The Dallas gunman was plotting a major bomb attack, authorities said, urging calm as hundreds of people were arrested in weekend protests in US cities over police violence against African-Americans.
Demonstrators marched demanding justice for two black men shot dead by cops in Minnesota and Louisiana, their dying moments captured in video that went viral online.
Peaceful marches attracted large crowds in major US cities, but became especially unruly in St. Paul, Minnesota and Baton Rouge, Louisiana, where police killed the two men.
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The demos come days after black army Afghan war veteran Micah Johnson, 25, used a high-powered rifle to kill five police officers and wound seven in a sniper attack at a protest in Dallas, Texas late Thursday.
Johnson said before he was killed that he wanted to murder white cops in revenge for the black deaths.
Seeking to restore calm, President Barack Obama, scheduled to speak in Dallas at an inter-faith memorial service Tuesday, cautioned protesters against casting all police as racially biased.
The Dallas community's "unity is reflective of who we are as Americans" during these trying times, said Obama, speaking yesterday in Madrid.
The president, who cut short his European visit, will meet privately in Texas with the families of the five fallen police officers and those wounded.
Vice President Joe Biden will also be at the Dallas memorial, along with former president and ex-Texas governor George W. Bush.
Large crowds gathered to march peacefully Sunday in Atlanta, Washington DC and New York.
In Baton Rouge, at least 48 people were arrested Sunday, local media said, hours after Sheriff Sid Gautreaux said that 102 protesters had been arrested in late Saturday demonstrations.
Among them was Black Lives Matters activist leader DeRay McKesson, who livestreamed the incident. He was released on bond yesterday.
"The only people that were violent last night were the Baton Rouge police department," McKesson told reporters outside the jailhouse.
Gautreaux however said that one officer was injured late Saturday.
Protesters will not be "allowed to incite hate and violence, to engage in unlawful activities," said Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards.
Yesterday police in armored cars and clad in riot gear confronted a crowd in what began as a peaceful march, the local The Advocate newspaper reported.