Alex Pretti Video: The Earlier ICE Vehicle Altercation
A new video shows Alex Pretti in an earlier altercation with ICE agents, but it
does not justify or explain the fatal 1/24 shooting. Here’s what the footage
really means.
A newly surfaced video from January 13 shows Alex Pretti in a heated
confrontation with federal agents. In the footage, he is seen yelling, spitting
toward the vehicle, and kicking the taillight of an ICE SUV before agents exit
the car and take him to the ground. The video has been verified by multiple
news outlets and confirmed by his family.
This earlier incident is part of the story but it is not the whole story.
It’s important to be clear about what this video does not show. It
does not show the events of January 24. It does not show the moments leading up
to his death. And it does not prove that he “asked for” or “deserved” what
happened eleven days later. A prior altercation, even a serious one, does not
retroactively justify a fatal shooting under completely different
circumstances.
On January 24, every publicly available video shows Pretti holding a
phone, not a weapon. Witnesses describe him helping a woman who had been pepper‑sprayed.
He was disarmed before he was shot. These facts stand on their own and are not
erased by a separate incident a week earlier.
Both things can be true at once:
- Pretti had a volatile encounter
with agents on January 13.
- And the shooting on January 24
still raises serious questions about use of force, training, and
accountability.
The earlier video adds context, not justification.
As more information emerges, the full picture will continue to develop.
But no single piece of footage whether
from the 13th or the 24th should be used to flatten a complex human story into
a simple narrative of blame.


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