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Man Arrested in Arson of Minneapolis Police Precinct After Posting Videos on TikTok

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However, Reuters reported Wednesday that several larger producers are “starting to turn everything back on,” according to Oklahoma oil marketer, Joshua Wade. Oil Industry Unemployment Worries Rystad Energy said in a report last week that over 100,000 jobs had already been lost in the U.S. oil and gas industry due to the CCP virus crisis, and that wages could drop by up to 10 percent through 2021. The most severely affected sector is currently that of support activities for oil and gas production, where more than 44,000 of the 233,550 jobs in the sector had been lost—over 19 percent of employees. Almost 17 percent of drilling jobs had been lost, while 6 and 7 percent of jobs had been lost in oil & gas extraction and construction, respectively. Texas has…

Man Arrested in Arson of Minneapolis Police Precinct After Posting Videos on TikTok

Videos posted on TikTok helped investigators identify a suspect in the torching of the Minneapolis Police Department’s Third Precinct.

The building was burned during riots on May 28 after police officers abandoned it.

A man spotted in surveillance video footage holding a Molotov cocktail was identified as Bryce Michael Williams thanks to videos he posted on TikTok, a platform where users post short video clips.

In one video, Williams, 26, is standing in front of the burning precinct building wearing the same clothing he was wearing when captured in the surveillance footage. A second TikTok video clearly showed his face when he turned the camera around to take a selfie as he stood near the building.

Williams was wearing a baseball cap with a light-colored brim, dark-colored pants, dark shoes, and a distinctive light-blue medical mask.

Other video footage and photographs were reviewed that show the man holding a Molotov cocktail a different man tried lighting, according to a criminal complaint (pdf). Williams was interviewed by an Instagram user on or about June 12 about the rioting in Minneapolis. During the interview, Williams says he was “there when they first burned down the police station.”

Man Arrested in Arson of Minneapolis Police Precinct After Posting Videos on TikTok A man investigators say is Bryce Michael Williams holds a Molotov cocktail in surveillance footage from outside the Minneapolis police precinct that was torched during riots on May 28, 2020. (ATF)
Man Arrested in Arson of Minneapolis Police Precinct After Posting Videos on TikTok Rioters cheer as the Third Police Precinct burns behind them in Minneapolis, Minn., on May 28, 2020. (Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

The man said he participated in protests during the day before joining the riots at night “’cause I’m with my people.”

“They’re all doing [expletive] and getting teargassed, of course I’m going to riot, too,” he said.

Burning down buildings was part of the rioting, he added later. “That’s what a riot is, it’s mass destruction,” he said.

Information from a TikTok video, including Williams’s profile picture and the listing of his full name, helped lead to his arrest. Investigators found Williams was booked into jail in 2015. At that time, and during subsequent encounters with law enforcement, he gave his phone number.

Investigators obtained a search warrant and found, using GPS location data, that the phone was near the police precinct during the time it was burned.

Williams was charged with conspiracy to commit arson.

Two other men—Dylan Shakespeare Robinson and Branden Michael Wolfe—were previously identified and charged with helping torch the precinct.

Focus News: Man Arrested in Arson of Minneapolis Police Precinct After Posting Videos on TikTok

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