BusyTarpDuster2017 said:FLBear5630 said:midgett said:El Oso said:midgett said:
Pretti was actively obstructing ICE workers, resisting ICE officers, carrying a weapon and all the agitators were blowing whistles intentionally interfering with ICE workers and causing a chaotic situation.
It's a recipe for disaster. Should he have been shot? Probably not. But if you are part and parcel of interference with law enforcement, you should not be surprised when someone is killed.Pretti is on video directing SUVs to form a barricade on the street, which is what prompted the first confrontation with officers.
— Julie Kelly 🇺🇸 (@julie_kelly2) January 25, 2026
Which means he was actively impeding/obstructing federal officers, a felony under 18 USC 111
Also a crime to conspire to obstruct/impede federal… https://t.co/mWnKcbKSrW
Can you post a still shot from the video that shows him obstructing ICE? I don't see obstruction when I watch the videos. I see him cross a street. I see him help a woman who ICE pushed down. Then I see ICE pepper spray and dog pile him. I never see him obstruct.
The man was tackled. I don't see resist. I see a takedown.
The gun was strapped to his back. Nobody even knew he had it until he was dogpiled by ICE. You cannot be pro 2A and use the gun against this man. He had a right to carry that weapon and he left it holstered the entire time he was there. It was an ICE agent who unholstered it.
If all the agitators were blowing whistles, then he was not an agitator. He doesn't have a whistle.
There is no probably not. This was a murder. At no time was an ICE agent in danger from the man who was shot.
I interfere with law enforcement on a regular basis. Every time I drive on 45, 35, 30, and I see cops in an active speed trap. I flash my lights at oncoming traffic to let them know it is in their best interests to slow down because there are police ahead. In Texas, this is actually against the law, and a cop who sees me do it can pull me over. Following your logic, nobody should be surprised if a cop shoots me in the future because yes, I am legally armed in my car and obstructing law enforcement.This footage is so damning, that you and I both know it will never leave X.
— Matt Van Swol (@mattvanswol) January 28, 2026
Now we know that Alex Pretti was not a kindly gentle nurse… he was a CRIMINAL!!!
An ARMED, VIOLENT, DANGEROUS, UNHINGED criminal.
HE SHOULD HAVE BEEN IN PRISON!!!!!!!
pic.twitter.com/Oa36olxtTe
Pretti was no innocent. He wasn't a legal observer. He wasn't an innocent bystander. He wasn't a gentle caring nurse. He was confronting, attacking and obstructing law enforcement.
Did he deserve to die? No. Did he put himself in a compromising position? Yes.
I fail to see how him getting into it with ICE 11 days earlier equals it is good to shoot him.
You want to arrest him and fine him for vandalizing a vehicle? Fine. Did he like ICE? clearly not.
Just not seeing how something that happened 11 days earlier effects last weekend? Is the tape 11 days earlier even admissable? I guess history? Anyone that tried such a case? Attorneies?
If the officers in the later video were aware of, or maybe even part of the previous incident where Pretti had violently assaulted officers, then clearly this would change the entire context of the second encounter, and cause the officers to have a much lower threshold in considering Pretti a threat to their life and safety while physically apprehending him - especially given that Pretti was likely known to be carrying a deadly weapon. In that very volatile and chaotic situation, you then add in the spontaneous discharge of his gun? You get a shooting by the officers - while undoubtedly the result of extremely bad luck for Pretti who was very unwisely and dangerously testing fate - which was still within the officers' right, and thus likely justifiable.
I get it and I believe he should have been arrested for kicking the vehicle. I can even see being arrested for getting in the way of ICE the 2nd time.
You make those decisions for a principle, your right. But, the other side is you are arrested.
The issue I am having is with the Federal Agency response and posture. The level of response is not proportional. He kicked the taillight, so that justifies shooting him 10 times 11 days later? He kicked the taillight, so they teargas the crowd? Walking around MN like a Fallout character in gas masks? So the expectation is that they are teargassing regularly?
That is the issue, in my opinion. The default can't be the Federal Agency kills people in the street for minor actions and the responsibility is on the dead to prove they didn't deserve to be shot. If it is even investigated. That is a dangerous precedent.
The argument, this Board is a great example, has moved from right and wrong to right and left. That is a problem.