Outrage grips Minneapolis following the deadly shooting of U.S. citizen and ICU nurse Alex Pretty by ICE agents on a slippery, ice-bound street. Coming hot on the heels of Renee Good’s killing three weeks prior, the event has unleashed a wave of protests demanding President Trump’s ICE forces withdraw from the city.
Eyewitness videos, now viral across U.S. media, capture the harrowing sequence. Pretty, phone in hand, films agents as he helps manage traffic amid snowy conditions. The flashpoint: an agent pushing a woman protester down. Pretty steps in with irritant spray, prompting a violent takedown on the frozen road.
Multiple officers pile on. One pulls a gun from Pretty’s waistband; seconds later, gunfire erupts. Pretty crumples, yet agents fire more rounds from afar into his lifeless form. DHS cites the weapon as justification, with Secretary Noem stating in a briefing, ‘He was there to incite violence.’ Trump backed the prior shooting as self-defense, and the White House now vilifies Pretty.
Contradicting official accounts, the footage shows Pretty aiding civilians, not aggressing. VP JD Vance fired off posts on X, slamming Minnesota’s local officials for stonewalling ICE collaboration, which he says enables ‘far-left agitators’ to manufacture disorder.
Community leaders decry the pattern of lethal force against citizens. ‘ICE is turning our streets into war zones,’ said a prominent activist. With federal probes underway, this tragedy amplifies national debates on immigration policing, accountability, and the human cost of aggressive enforcement under the current administration.
