Alex Pretti, the intensive care nurse killed by federal agents last weekend, was swarmed and tackled by officers in another encounter 11 days earlier, according to footage obtained by the Minnesota Star Tribune.
Pretti, 37, was captured on bystander video Jan. 13 amid a crowd of whistle-blowing observers, cursing immigration agents as an unmarked convoy swarmed a south Minneapolis street corner.
A spokesperson for his family and the family’s attorney have verified that the man in the video is Pretti.
Pretti stood in the crosswalk and flipped the middle finger of both hands toward an SUV carrying officers clad in tactical gear. One jumped out of the back passenger seat and charged toward him, grabbing Pretti by the jacket and tackling him as other agents piled on, according to the footage.
Onlookers screamed for them to stop while at least four agents struggled with Pretti on the pavement. He managed to slip out of his coat and break free after about 25 seconds. The officers retreated moments later, without bringing him into custody.
“He got slammed to the ground pretty hard,” said Max Shapiro, a witness who filmed the interaction.
The Star Tribune initially identified Pretti by conducting a digital forensic analysis of the footage. The man caught on tape shared a striking physical resemblance to Pretti and even wore some of the same clothing Pretti did the day he was killed: a plain black hat, sunglasses, brown coat and a beige hooded long-sleeve shirt.
“A week before Alex was gunned down in the street — despite posing no threat to anyone — he was violently assaulted by a group of ICE agents," Steve Schleicher, an attorney representing the family, said in a statement after reviewing footage and still images from the incident. “Nothing that happened a full week before could possibly have justified Alex’s killing at the hands of ICE on Jan 24.”