“We had enough evidence to charge (four men) with disorderly conduct 2 at this point, but that doesn’t mean they couldn’t be charged with something else as more information comes to light,” Duncan said. “The same is true for the sixth person and Mr. Marr.”

The people who were charged are Anya Grigorov, 22; Bart Bolger, 64; Julia Orduna, 23; and Ava Butler, 19.

Bolger is a longtime Veterans for Peace activist who lives in Corvallis. Reached by phone on Tuesday, he declined to comment on the incident.

Police are still investigating how the fight started and what led up to it, Duncan said, adding that no weapons were used as far as he knew.

“Nobody was stabbed or shot,” he said.

“There was definitely pushing, shoving, punches thrown, that kind of thing.”

Marr drives a pickup truck with wooden side and rear panels that he paints with provocative racist and anti-Semitic messages. On Monday, the truck was painted with a large swastika and a pro-Nazi message. It was parked for part of the day in front of the Benton County Courthouse and was later moved around the corner to the 300 block of Northwest Monroe Avenue, where the fight broke out shortly before 4 p.m.

Marr, who lives in Springfield, has brought his propaganda truck to Corvallis before. He has also been linked with Andrew Oswalt, the Oregon State University student who was sentenced last week to 40 days in jail on hate crime charges for putting racist bumper stickers on cars outside a racial justice meeting.

Reporter Bennett Hall can be reached at 541-758-9529 or bennett.hall@lee.net. Follow him on Twitter at @bennetthallgt.

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