Dallas police searched in vain for a suspicious man spotted in its headquarters on Saturday night, amid fresh threats to the city’s officers and renewed anti-police violence protests across the country that resulted in hundreds of arrests.

Swat team officers and dog units scoured a multi-level parking garage connected to the Dallas police force’s building on Saturday, for fear of new threats. An explosive device and a shotgun were used to gain entry to locked passages, according to police.

Shortly before 8pm it was announced no one had been located. “Out of an abundance of caution, officers searched the garage to ensure reports of a suspicious person was thoroughly investigated,” the department announced.

The operation took place as renewed protests broke out in cities across the US against the perceived excessive use of deadly force by police against African Americans. Demonstrations were were given fresh impetus by the fatal shootings last week of black men in Louisiana and Minnesota.

In Minnesota, protesters blocked access on I-94, forcing the highway’s closure at about 8.30pm CT. Fireworks were hurled at police, which said just after midnight that at least three officers had been injured. Police delivered 16 dispersal orders, fired smoke rounds on the crowd, and, as of midnight the highway was still closed.

St Paul police said that 50 people were arrested for “third degree riot” on I-94, and 52 others were arrested for public nuisance and unlawful assembly. 27 state and local police officers were injured. I saw reports all night that police “maced” a truckload of children at one point, but none of the protesters I had contacts with have responded just yet.

A livestream of the protest showed police appearing to spray protesters with a chemical irritant, while firing marker rounds. As an officer called on them to “stop throwing rocks” at police, demonstrators responded: “Fuck the police.”

A spokesperson for the St Paul police department late on Saturday couldn’t say how many individuals were arrested as part of the highway protest over the death of 32-year-old Philando Castile, and referred requests for updates to its Twitter feed.

On the highway an officer told the estimated crowd of 150-200: “Ladies and gentleman, this is the St Paul police department. You can leave at any time to the west.”

DeRay McKesson arrested in Baton Rouge. Photograph: Max Becherer/AP

Demonstrators returned to the streets in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, where 37-year-old Alton Sterling was shot dead while pinned down during a struggle with two officers last Tuesday. On Saturday, demonstrators gathered outside the police department and the convenience store where Sterling was confronted by officers while selling CDs. About 30 people were arrested during tense protests in the city late on Friday into the early hours of Saturday.

Police in Baton Rouge arrested several protesters including DeRay Mckesson, a prominent figure within the Black Lives Matter movement, and were reported to be charging at other crowds of demonstrators. Officers seized Mckesson while he was peacefully broadcasting live footage of the demonstration from his cellphone. The reason for his arrest was unclear. Friends said he was taken away in a police van along with other detainees.

In Chicago, hundreds of protesters marched and held a simulated “die-in” on the ground at the Taste of Chicago outdoor food festival, which they attempted to shut down. Marchers also took to the streets of downtown Indianapolis, where demonstrators remained silent as they walked with fists held high.



Meanwhile another Black Lives Matter demonstration hit the streets of Manhattan, where protesters marched down Fifth Avenue and gathered in Union Square Park.

In Dallas, officers were seen racing out of armoured vehicles with rifles earlier in the evening, and reporters and the public were instructed to move back from the department building, which appeared to be under lockdown.

“Officers are searching the police parking garage for a suspicious person,” the department said. “Officers are conducting a systematic search of the parking lot ... Officers are planning to breach a lock door in the garage with a shotgun.”



Police crouch behind vehicles lot south of police statio oriented toward garage @HoustonChron #DallasPoliceShooting pic.twitter.com/6QnA6O9mdf — Mark Mulligan (@mrkmully) July 9, 2016

Local stations KTVT and WFAA both reported police sources had told them the man was dressed in black and appeared to flee after being confronted by a detective.

The developments came soon after the department issued a statement that a threat had been delivered against officers in the city, where five police officers were shot dead by a gunman at the end of a downtown protest last Thursday.

“The Dallas police department received an anonymous threat against law enforcement across the city and has taken precautionary measures to heightened security,” according to a written statement from police.

Local KTRK television reported the threat was linked to “a group from Houston” that was alleged to be “driving to Dallas with the intent of killing more police officers.” Police spokespeople declined to comment on the nature of the threat.

Police dismissed reports shots had been heard fired near the department headquarters earlier in the evening. Swat officers “set off a device to enter a locked fence”, officials said, appearing to explain a noise reporters said they had heard

Dozens of passersby and reporters were around the police department as the search operation developed. A memorial to the deceased officers, comprising flowers, cards and balloons, has built up around a pair of squad cars parked beside the building since Thursday’s shootings.

Police instructed television media to stop showing live footage of officers’ movements and appeared increasingly irritated by their presence. “Reporters putting out misinformation is making our jobs more difficult,” the department said on Twitter. “Officers are ordering reporter to move back because they are making it very difficult for them to do their jobs.”



Activists protest on Friday in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, against the death of Philando Castile. Photograph: Stephen Maturen/Getty Images

The tense reaction to fresh reports about a suspicious person reflected that the city remained on edge two nights after the fatal shooting of five police officers at the end of a peaceful downtown demonstration.

As the city’s residents tried to come to terms with the shootings, some gathered for the procession of the body of one of the deceased policemen, 43-year-old transit officer Brent Thompson, from Dallas to his hometown of Corsicana.

Hundreds of police officers, first responders and civilians stood on bridges over Interstate 45 and along the side of the freeway, many waving American and Texas flags and holding banners, as Thompson’s body was driven 55 miles south to the city of about 24,000 people, on Saturday afternoon.

