Minneapolis police on Tuesday arrested three white men in connection to a shooting that took place at a Black Lives Matter protest late Monday night that left five people wounded.

The shooting occurred as demonstrators were protesting the recent police shooting of Jamar Clark at the Fourth Precinct Monday night. That's when "white supremacists" showed up to the rally "in an act of domestic terrorism," said the local Black Lives Matter group a Facebook post, according to Newsweek.

Deputy Police Chief Medaria Arradondo said the victims were being treated at a local hospital for non-life-threatening injuries, reported the Star Tribune.

On Tuesday, police announced the arrest of three men in the shooting. According to the Star Tribune, Allen Lawrence "Lance" Scarsella III, 23, was arrested in Bloomington, while sources say Nathan Gustavsson, 21, and Daniel Macey, 26, turned themselves in.  Officials will now decide whether or not to charge the men with a hate crime.

Meanwhile, activists vowed to continue to protest Clark's death in spite of Monday's shooting.

"We will not bow to fear or intimidation," said Miski Noor, a media contact for Black Lives Matter, at a rally by the police precinct building, according to Reuters.

"We ain't going nowhere. This is our precinct," shouted Pastor Danny Givens Jr. of Above Every Name Church. "We ain't scared of domestic terrorists."

According to a woman named Jie Wronski-Riley, the shooting occurred around 10:45 p.m. on Monday after the three white men showed up at the rally and began antagonizing peaceful protesters. About a dozen protesters attempted to herd the group away from the area, said Noor, and the gunman "opened fire on about six protesters," hitting five of them about a block away from the precinct station. The attackers then fled the scene.

Protesters have been demonstrating at the Fourth Precinct even since Clark, a 24-year-old unarmed black man, was fatally shot by two Minneapolis police on Sunday, Nov. 15. The Minnesota Department of Public Safety's Bureau of Criminal Apprehension released a statement saying that Clark was a suspect in a domestic violence case and that he interfered when first responders arrived on the scene, reports The Atlantic.

"Minneapolis police have said that Mr. Clark was a suspect in the assault. At some point during an altercation that ensued between the officers and Mr. Clark, an officer discharged his weapon, striking Mr. Clark," said state authorities.

However, several eye witnesses say Clark was handcuffed and lying flat on his stomach when he was shot in the head, which police deny.

"The young man was just lying there; he was not resisting arrest," said Teto Wilson, according to the local NAACP chapter. "Two officers were surrounding the victim on the ground, an officer maneuvered his body around to shield Jamar's body, and I heard the shot go off."