MN - Alex Pretti dead after Minneapolis shooting involving immigration agents, US media report, January 24, 2026

  • #2,281
Here is a HUGE problem because of AI. AI can clean up a picture beautifully, BUT it can also alter it in ways we can't even begin to tell.
It would be great if we could get a clearer picture of the shooting, but how do we know nothing else in the picture has been altered? Who do we trust to do this type of work? Who do we trust to report on it?
 
  • #2,282
Here is a HUGE problem because of AI. AI can clean up a picture beautifully, BUT it can also alter it in ways we can't even begin to tell.
It would be great if we could get a clearer picture of the shooting, but how do we know nothing else in the picture has been altered? Who do we trust to do this type of work? Who do we trust to report on it?
It's why citizen documentation is important. Maybe a video can be altered with AI and fool the eye, but not as easy if there are multiple videos from several cameras, dash cams, ring cameras from different angles.

When people are wondering WHY residents are out there with their cameras, well, here you go. Their videos stand as witness just as they themselves stand as witness.

jmo
 
  • #2,283
It's why citizen documentation is important. Maybe a video can be altered with AI and fool the eye, but not as easy if there are multiple videos from several cameras, dash cams, ring cameras from different angles.

When people are wondering WHY residents are out there with their cameras, well, here you go. Their videos stand as witness just as they themselves stand as witness.

jmo
👏 this exactly. I’ve said it many times before, but one of the main reasons I hate AI is it dirties the nature of truth and evidence and allows people to fall back on their confirmation biases rather than having to face reality.

Multiple angles, livestreams, and long video are all helpful in these times. I’ve heard AI can’t really produce a consistent video over 20 seconds. So if a video is 5-10 mins long, there’s a good chance it’s real, because AI (at least what us plebs have access to right now) cannot create videos that long.

I believe every AI video needs a watermark that cannot be cropped out or removed, and I believe this should be legislated. Sorry for all those who just make ‘fun’ ai videos, but the people who would distort truth with AI ruined that for them. MOO
 
  • #2,284
Thanks @zleuther for letting me know! I would have never had caught that on my own :)
 
  • #2,285
Replying to myself as I think about this.

The shooting of Alex Pretti hits at the core of who we are as a nation: All the branches of the Federal government (executive, judicial, legislative) as laid out in the Constitution, plus State rights, plus individual rights guarenteed in the Bill of Rights.

Overwhelming, tbh.

jmopinion
I do believe they can be simply charged with murder if the state wishes to do. Just because they are federal agents doesn't give them a pass to murder.


Idaho prosecutor praises Ruby Ridge sniper ruling
SANDPOINT, Idaho (CNN) -- The prosecutor who brought a manslaughter charge against the FBI sniper who killed the wife of a white supremacist during the 1992 standoff at Ruby Ridge said Wednesday she believes in "equal justice under the law," including for federal agents.


Denise Woodbury, the former prosecutor for Boundary County, made her comments a day after a federal appeals court ruled that FBI agent Lon Horiuchi can be tried for manslaughter if issues still in dispute can be resolved.




A new DA was elected and the charges were dropped, Ruby Ridge was a case where excess force was used on someone breaking the law. Ruby Ridge and Waco are similar type instances and it's a question of how much force is acceptable.

In this case, you have Pretti killed for exercising his first amendment rights. Same with Renee Good. Of course they can argue that their protests were annoying and hampered their work just because they were loud and annoying and Alex shouldn't have physically moved and just passively complied when agents accosted him, but the human body reacts to things such as pepper spray with fight or flight reactions. Police brutality increases fight or flight reactions in people who are already nervous. (Think of being pulled over for a minor traffic violation Your heart is pounding. Just imagine if they pulled guns on you, bashed your winds and dragged you out of the car instead of simply writing a ticket. Your body would react to being forcefully pulled out of your vehicle for a minor traffic violation)
 
  • #2,286
Not a surprise, but making sure we have the official info on the thread:



Alex Pretti's official manner of death has been ruled a homicide by the Hennepin County Medical Examiner, a report shows.

The 37-year-old nurse's cause of death was "multiple gunshot wounds," according to the report.

The report recorded that Pretti was "shot by law enforcement officer(s)" and died in the emergency room at Hennepin Healthcare.



 
  • #2,287
A local reporter interviews the ProPublica reporter...


Her last question was the meat of the interview, but earlier he confirms he spoke with an agent's ex-wife. He also mentions agents (perhaps situationally) are instructed to scrub their online presence which IMO is cautionary (To try to Internet-sleuth a photo or more details carries the likelihood of incorrectly besmirching innocent folks with the same name).

ETA kinda a "What's missing" tutorial if I may...
It's very significant that he spoke to a F&F cuz any reporter would indeed ask "You've seen the videos so you would recognize if that's him. Is it?"
 
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I just spoke with @RealTomHoman @ICEDirector @CBPCommissioner
. Effective immediately we are deploying body cameras to every officer in the field in Minneapolis. As funding is available, the body camera program will be expanded nationwide. We will rapidly acquire and deploy body cameras to DHS law enforcement across the country.


I'm glad about body cams but with THOUSANDS of agents (including 3,000 sent to Minnesota), I wish taxpayers were as concerned about the cost of this surge as they are about funding science at universities, federal employees, national parks when doge eliminated them to "save money."

jmo
 
  • #2,291
I'm glad about body cams but with THOUSANDS of agents (including 3,000 sent to Minnesota), I wish taxpayers were as concerned about the cost of this surge as they are about funding science at universities, federal employees, national parks when doge eliminated them to "save money."

jmo
No kidding. It's not just the cost of the cameras, it's the cost of data storage, maintenance, and IT.
 
  • #2,292
No kidding. It's not just the cost of the cameras, it's the cost of data storage, maintenance, and IT.
and there will still be the problem of agents turning them on or off as it suits them. But weren't we already told that the agents who shot AP were wearing body cams and that the footage from those cams has been preserved?


MOO body cam footage is useless if DHS controls who sees it or not. Hoping the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs led by Rand Paul will be seeing the ones worn by Pretti's killers
 
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  • #2,293
and there will still be the problem of agents turning them on or off as it suits them. But weren't we already told that the agents who shot AP were wearing body cams and that the footage from those cams has been preserved?


MOO body cam footage is useless if DHS controls who sees it or not. Hoping the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs led by Rand Paul will be seeing them.
Good point.

If the agents in the shootings were already wearing body cams, why is this announced as an accountability development?

I'm sick of feeling like we're being played.

jmo
 

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