Four suspects were arrested Saturday, Madison Police Lt. Jennifer Hannah said in a statement detailing the latest attack Tuesday night. The other three suspects are 17, 18 and 20 years old. Police spokeswoman Stephanie Fryer had previously said police believed the same group of people were responsible for other attacks in the city center and on the UW-Madison campus. Police say the attacks, at least two of which included UW-Madison as victims of Asian students, do not seem to have racist motives, despite continuing outcry by groups of Asian students who marched on State Street on Friday afternoon to protest for racist violence.

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At least four people of different backgrounds have been attacked by the same group in the past two weeks, Madison and UW police said. More recently, the group attacked a man Tuesday night at 400 West Gilman Street, with perpetrators punching and kicking him while he was on the ground, Fryer said Friday. Images circulating on social media of the student, who is Asian, show him with sores on his face, chin and ears. Earlier that night, the same group threw a banana at an Asian student at the Library Mall, said UW-Madison police spokesman Marc Lovicott. Lovecott said the incident did not appear to be racist because the suspects did not explicitly say anything racist to the victim. Madison police believe that this group of men attacked another man who was walking downtown on Tuesday night in the third such incident last week. MADISON POLICE DEPARTMENT Fryer said the attacks appeared to be random and “detectives have no information to make them believe” that the attacks were racist. Madison police released photos of four suspects who allegedly took part in the attacks. In the pictures, two of the men are seen holding bananas. In a statement, UW-Madison said the students were not victims of off-campus attacks.

        Art of the Everyday: A May Summary in Photographs by Wisconsin State Journal Photographers 

Kayla Soren and Diego Frankel enjoy a breath of spring during a visit under a magnolia tree at the UW Arboretum in Madison, Wis. Monday, May 9, 2022. JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL JOHN HART STATE JOURNAL Umalkher Samatar, center, plays with daughters Siham Ali, left, and Zubeida Ali during a party Saturday to celebrate Eid al-Fitr at McGaw Park in Fitchburg. The Eid holiday marks the end of Ramadan. KAYLA WOLF, STATE NEWSPAPER KAYLA WOLF STATE JOURNAL Lottie Stenjem organizes a variety of flowers to put in vases to be sent to retailers at ERI Floral in Stoughton, Wis., Monday, May 2, 2022. AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL AMBER ARNOLD Chris Wallom, a facility worker at the Wisconsin Department of Administration, collects tulips from the Wisconsin State Capitol as workers prepare the beds for incoming annual rows in Madison, Wisconsin. Monday, May 16, 2022. Every spring, after a short growing season for flowers, workers dig up the bulbs and give them priority to residents who want to improve their own qualities for next year. JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL JOHN HART STATE JOURNAL Uri Andrews, from Middleton, holds up one of his 4-year-old twins, Benjamin, with Rafael, 2, down to catch a scent of the corpse flower, Amorphophallus titanum, which bloomed after reaching a height just below 68-inches, at the Bolz Conservatory of the Olbrich Botanical Gardens in Madison, Wis., Thursday, May 5, 2022. The plant, which was donated by the UW-Madison DC Smith Greenhouse in 2006, last bloomed in 2010 at a height of 6 feet. The flowers of corpses bloom four to five times on average during their 40-year life. AMBER ARNOLD, JOURNAL STATE AMBER ARNOLD Eva Theyerl, granddaughter of the Roberta Ryskoski Library, takes a nap at the Brandon Public Library in Brandon, Wis., Tuesday, May 3, 2022. KAYLA WOLF, STATE JOURNAL KAYLA WOLF STATE JOURNAL Genevieve Bouska, left, and Lulu Jaeckel, both seniors at West High School, relax in hammocks during an afternoon visit to Vilas Park in Madison, Wis., Wednesday, May 11, 2022. AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL AMBER ARNOLD …