maandag 26 januari 2026

‘This is what fascism looks like’: terror in Minneapolis reminiscent of civil war David Smith in Washington





 Minneapolis

‘This is what fascism looks like’: terror in Minneapolis reminiscent of civil war

in Washington
Alex Pretti’s death could be a moment of reckoning for Democrats to call time on Trump waging war on his people
Wearing helmets, gas masks and camouflage fatigues, the federal agents took aim and prepared to open fire. “It’s like Call of Duty,” one could be heard saying via a TV mic, referring to a first-person shooter military video game. “So cool, huh?”
This was the scene on the streets of Minneapolis on Saturday after armed agents, wearing masks and tactical vests, wrestled 37-year-old Alex Pretti to the ground and shot him dead. The killing took place just over a mile from where Renee Good was fatally shot on 7 January, a scene that itself was less than a mile from where police murdered George Floyd in May 2020.
“How many more residents, how many more Americans need to die or get badly hurt for this operation to end?” the Minneapolis mayor, Jacob Frey, demanded at a press conference on Saturday, referring to the Trump administration’s ongoing immigration crackdown in Minneapolis. An angry crowd gathered and swore profanities at federal officers, calling them “cowards” and telling them to go home.
Donald Trump spoke of “American carnage” in his first inaugural address nine years ago. The US president has surely delivered it by deploying Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to the streets of a major city in order to create a spectacle of terror reminiscent of a civil war – or a video game.
In the first year of his second presidency, Trump’s ICE deployments have been carefully aimed at cities that are Democratic-led and often Black-led, as if imposing collective punishment for their defiance. In this, he is borrowing from an authoritarian playbook reminiscent of Saddam Hussein of Iraq targeting the Kurds or Soviet leader Joseph Stalin causing the Holodomor, or “death by hunger”, in Ukraine.
It is the same vengeful petulance that in the past week alone has seen Trump lash out at Canada and other Nato allies over perceived slights in Davos during his quest to conquer Greenland.
Trump seems to reserve a special loathing for Minnesota because he lost the presidential elections there in 2016, 2020 and 2024, despite most neighbouring states voting in his favour. He recently made the false claim that he won Minnesota all three times. In reality, no Republican – not even Ronald Reagan – has prevailed there since Richard Nixon in 1972.
Minnesota is home to the biggest Somali community in the country, making it a target of Trump’s animus: this week, he described Somalis as “low-IQ people”, not even trying to conceal his racism. It is also home to Somali-born Ilhan Omar, a progressive congresswoman who gets under Trump’s skin. The state’s governor, Tim Walz, is a trenchant critic of the president who was Kamala Harris’s running mate in the 2024 election that she lost to Trump.
In addition, toward the end of his first presidency, Minneapolis was the scene of the police murder of Floyd, a Black man. Floyd’s killing sparked Black Lives Matter protests that surged all the way to the doorstep of the White House. America felt febrile and fragile in those days. This is another of those moments.
Trump has deployed 3,000 ICE officers and Customs and Border Protection agents to the ground in Minnesota, vastly outnumbering the 10 biggest local and state police agencies there combined. Many operate with masks, weapons and swaggering impunity – but insufficient training in de-escalation techniques.
Local politicians have been roughed up; legal observers hauled off without charge; schoolchildren teargassed; motorists dragged from their cars. Even Native Americans, whose ancestors lived here long before the US existed, have been stopped and questioned. Simply filming these agents is enough to be branded a domestic terrorist.
Garrett Graff, a journalist and historian, wrote on his Doomsday Scenario blog this week: “This is what fascism looks like – there is no bright line between democracy and autocracy, it’s a spectrum, and not all of the country will experience that switch at the same moment in the same way. But let’s be clear: there is a US city living under occupation by fascist presidential secret police right now.”
That conclusion was hard to avoid on Saturday. TV pictures showed the air thick with teargas as agents forced one protester to the ground. He could be heard shrieking: “I’m a United States citizen! You’re gonna kill me! Is that what you want? You want to kill me?” Nearby a woman was kneeling and screaming as a man tried to comfort her.
The protester fatally shot by a federal officer was identified as ICU nurse Alex Pretti. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) claimed that officers fired “defensive shots” after a man with a handgun approached them. Walz accused the authorities of a “rush to judgment” and called the shooting “sickening”.
The DHS and other government authorities have already shredded their credibility with false and misleading claims in the past. A chorus of Democrats reacted in horror to the shooting and called on ICE to get out of Minneapolis, with some urging Congress to cut off its funding.
Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez posted on the X social media platform: “Americans are being killed in the street by their government. Our Constitution is being shredded and our rights are dissolving. Resist. Senate [Democrats] should block ICE funding this week. Activate the National Guard. We can and must stop this.”
The past week in Davos felt like an inflection point when western leaders drew a line in the sand over Trump’s bullying over Greenland and said: no more. Pretti’s death could be a similar moment of reckoning for Democrats and others in the domestic arena to call time on Trump waging war on his own people.
JB Pritzker, the Democratic governor of Illinois, told the MS Now network: “We’re in a precarious moment and I just think that, if we do not stop this now, if we don’t abolish Trump’s ICE and make sure that we have a trained force that is following the law, this is going to erupt into something really terrible.
“It already is, but it could get vastly worse.”

Alex Pretti did not brandish gun, witnesses say in sworn testimony



Alex Pretti did not brandish gun, witnesses say in sworn testimony

Pair testify that Pretti did not hold weapon and was trying to help woman federal agents had shoved to the ground

Two witnesses to the killing of Alex Pretti have said in sworn testimony that the 37-year-old intensive care nurse was not brandishing a weapon when he approached federal agents in Minneapolis on Saturday, contradicting a claim made by Trump administration officials as they sought to cast the shooting of a prone man as an act of self-defense.

Their accounts came in sworn affidavits that were filed in federal court in Minnesota late Saturday, just hours after Pretti’s killing, as part of a lawsuit brought by the ACLU on behalf of Minneapolis protesters against Kristi Noem and other homeland security officials directing the immigration crackdown in the city.

One witness is a woman who filmed the clearest video of the fatal shooting; the other is a physician who lives nearby and said they were initially prevented by federal officers from rendering medical aid to the gunshot victim.

The names of both witnesses were redacted in the publicly available filings.

In her testimony, the woman who filmed the shooting from just behind Pretti wearing a pink coat identified herself as “a children’s entertainer who specializes in face painting”. She testified that she came to the scene on her way to work because “I’ve been involved in observing in my community, because it is so important to document what ICE is doing to my neighbors”.

She described the harrowing scene of Pretti being tackled by federal officers after coming to the aid of another observer the agents had shoved to the ground. One federal agent then sprayed a chemical agent in the faces of Pretti and the woman he had tried to help.

The woman testified that she saw no sign of Pretti holding a gun at any point.

She said: “The agents pulled the man on the ground. I didn’t see him touch any of them – he wasn’t even turned toward them. It didn’t look like he was trying to resist, just trying to help the woman up. I didn’t see him with a gun. They threw him to the ground. Four or five agents had him on the ground and they just started shooting him. They shot him so many times … I don’t know why they shot him. He was only helping. I was five feet from him and they just shot him …”

She continued: “I have read the statement from DHS about what happened and it is wrong. The man did not approach the agents with a gun. He approached them with a camera. He was just trying to help a woman get up and they took him to the ground.

“I feel afraid. Only hours have passed since they shot a man right in front me, and I don’t feel like I can go home because I heard agents were looking for me. I don’t know what the agents will do when they find me. I do know that they’re not telling the truth about what happened.”

The second witness, a 29-year-old physician, said in their testimony that they saw the shooting from their apartment window near the scene. Before the shooting, the witness said, they could see Pretti yelling at agents, but “did not see him attack the agents or brandish a weapon of any kind”.

After the shooting, when the physician attempted to render medical aid, they were initially prevented from doing so. “At first the ICE agents wouldn’t let me through,” they said. “But none of the ICE agents who were near the victim were performing CPR, and I could tell that the victim was in critical condition. I insisted that the ICE agents let me assess him.”

When the physician finally convinced the agents to let them through, they said they were confused as to why the victim was on his side, but instead of checking his pulse or performing CPR the officers “appeared to be counting his bullet wounds”.

The victim had “at least three bullet wounds in his back”, the doctor said, in addition to one on his upper left chest and another possible gunshot wound in his neck.

“I checked for a pulse, but I did not feel one,” the doctor said.

The witness testimony, combined with video evidence reviewed by the Guardian, directly contradicts claims by senior Trump administration officials, including the president, the homeland security secretary and Greg Bovino, a border patrol commander, who called Pretti a “gunman” who approached federal officers “brandishing” a gun and threatened to “massacre” them.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/24/alex-pretti-killing-witness-testimony