The Videos of Alex Pretti's Murder vs Outright Lies by Bovino and Noem
I was born and raised in Minnesota. One of my childhood homes in south Minneapolis is less than a mile from the scene of Saturday’s brutal Border Patrol killing. The victim was 37-year-old Alex Pretti, a US citizen born in Illinois and a registered ICU nurse at the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs hospital.
Pretti’s crime: He was “Minnesota nice.”
Before proceeding further, please watch this New York Times video.
But be warned, the footage is violent, graphic, and disturbing:
Footage and analyis of Alex Pretti killing
Similarly, a detailed CNN compilation of bystander videos confirms that Border Patrol officers took Pretti’s gun before shooting him an estimated 10 times:
And USA Today also offered a second-by-second analysis:
Now contrast what you just observed with the Trump administration’s four-step playbook for avoiding accountability: Lie, double-down, deflect, and cover-up.
Almost immediately, the Department of Homeland Security issued a false statement exonerating Border Patrol officers and blaming Pretti for his death:
No. Pretti approached the officers with a cellphone as he filmed their encounter with two protesters. Then he tried to aid a protester whom officers had shoved to the ground.
No. The officers didn’t even know that Pretti had a gun until seven of them had already swarmed, pepper-sprayed, and wrestled him to the ground. Then one of the officers exclaimed with surprise, “He has a gun!”
At that point, several officers were on top of Pretti. A gun matching the description of the one that DHS said Pretti owned (and for which he had a permit in the open-carry state of Minnesota) emerged from the group. After Pretti had been disarmed, an officer shot him in the back at close range. As the officer continued firing, another officer shot Pretti as he lay on the ground.
The agents fired a total of at least 10 shots.
During a six-minute press appearance, Border Patrol Commander Greg Bovino doubled-down on the lies. He said that an “individual approached Border Patrol agents with a nine-millimeter semi-automatic handgun.”
No. It was a cellphone.
“The agents attempted to disarm this individual, but he violently resisted.”
No. Pretti was on the ground when officers noticed his gun and took it.
“Fearing for his life and lives and safety of fellow officers, a Border Patrol agent fired defensive shots.”
No. Two agents fired a total of 10 shots as Pretti lay on the street with his hands over his head.
“The suspect also had two loaded magazines and no accessible ID.”
I don’t know what an “accessible ID” is, but Minnesota is an open-carry state and Pretti had a permit to own the gun.
“This looked like a situation where an individual wanted to do maximum damage and massacre law enforcement.”
There is no evidence supporting that claim.
“The officer was highly trained and had been serving as a Border Patrol agent for eight years. The officer has........
