The Dallas shooter's home had bomb-making materials and a rambling journal that showed plans for a larger effort to target law enforcement officers for what he saw as abuse of minorities, according to the city's police Chief David Brown.

“We're convinced this suspect had other plans and thought that what he was doing was right,” Brown said Sunday in an interview on CNN. “He was going to target law enforcement and make us pay.”

The videos of police shootings of black men in Louisiana and Minnesota last week “just sparked his delusions to fast-track his plans,” Brown said. “He saw the protest in Dallas as an opportunity to start wreaking havoc on our officers.”

Micah Johnson, a 25-year-old Army veteran who served in Afghanistan, was killed by a bomb-deploying police robot after a standoff with police. Dallas officials say he was the sole shooter who killed five police officers and wounded seven others during a Black Lives Matter protest march Thursday night. Two civilians were also wounded.

During Sunday's interview, Brown gave new details of his department's confrontation with Johnson, saying that he had engaged in a mocking two-hour conversation after police had pinned him down in a parking garage.

“He lied to us. He was playing games, laughing at us, singing, asking how many did he get,” Brown said, adding that “he seemed very much in control” and determined to hurt more officers.

Brown confirmed a report that Johnson had insisted on speaking to a black negotiator but said Johnson initially did not believe the officer was black.

“It didn't matter if he was black, because he was shooting at us,” said Brown, who is also African-American. “It did not lead to any kind of peaceful resolution.”

He said the shooter, apparently wounded, wrote in his own blood on the walls of the parking structure, including the initials “RB.” Brown said police have not made sense of the messages.

The chief said that the protest had initially been planned as a “static” rally, not a march, and that his officers had needed to scramble to clear intersections once the protesters began a spontaneous walk through downtown Dallas.

Because they had not planned on a march, they had not made security precautions along the route, the chief said.

Johnson took advantage, anticipating the route of the march and taking a position in a high building.

“We were not planning on blocking streets. We had to scramble to block intersections, which did expose our officers to this attack,” Brown said, adding that Johnson changed positions to shoot from different angles, “almost triangulating our officers with this rapid fire.”

He said that Johnson planned to use such military-style tactics, which proved especially deadly: “We don't normally see this kind of moving and shooting from criminal suspects.”

“They were in a funnel,” the chief said of his officers. “It ended up being a fatal funnel.

“They did things that day that are just hard to describe. We are learning that officers that day exposed themselves to draw fire so they could see what floor the shooter was on.”

Brown said Johnson was protected behind a brick wall and police had no chance to get a shot without exposing themselves.

Before giving a news conference at the scene Thursday, Brown said, he had told his staff to come up with a plan for dealing with the shooter; 15 minutes later, they proposed the robot, which Brown said was armed with a pound of explosives.

“I approved it, and I'd do it again if presented with the same circumstances,” he said, adding that he had no patience for a debate on whether using the robot presented an unwise escalation in police tactics.

He said investigators were still analyzing Johnson's cellphone, computer and journal and hadn't ruled out the possibility that Johnson had help.

Three people were arrested at the protest; two were released and one was charged with a misdemeanor weapons charge, Brown said. Some protesters carried AR-15 rifles and wore body armor and camouflage, apparently for effect, he said.

“It doesn't make sense to us, but that's their right in Texas,” he added.

Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings said those protesters led to some confusion during the shootings. “So it sure took our eye off the ball for a moment,” Rawlings said on CBS' “Face the Nation.”

Brown declined to offer an opinion on whether the U.S. needs new gun control measures. But, as the nation continues to be roiled by protests against police-involved shootings, Brown made an emotional plea for a “silent majority” of the public to express appreciation for officers.

“We are sworn to protect you and your right to protest, and we'll give our lives for it,” he said. “That's a tough relationship to be in.”

joseph.tanfani@latimes.com