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

  • #841

White House changes tone, if not policy approach​


Sarah Smith
North America editor

There is a marked change in tone from the White House today – even if we have not yet seen a change in policy.

Donald Trump can obviously sense a potential public backlash to the violent tactics being used by ICE agents in Minneapolis.

[…]

Videos of the incident that have since emerged contradict these early statements from the administration.

Trump has avoided using incendiary rhetoric about Saturday’s shooting. And after weeks of lobbing insults and accusations at the Democrat governor of Minnesota, Tim Walz, Trump today said they “seemed to be on a similar wavelength” after a phone call.

By sending his border tsar, Tom Homan, to take control of the immigration crackdown in Minnesota, President Trump is clearly hoping to calm the situation. It’s notable that Homan will report directly to the president, cutting out the senior officials who were so quick to defend ICE agents and to try to blame Pretti.

[…]

So it will be interesting to see if Minnesota and Minneapolis follow suit and give ground as well. Let us hope so.
 
  • #842
Of course. We can look at the end result and know that no one should have pulled the trigger. That much is obvious.

But, some see value in examining the events that occurred prior to the shooting in order to understand how it went wrong. Analyzing the events prior to the shooting does not equate with a statement that the shooting was justified.
It went wrong the very moment federal agents decided to attack a man who wasn't doing anything wrong or illegal. From that point on it just kept getting worse.

MOO 🐄
 
  • #843
It went wrong the very moment federal agents decided to attack a man who wasn't doing anything wrong or illegal. From that point on it just kept getting worse.

MOO 🐄
Well, it went wrong way before that! But we can say on Saturday, it went wrong the very moment agents attacked a man who was not doing anything illegal.
 
  • #844
Because the shooters are federal law enforcement agents, the situation gets viewed differently than an ordinary street crime.

If this had been a robbery, a fight, or a random shooting, we would all immediately recognize Alex as the victim. But ICE is claiming Alex was the aggressor and that the agents acted in lawful self-defense / justified use of force—and that claim is the starting point we have to examine.

So the first question has to be: Did ICE have a legitimate legal reason to shoot Alex?
Until we have a full STATE investigation and official findings, that’s the core issue the entire case will hinge on, and we may never all agree on it.

What I’m hoping is simple: if the state determines there is enough evidence to charge an officer, they will. But we are not there yet, and until we are, this discussion is going to remain divided.


It is a completely dystopian assertion, right out of 1984, to assert that I have to accept what the state says, rather than trust my own eyes.

MOO
 
  • #845
It is a completely dystopian assertion, right out of 1984, to assert that I have to accept what the state says, rather than trust my own eyes.

MOO
It doesn't matter what we see. The very fact of AP being there while ICE/CBP were jackbooting around makes him fair game for shooting, according to Noem et al.
 
  • #846
Per the media interview with the ICE department (linked upthread), he said that civilians should not interfere with the duties of federal officers. Observing is fine, taking video is fine. In both of these screen shots, it does not look like a friendly conversation. In my opinion, it looks like a confrontation.

View attachment 639617
see video

View attachment 639618
Guardian News video

There's no question that excessive force was used, but it doesn't appear to start with excessive force. It appears to start with confrontations between protesters and ICE agents.
Like others have mentioned, @otto, I also sincerely appreciate your measured efforts to analyze/interpret the various video images. I hope federal investigators will be as thorough, but we don't know for a fact yet that there will be any investigation, or by whom.

We know that the killing of Mr. Pretti occured in front of a donut shop. After the "target" the pack of agents were seeking entered thhe shop and the door was locked behind him, the agents - apparently unwilling to break through a locked door in pursuit of their target - seem to have been milling about, waiting on who knows what. It was brutally cold, noisey with whistles and protestors, and their target had easily eluded them.

Personally, I have no problem imaging observers/protestors yelling something like, "Go home, get out of here, eff you," etc. Maybe the woman in the white coat did just that. If the agent who you think might have engaged with her did in fact do that, they didn't have to. As the saying goes, "Nod, smile, and back away." They certainly did not have to reply to her, nor aggressively shove her so hard that she fell.

IMO, the loss of situational control by the agents is evident then, even before Mr. Pretti is involved. He could not have realized what chaos he was stepping into. We film things with our phone and we're really not even seeing what we're filming because we're looking at what we're filming and also looking at the phone we're filming it with.

JMO, Mr. Pretti sees that two women seem to be on the receiving end of aggressive, possibly hostile actions being committed by masked agents. Alarmed, maybe appalled, and still filming, he steps into the scene, approaching the woman in the white coat seconds before she is shoved to the ground and then reaching out immediately to try to help her up. His efforts are thwarted by agents putting shoving him, pepper spraying him and knocking him to his hands and knees. Shocked as, IMO, he must have been, I believe he had no notion that he would be shot in the next seconds.

There were other actions available to these agents, if they understood their training. If they were "intimidated" or "felt threatened" by the two women and, later, the one man, they could have verbally de-escalated things, physically pulled back a few steps, or even snapped into teams and detained all three with handcuffs/zipties, something.

No scenarios that I can conceive of explain, rationalize or justify what we all saw happen next. A man already on the ground was shot in the back, and then shot multiple more times. That's a crime.

The murder of Alex Pretti is a crime. How it will get solved, when it will get solved, and what justice will be visited upon the perpetrator/s is what matters now.

I am so frightened that it may never come.
 
  • #847
IMO ICE Operations need to switch tactics. These trained agitator activists are amping up and becoming more dangerously organized. They need to minimize apprehensions in crowds where bystanders think they’re the main character and wanting their viral moment. Pick ground, tighten parameters, control distance, move fast, keep it clean, keep it boring, take people into custody where there’s limited audience and chaos. These apprehensions are turning into street spectacles. You are no longer running an operation you’re managing bad actors( many violent - one biting the finger tip off an agent), and plenty of them. Lean heavier on technology (facial recognition, lic plate readers, social media monitoring, skip tracing) get in, get out. Slow is smooth, fast is smooth.

For the love of God, give the DHS Security a strict script to stick too. The instant inflammatory remarks don’t help. Your agents are beyond over it.

You know who didn’t get shot by federal agents this past weekend? Me.

IMO

I think the script for ICE agents should simply read 'find a new job, this strategy failed and we're done'. It's not too far a stretch to say IMO the majority of US citizens would appreciate this
 
  • #848
I think the script for ICE agents should simply read 'find a new job, this strategy failed and we're done'. It's not too far a stretch to say IMO the majority of US citizens would appreciate this
ICE’s approval rating is falling rapidly, currently the disapproval rate is at 63% and that stat was taken from Jan 13-17 so before Alex Pretti was shot. I’d imagine it’s probably even lower now after that incident.

 
  • #849
ICE intentionally walked across the street to confront witnesses, including Pretti:

"Nilson Barahona, another witness, told CNN that he was at Glam Doll Donuts on the same street when someone fleeing federal agents ran into the restaurant. The donut shop staff quickly locked the doors, and when agents couldn’t get inside, they turned their attention to “those who were outside, who had come to help,” Barahona said. Outside the restaurant, Barahona said observers began making noise and blowing their whistles.

A video recorded by someone nearby and analyzed by CNN shows a group of about ten federal agents gathered outside the donut store, while observers including Pretti watch from across the street. About three minutes before the shooting, two officers walk across the street, confronting Pretti and other observers in nearly the same spot where he was later shot dead.

One officer, wearing a dark-colored jacket and light-brown beanie, is seen placing a hand on Pretti’s torso and pushing him backwards out of the street as Pretti records with his phone. “Do not touch me,” Pretti shouts at the officer, adding, “I am out of the traffic… you are the one who is in the traffic.”'

Yup.

So the federal agents had their suspect cornered, and still couldn't make the arrest. Because they were distracted by cameras. That is sheer incompetence.

The horrific thing is the killing. But that trained professionals can't even focus on their suspect is also pretty bad.

MOO
 
  • #850
Gregory Bovino has been removed from his role as Border Patrol “commander at large” and will return to his former job in El Centro, California, where he is expected to retire soon, according to a DHS official and two people with knowledge of the change.

 
  • #851
Yup.

So the federal agents had their suspect cornered, and still couldn't make the arrest. Because they were distracted by cameras. That is sheer incompetence.

The horrific thing is the killing. But that trained professionals can't even focus on their suspect is also pretty bad.

MOO
And you've got to wonder if IMO part of the reason they were distracted is that they expected respect from US citizens for the job they were doing, but they were getting the opposite in regards to the role of ICE in their community. For individuals expecting respect, it could turn to demanding respect.
 
  • #852
Gregory Bovino has been removed from his role as Border Patrol “commander at large” and will return to his former job in El Centro, California, where he is expected to retire soon, according to a DHS official and two people with knowledge of the change.


Scapegoats r us!
 
  • #853
IMO ICE Operations need to switch tactics. These trained agitator activists are amping up and becoming more dangerously organized. They need to minimize apprehensions in crowds where bystanders think they’re the main character and wanting their viral moment. Pick ground, tighten parameters, control distance, move fast, keep it clean, keep it boring, take people into custody where there’s limited audience and chaos. These apprehensions are turning into street spectacles. You are no longer running an operation you’re managing bad actors( many violent - one biting the finger tip off an agent), and plenty of them. Lean heavier on technology (facial recognition, lic plate readers, social media monitoring, skip tracing) get in, get out. Slow is smooth, fast is smooth.

For the love of God, give the DHS Security a strict script to stick too. The instant inflammatory remarks don’t help. Your agents are beyond over it.

You know who didn’t get shot by federal agents this past weekend? Me.

IMO

I see this being said a lot, that these are trained agitators or paid agitators. Do you have an MSM link that supports this? And not just someone in the Trump administration or in media stating that’s what they are. Do you know the names of the persons or companies that fund their training? Who puts on the training? How does one sign up? Where is the training held? What does the training consist of? How long is the training? Are there any prerequisites that have to be fulfilled before participating in the training? Was Alex Pretti a trained agitator?
 
  • #854
There's also federal law, which prohibits willfully interfering with a federal law enforcement agent through the use of intimidation. It is not necessary to demonstrate that force was used against the agent, only to show that someone's willful actions constituted interference.

If you have evidence of this individual willfully interfering with federal law enforcement through the use of intimidation, please post it. I have yet to see any such evidence. Otherwise, I don't see how this line of reasoning is relevant to the thread.

MOO
 
  • #855
I think they’re being a bit ‘smarter’ about this one. Jonathan Ross’ identity was found out because Noem said the officer had been involved in a dragging incident in x month, and it turned out there was only one such incident at that time.
Also, there had been a surge of hacktivists doxing ICE employees. The shooter were apparently border patrol. The hacktivists didn't see it coming.

MOO
 
  • #856
  • #857
Gregory Bovino has been removed from his role as Border Patrol “commander at large” and will return to his former job in El Centro, California, where he is expected to retire soon, according to a DHS official and two people with knowledge of the change.

They may have well just said that he's decided to leave to 'spend more time with his family'. It is fooling nobody that this isn't a gesture to punish him, personally, and pacify the increasingly broad, bipartisan vocal criticism of this whole mess.

But this is much, much bigger than one man, and I hope that isn't forgotten. This isn't a consequence of resounding impact, it is a distraction.

MOO
 
  • #858

Kristi Noem called to testify at US Senate in March​


A spokesperson for Chuck Grassley, Republican senator from Iowa, says Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem will testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee in March.

"Noem is expected to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee on March 3rd for one round of questioning, with each senator allotted 10 minutes for questions," the spokesperson told CBS News, the BBC's US partner.


If she was running a company in which there were this many errors and loss of trust, she would have been terminated. Can't believe they're giving her until March to get her story together on this disaster.

MOO.
 
  • #859
I see this being said a lot, that these are trained agitators or paid agitators. Do you have an MSM link that supports this? And not just someone in the Trump administration or in media stating that’s what they are. Do you know the names of the persons or companies that fund their training? Who puts on the training? How does one sign up? Where is the training held? What does the training consist of? How long is the training? Are there any prerequisites that have to be fulfilled before participating in the training? Was Alex Pretti a trained agitator?
Please, I want to know,

It's an urban legend.

MOO
 
  • #860
So it will be interesting to see if Minnesota and Minneapolis follow suit and give ground as well. Let us hope so.

I consider Minneapolis to be the victim so hope they don't give anything.

MOO.
 

Guardians Monthly Goal

Staff online

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
72
Guests online
1,602
Total visitors
1,674

Forum statistics

Threads
638,743
Messages
18,732,789
Members
244,527
Latest member
CuriousKay
Back
Top