'What did you just do!' US Federal agents fire 10 shots in five seconds, killing Minneapolis man - video captures horror
A second US citizen 37-year-old Alex Jeffrey Pretti was killed during a confrontation with ICE officials in Minneapolis on Saturday. Footage from the moment Pretti was killed shows him holding a mobile phone as officers move in, followed by a chaotic struggle on the ground. An agent is seen pushing people into the street and spraying Pretti with pepper spray when he steps forward.
Also read: Parents of victims call ICE, Trump admin’s account of events ‘sickening lies’Seconds later, several agents seize him and force him down. As he is restrained on his knees, one agent appears to pull a handgun from near Pretti’s hip while another draws his own weapon. Almost immediately, shots ring out at close range. Even after Pretti collapses, two agents continue firing. At least ten shots are heard within roughly five seconds, according to the videos.
The incident came just weeks after Minnesota resident Renée Good was shot dead by a federal immigration agent on January 7 , an earlier killing that sparked daily protests in the city.
One video, filmed from inside a coffee and doughnut shop, shows agents surrounding and tackling a man later identified as 37-year-old Alex Jeffrey Pretti. An officer appears to strike him several times as they force him to the ground. Gunshots are then heard, and the man collapses.
A second clip from nearby captures agents but not Pretti himself. Around ten shots can be heard in quick succession as officers move back into the street.
Analyses of the footage indicate Pretti was holding a mobile phone before he was taken down, as per the NYT. At one point, he appears to be directing traffic and filming as protesters interact with officers. An agent is seen shoving demonstrators and using pepper spray. Pretti’s hands are visible — one holding a phone, the other raised toward his face.
Several agents then pull him from behind and wrestle him to his knees. As officers push down on his back and legs, shouts of “he’s got a gun” are heard roughly eight seconds after he is pinned. One officer reaches into the group and appears to retrieve a firearm matching the type later shown in a photo released by the Department of Homeland Security.
Seconds later, an agent fires at close range into Pretti’s back. Further shots follow as he lies motionless. In total, at least ten shots appear to be fired within about five seconds.
Amid the gunfire and confusion, a voice from the crowd cuts through the chaos, capturing the shock of those watching it unfold. As agents surround the man and shots erupt in rapid succession, a bystander can be heard shouting, “What did you just do?”.
In a statement, DHS said: “The officers attempted to disarm the suspect but the armed suspect violently resisted…Fearing for his life and the lives and safety of fellow officers, an agent fired defensive shots.”
Officials have not said whether Pretti, who police believe was a lawful gun owner with a permit to carry, ever brandished the weapon. In the videos reviewed, he is not seen visibly holding a gun before being tackled.
Pretti’s family describe him as an intensive care nurse at a Veterans Affairs hospital who cared deeply about people and the environment. His father, Michael Pretti, said: “He cared about people deeply and he was very upset with what was happening in Minneapolis and throughout the United States with ICE, as millions of other people are upset.”
His mother, Susan Pretti, said: “He was an outdoorsman... He loved this country, but he hated what people were doing to it.”
The incident came just weeks after Minnesota resident Renée Good was shot dead by a federal immigration agent on January 7 , an earlier killing that sparked daily protests in the city.
What the footage shows
One video, filmed from inside a coffee and doughnut shop, shows agents surrounding and tackling a man later identified as 37-year-old Alex Jeffrey Pretti. An officer appears to strike him several times as they force him to the ground. Gunshots are then heard, and the man collapses.
A second clip from nearby captures agents but not Pretti himself. Around ten shots can be heard in quick succession as officers move back into the street.
Analyses of the footage indicate Pretti was holding a mobile phone before he was taken down, as per the NYT. At one point, he appears to be directing traffic and filming as protesters interact with officers. An agent is seen shoving demonstrators and using pepper spray. Pretti’s hands are visible — one holding a phone, the other raised toward his face.
Several agents then pull him from behind and wrestle him to his knees. As officers push down on his back and legs, shouts of “he’s got a gun” are heard roughly eight seconds after he is pinned. One officer reaches into the group and appears to retrieve a firearm matching the type later shown in a photo released by the Department of Homeland Security.
Seconds later, an agent fires at close range into Pretti’s back. Further shots follow as he lies motionless. In total, at least ten shots appear to be fired within about five seconds.
Amid the gunfire and confusion, a voice from the crowd cuts through the chaos, capturing the shock of those watching it unfold. As agents surround the man and shots erupt in rapid succession, a bystander can be heard shouting, “What did you just do?”.
Official response and family reaction
In a statement, DHS said: “The officers attempted to disarm the suspect but the armed suspect violently resisted…Fearing for his life and the lives and safety of fellow officers, an agent fired defensive shots.”
Officials have not said whether Pretti, who police believe was a lawful gun owner with a permit to carry, ever brandished the weapon. In the videos reviewed, he is not seen visibly holding a gun before being tackled.
Pretti’s family describe him as an intensive care nurse at a Veterans Affairs hospital who cared deeply about people and the environment. His father, Michael Pretti, said: “He cared about people deeply and he was very upset with what was happening in Minneapolis and throughout the United States with ICE, as millions of other people are upset.”
His mother, Susan Pretti, said: “He was an outdoorsman... He loved this country, but he hated what people were doing to it.”
Top Comment
U
User laxminarayan
11 hours ago
If law of that country agrees to that even in grey area, legally they are right. Citizens must be careful. No human rights from that country We pamper muslims here especially in Kashmir where our soldiers even right get harsh treatment . By our own politicians and secular communityRead allPost comment
Popular from World
- Egypt’s ‘lost golden city’ resurfaces after 3,400 years and it’s rewriting history
- Pakistan-born doctor mourns colleague and ICU nurse Alex Pretti, shot by federal agents in Minnesota: 'Senseless carnage...'
- An argument that ended in four deaths: What happened inside the Indian home in Georgia right before the massacre
- Sleeping Hindu man burnt to death in Bangladesh; body charred beyond recognition
- 'We're buying Canadian': PM Mark Carney hits back at Trump’s 100% tariff threat
end of article
Trending Stories
- Oklahoma City Thunder vs Toronto Raptors (01-25-2026) game preview: When and where to watch, expected lineup, injury report, prediction, and more
- Sauce Gardner and Brooklyn Nikole allegedly dating: How it began after Ice Spice split
- Who is Sean McVay’s wife? Everything to know about Veronika Khomyn
- Nuggets vs. Grizzlies game in Memphis postponed as severe weather disrupts NBA schedule
- Quote of the day by Richard Feynman: "You have no responsibility to live up to what other people think you ought to accomplish."
- US to cut number of green cards by up to 2.4 million: What it means for jobs and career growth
- T20 World Cup row: Shahid Afridi drags India–Pakistan angle, says 'ICC should build bridges, not burn them'
Featured in world
- Indian‑origin doctor says her mother was ‘harassed’ by ICE agents in Texas: ‘Because she has an accent…’
- Mizkif alleges bizarre incident involving Tectone and Emiru during ongoing feud
- Inside China's AI army: Drones learn to hunt and kill like nature’s predators
- Lacari suspended by Twitch, permanently banned on Kick after serious on-stream violation
- ‘Wake-up call for America’: Obamas condemn killing of Alex Pretti, accuse Trump of assault on US values
- IShowSpeed’s Africa tour moment turns tense after on-camera attack in Ivory Coast
Photostories
- ‘Sinners,’ ‘Chronicles,’ ‘Black Panther’: You can’t miss out these top Michael B. Jordan movies
- How to set boundaries with others when you often shrink yourself: 5 effective tips
- Republic Day 2026: 7 Tricolour-inspired dishes to try at home
- 6 traditional Bengali sweets made with Nolen Gur
- 5 most famous glaciers in the world that every adventure travellers must visit at least once
- Beat Chennai traffic: Phase-2 metro Koyambedu–Butt Road line to open by June
- From a luxurious house in Mumbai to a property in California, net worth and more: Krushna Abhishek’s lavish lifestyle
- Baby names inspired by love and compassion
- How to make Kadhai Chicken for lunch at home
- Amid cheating allegations and legal tussle, Palash Muchhal looks almost unrecognisable in old photos with Shah Rukh Khan, Amitabh Bachchan, Salman Khan
Videos
08:44 Iran Threatens US Carrier With Drone Strike Video As IRGC Claims ‘Finger On The Trigger’07:18 Electrifying! America's Alex Honnold Scales Taiwan's Tallest Skyscraper; Says THIS On Reaching Top07:25 Minnesota: Alex Pretti’s Viral Video Shows Never-Seen-Before Act; Anger Against ICE Explodes07:03 Minneapolis Horror: Witnesses, Video Challenge Trump Claims In ICE Shooting Of Nurse Alex Pretti08:50 Minnesota Shut Out As DHS Seizes Federal Shooting Probe, Sparking Outrage & Protests09:57 Khamenei Goes Underground As U.S. Warships Advance and Iran Warns Of All-Out War03:59 Venezuela’s Rodriguez Bashes Trump’s ‘Puppet' Machado; ‘Don’t Deserve To Even…’08:02 EU's Huge Greenland Reveal After Trump Backs Off On Tariff Threat Over Invasion Protest10:25 Trump Asks ‘Where Are The Local Police?’ As He Accuses Minnesota Pols Of Inciting Unrest
Up Next