Shot While Unarmed: How the Death of ICU Nurse Alex Pretti Contradicts Official Federal Accounts

Doctors and intensive care nurses who treated Alex Pretti say his final moments were marked by pain, confusion, and a quiet plea that still haunts them. According to medical staff present in the emergency response, the 37-year-old ICU nurse—himself a caregiver to critically ill veterans—was conscious briefly after being shot by federal immigration agents on an icy Minneapolis roadway. During that short window, he weakly spoke five words, asking the nurses to pass a message on to his parents.
What those words were has not been publicly disclosed at the family’s request. But the staff who heard them described the moment as devastating: a man who had spent his life saving others, now struggling to breathe, thinking not of himself, but of his family.
Alex Pretti was pronounced dead at the scene.
A Nurse, Not a Threat
Pretti was an intensive care nurse at the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs hospital, where colleagues say he was known for his compassion, calm demeanor, and deep sense of duty.
“He wanted to make a difference in this world,” his parents said in a statement released after his death. “Unfortunately, he will not be with us to see his impact.”
Dimitri Drekonja, chief of the Infectious Diseases Section at the VA hospital and a colleague of Pretti’s, described him as “a good, kind person who lived to help.”
“He had such a great attitude,” Drekonja wrote. “We’d chat between patients about trying to get in a mountain bike ride together. That will never happen now.”
Pretti worked with critically ill veterans—patients often facing life-or-death situations—and was known among staff as someone who remained steady under pressure.
That reputation stands in stark contrast to how federal authorities have described his final moments.
Conflicting Narratives
Trump administration officials quickly portrayed Pretti as a violent aggressor, claiming he intended to harm federal agents during a demonstration against a sweeping immigration crackdown.
But multiple videos circulating widely in U.S. media—though not independently verified by AFP—appear to contradict those claims.
Footage shows Pretti holding a mobile phone, apparently recording the actions of immigration officers. Witnesses say he had been observing, not attacking.
His parents say their son intervened only after a federal agent shoved a woman protester to the ground.
“Alex is clearly not holding a gun when attacked,” the family said in a statement. “He has his phone in his right hand and his empty left hand raised above his head while trying to protect the woman ICE just pushed down—all while being pepper sprayed.”
Local officials have confirmed that Pretti legally possessed a firearm and was licensed to carry it. However, they have also said the weapon was not in his hand when he was shot.
For his family, the government’s statements are not just inaccurate—they are deeply hurtful.
They described official claims as “sickening lies” and accused authorities of attempting to justify the killing by smearing their son’s character.
A Pattern of Escalation
Pretti’s death occurred less than three weeks after another fatal shooting by an ICE officer in Minneapolis, when 37-year-old Renee Good was shot and killed in her car.
Together, the incidents have fueled protests, grief, and growing anger across the city.
Community members and local leaders say federal immigration enforcement in Minneapolis has become increasingly aggressive, with situations escalating rapidly and without clear justification.
Pretti’s killing has become a flashpoint—not only because of the disputed facts, but because of who he was.
“He wasn’t a criminal,” one protester said at a vigil near the site of the shooting. “He was a nurse. He saved lives.”
Final Moments in the Care of Colleagues

Perhaps the most painful detail for those who knew Pretti is that his last moments were spent in the care of people just like him.
Doctors and ICU nurses attending to him recognized immediately that he was one of their own. Some had worked alongside him. Others knew his reputation.
They tried everything they could.
Despite severe injuries, Pretti remained conscious long enough to speak briefly. His words—spoken with great effort—were directed not at law enforcement, not at politics, but at his parents.
Medical staff say that moment has stayed with them.
“There are patients you never forget,” one nurse said anonymously. “This is one of them.”
A Family’s Plea
Pretti’s parents have asked the public for one thing: truth.
“Get the truth out about our son,” they said. “He was a good man.”
They say they are not seeking vengeance, but accountability—and an honest reckoning with what happened on that frozen road.
As investigations continue, videos, witness testimony, and forensic evidence will be examined. But for many in Minneapolis, the facts already feel painfully clear.
A man trained to save lives was killed while holding a phone, not a weapon.
A nurse who cared for veterans died at the hands of the government he believed in.
And in his final moments, Alex Pretti did what he had always done—he thought of others.
