So you still have no evidence to present?
Piles of evidence as shown in many articles documenting the Minneapolis arson and looting with participants bragging about it on social media. Let's start with the first four of over 1 million Google results for Minneapolis rioters brag about arson. Some participants can be classified as BLM and others as ANTIFA.
Staples man pleads guilty to arson of Minneapolis Police Third Precinct
Men from Brainerd and Staples are among four defendants federally indicted with conspiracy to commit arson for their alleged roles in burning the Minneapolis Police Department’s Third Precinct building during the May 28 riots following the murder of George Floyd.
https://www.grandforksherald.com/ne...to-arson-of-Minneapolis-Police-Third-Precinct
From Minneapolis riots to Capitol attack, social media users broadcast their own crimes
Craving internet fame, people flaunting lawlessness
https://www.startribune.com/from-mi...a-users-broadcast-their-own-crimes/600081117/
When the FBI caught up with Matthew Rupert, it already was sitting on a mountain of evidence implicating the 28-year-old in a crime spree spanning three days and two states.
They had Rupert in writing, describing his plans to drive from Galesburg, Ill., to Minneapolis as lawlessness erupted after George Floyd's murder, and then on to Chicago to "riot this mf!!!"
They had photos of Rupert posing, head held high, as flames rose in the backdrop. They had video showing him looting a convenience store, doling out explosives to be thrown at police and walking out of a Nicollet Avenue Sprint store declaring, "I lit it on fire."
The FBI did not need an informant for the damning evidence — Rupert collected it himself. He posted it on his Facebook account, "El Ricco Rupert," and streamed his actions on Facebook Live for hours.
"Nothing like snitching on yourself," one follower remarked. Rupert recently pleaded guilty to arson and faces a five-year minimum federal prison sentence, a conviction built almost entirely on evidence he posted. He is not an aberration. More people are broadcasting their illicit acts on social media, effectively informing on themselves.
It's a trend called "performance crime," a bewildering phenomenon often driven by a quest for online clout and not limited to any age group, education level or ideology.
(More at above url)
Rochester man pleads guilty to arson of Minneapolis pawn shop during 2020 riots
https://www.fox9.com/news/rochester...on-of-minneapolis-pawn-shop-during-2020-riots
Richfield Man Sentenced To Prison For Arson Of Target Corporation Headquarters
https://www.justice.gov/usao-mn/pr/...-prison-arson-target-corporation-headquarters