After the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents in Minneapolis, shockwaves reverberated not only across the nation but also within the White House itself. The incident, where Pretti was shot around 10 times while protesting ICE’s presence, prompted swift efforts by senior administration officials to frame the victim as a “domestic terrorist” brandishing a gun, painting the shooting as justified. However, subsequent video evidence contradicted these claims, showing Pretti unarmed and shot in the back.
The revelation of the true events caused a rapid shift within the administration, leading to the removal of senior border official Greg Bovino from Minneapolis. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt distanced herself from the inflammatory rhetoric used by other White House figures, opting for a more neutral stance of letting the facts guide the situation. The killing of Pretti, an American citizen legally carrying a firearm, marked a troubling turn in the government’s handling of protests, especially following another recent shooting of a US citizen in the same city.
The White House faced escalating turmoil as it tried to manage the fallout from the incident, culminating in a high-stakes Oval Office meeting involving President Trump, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, and other top officials. Speculation arose over potential repercussions for key figures like Noem and her associate Corey Lewandowski, given the reshuffling in leadership roles following the shooting.
Internally, tensions mounted, with sources indicating growing dissatisfaction from Senior Advisor Stephen Miller over the handling of the situation. Publicly, the administration maintained a facade of stability, but ICE’s plummeting approval ratings in the aftermath of the Minneapolis events underscored the agency’s tarnished reputation.
Despite Trump’s reluctance to openly address the issue, the administration’s frantic attempts to contain the fallout and restructure key positions painted a clear picture of the severity of the situation. The shooting of protesters by ICE agents on American soil crossed a line that even the President could not ignore.
