas law professor and civil rights activist, said while marching down Washington Avenue.