While Minneapolis is reeling from the shock of another resident being shot by ICE agents within a month, Stella Carlson, the woman who saw 37-year-old Alex Pretti being shot has spoken out for the first time.In an interview, Carlson shared a first-hand account of the fatal incident. For her, what was supposed to be a normal Saturday morning painting children’s faces at church transformed into one of the most daunting experiences of her life.
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Unmissable Full Length Minneapolis Video: How ICE Agents Killed Alex Pretti In Full Public View
Stella Carlson speaks out
Being an active member of her community, Carlson had spent the past few weeks learning about mutual aid and participating in grassroots efforts to warn her neighbours of the federal immigration actions. “I know every time I leave my vehicle or leave my house and I put that whistle around my neck, I know because of Renee Good, the risk. I think we all knew after that happened, it is now at that point, and it could be any of us,” she told CNN’s Anderson Cooper on Tuesday.Carlson was on her way to work, donning the now-infamous pink jacket when she heard the sound of whistles. She drove down Nicollet Avenue and saw a brawl in the street and also spotted Pretti directing traffic.
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“It felt like somebody in my opinion, in my background, who was doing a risk assessment and found his place in this moment to be useful,” she said of Pretti.Soon, she got out of her car and began recording. The video recorded by her became one of the main pieces of footage of the incident, showing that Pretti, who had a permit to carry a concealed pistol, never brandished the gun at the agents, as claimed by DHS Secretary Kristi Noem.The video showed Pretti helping a woman who had been knocked down and his handgun being removed from its holster by an officer just before he was pinned down and shot multiple times.
‘I watched him die…’
Carlson shared her thoughts on the incident adding that she knew, Pretti “was calm, handling it with grace and consistency and definitely without fret.”When asked about the moment when Pretti was shot, she said: “I watched him die, I remember him arching his back and his head rolling back.” She added that the incident was “fast-moving” but not for her, as she saw the officers “scatter and save themselves” after the shooting.“I knew he was gone because I watched it,” she said. “And then they come over to try to perform some type of medical aid by ripping his clothes open with scissors, and then manoeuvring his body around like a rag doll, only to discover that it could be because they wanted to count the bullet wounds to see how many they got, like he’s a deer.”
Community support made her do it
Carlson also added that she probably would not have stayed at the scene as long as she did, if she had not experienced the support of her community the way she did.“If it wasn’t for the collective actions over the past three weeks, I don’t know if I would have been able to stay that long,” she said. “But I knew that this was a moment, and we all have to be brave and we all have to take risks, and we’re all going to be given moments to make that decision.”“And I’m grateful to myself and I’m grateful to anybody who was supportive to me after, to make sure I could get to safety and get that video uploaded to the right people,” she added.Carlson’s video and the responding outrage put immense pressure on the Trump administration, which led to the White House withdrawing Gregory Bovino, the Border Patrol officer at the helm of federal immigration operations in Minneapolis. It also led to the First Lady Melania Trump making a call for “peaceful protests” and President Trump claiming he would seek to “de-escalate” the situation in Minneapolis.This is followed by the death of 37-year-old mother of three, Renee Nicole Good who was fatally shot by an ICE agent in her car and also the detainment of young children by the agency officials.
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