DALLAS, TEXAS — Thanks in part to a heavy police presence, a planned demonstration by armed members of the group BAIR — the Bureau for American Islamic Relations — went off peacefully, despite a counter protest organized by a group called the Huey P. Newton Gun Club that included members of the street gangs the Bloods and the Crips, as well as elements of Black Lives Matter.

As the event ended, an angry mob of black protesters advanced on the BAIR members, and frantic Dallas police ordered the group to evacuate immediately.

Both members of BAIR and the Huey P. Newton Gun Club were openly armed, primarily with long guns.

Huey P. Newton Gun Club protestor wearing Black Panther Party pin, South Dallas, Texas. pic.twitter.com/CemM020uOy — ⏳ (@stranahan) April 2, 2016

BAIR, Anti-Nation of Islam Protestor preparing for event in South Dallas, Texas. pic.twitter.com/jRzqIoRm7U — ⏳ (@stranahan) April 2, 2016

As this exclusive video from Breitbart News shows, members of BAIR came to South Dallas to protest the local mosque connected to the Nation of Islam, a group that they call “a domestic terrorist group.” Leaders of BAIR said their concern with the Nation of Islam is part of a larger concern that leaders of mosques around the country may have ties to terrorism and the Muslim Brotherhood. the BAIR group was also demonstrating to show their support for the police, who have come under heavy fire from activist groups like Black Lives Matter.

The members of BAIR assembled at noon on Sunday to begin putting together gear and ammunition and suiting up for the process. The group then traveled to South Dallas, where the police had already put together a significant presence, including barriers, dozens of officers, and a helicopter to help maintain order.

Loaded for BAIR (Bureau of American Relations) protest in Dallas, Texas pic.twitter.com/YaXjVWSzD0 — ⏳ (@stranahan) April 2, 2016

Members of BAIR prepare for anti-Nation of Islam protest pic.twitter.com/2EGwHIM2nm — ⏳ (@stranahan) April 2, 2016

Part of the motivation for the police presence was a counter demonstration put together by the Huey P. Newton Gun Club, a leftist group from the area that follows the philosophy of the late Black Panther Party leader, who believed in putting together “armed cadres” to monitor the police. Newton himself, who was shot to death in front of a crack house in the 1980s, was arrested for killing police officer John Frey in 1967, although that conviction was later overturned on a technicality.

Members of the Huey P Newton Gun Club assembled in South Dallas pic.twitter.com/FYSJ23iJ18 — ⏳ (@stranahan) April 2, 2016

Heavy police presence at armed South Dallas protest pic.twitter.com/rXaNtcnzMy — ⏳ (@stranahan) April 2, 2016

The police kept the BAIR protesters penned up about 100 yards from community members, many of whom were shouting angrily and accusing the group of being the Ku Klux Klan, a group that BAIR has no known connection to.

That false belief angered the crowd and was being spread by local Nation of Islam and Black Lives Matter groups, says BAIR director David Wright. Wright says the group is concerned with Islam, not race issues but that the lie was spread to get non-Muslim black residents to support the protest.

Most bystanders appeared to have no idea why BAIR was protesting, although one black community member that spoke to Breitbart News said that he thought the group’s demonization of the Nation of Islam represented an attack on religious freedom.

Wrights says that at one point when a local TV news crew was attempting to interview his members, a group of about 100 of the black protesters began to advance. Wright says the group switched their weapons from safety to fire, and the police reacted.

David Wright told Breitbart exclusively:

Once we put on rifles into fire position, the police came over screaming and yelling at us. It wasn’t them “encouraging us” as one media outlet reported. That was an order. That was not request. Being the more mature, intelligent people in the situation, we complied with the police order.

The video contains statements from both the leader of BAIR and of the Huey P. Newton Gun Club, and it demonstrates some of the fury and chaos of the event, which slowed down traffic on Dallas’s Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard for nearly two hours.

The Huey P. Newton Gun Club is one of the few openly armed offshoots of the Black Lives Matter movement, which has generally relied on social media and social justice warrior street demonstrations up until this point. However, that situation seems poised to change as the election season heats up and Black Lives Matter activists are becoming increasingly agitated. a recent demonstration in Minneapolis, Minnesota, saw Black Lives Matter activists burning the American flag in front of a police station.

Here’s the video, which contains strong language:

Follow Breitbart News investigative reporter and Citizen Journalism School founder Lee Stranahan on Twitter at @Stranahan.