February 02, 2026
Back to all stories

Medical examiner rules Alex Pretti’s death a homicide in Minneapolis Border Patrol shooting

Hennepin County’s medical examiner has ruled Alex Pretti’s death a homicide, listing the cause as multiple gunshot wounds and noting he was shot by law‑enforcement officers in south Minneapolis near 26th & Nicollet. ProPublica and local reporting identified the two CBP personnel who fired as Border Patrol Agent Jesus Ochoa and CBP Officer Raymundo Gutierrez, and the DOJ has opened a civil‑rights probe while local prosecutors and the Minnesota BCA have sued to preserve evidence amid surveillance and bystander videos and conflicting federal accounts that have sparked protests and demands for independent review.

Public Safety Legal Immigration Local Government Health

📌 Key Facts

  • Hennepin County Medical Examiner has ruled Alex Pretti’s death a homicide, listing the cause as “multiple gunshot wounds” and noting he was “shot by law enforcement officer(s).”
  • Pretti, 37, was a Minneapolis resident and ICU nurse employed by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs; he was shot and killed by federal agents in south Minneapolis near 26th & Nicollet. Family members say he held a valid Minnesota carry permit and had only minor (traffic) violations on his record.
  • Government records and reporting identify the two CBP personnel who fired as Border Patrol Agent Jesus Ochoa and CBP Officer Raymundo Gutierrez; Customs and Border Protection had previously acknowledged two agents fired but withheld their names.
  • The Justice Department has opened a federal civil‑rights investigation (led by Homeland Security Investigations with FBI support). At the same time Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty, Attorney General Keith Ellison and the Minnesota BCA are coordinating and pursuing preservation of evidence, and local officials say a state charging decision remains under consideration.
  • Multiple surveillance and bystander videos circulating online show moments in which Pretti appears disarmed, on the ground, or not actively pointing a gun when shots are fired, creating public skepticism and contradictions with early federal accounts (which variously described a leg wound or an armed threat).
  • DHS/CBP investigators are examining whether an accidental discharge of Pretti’s own Sig Sauer after he was disarmed could have triggered other agents to open fire — a scenario under review as part of the federal probe.
  • The shooting is at least the third federal‑agent killing in Minneapolis in recent weeks (after the Jan. 7 death of Renee Good and another north‑side case) and prompted protests at the scene where federal officers deployed chemical irritants and detained at least one person, drawing widespread political reaction.
  • State and local officials and civil‑rights groups have sued to force DHS/CBP to preserve and not alter evidence; DOJ has pushed back, arguing some preservation and access demands are unprecedented and implicate federal investigatory privileges, setting up a larger federal‑state legal dispute over oversight of Metro Surge operations.

📊 Relevant Data

Since January 2010, at least 364 people have died as a result of encounters with U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents.

Fatal Encounters with CBP — Southern Border Communities Coalition

In 2025, there were at least 20 deaths in ICE custody, marking the deadliest year for such incidents since 2004.

2025 is the deadliest year to be in ICE custody in decades — NPR

The Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua has a presence in at least 16 U.S. states as of late 2024, with reports of expansion into the Midwest.

Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua now in 16 states: Report — NewsNation

Immigration enforcement surges in Minnesota in 2025-2026 have caused economic disruptions, including reduced customer traffic and business closures, particularly affecting immigrant-owned businesses.

Minneapolis Businesses Struggle During Trump's Immigration Enforcement Surge — U.S. News & World Report

The Venezuelan immigrant population in the United States increased by 318% from 2010 to 2023, with significant growth in recent years driven by crises in Venezuela.

Frequently Requested Statistics on Immigrants and Immigration in the United States — Migration Policy Institute

📰 Source Timeline (13)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

February 02, 2026
8:05 PM
Alex Pretti's death ruled a homicide after Border Patrol shooting in Minneapolis
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Melissa.Turtinen@fox.com (Melissa Turtinen)
New information:
  • Hennepin County Medical Examiner has formally ruled Alex Pretti’s death a homicide.
  • The cause of death is listed as 'multiple gunshot wounds' and notes he was 'shot by law enforcement officer(s).'
  • The medical examiner likewise ruled the Jan. 7 ICE killing of Renee Good a homicide, underscoring both federal shootings fall under the same manner-of-death classification.
1:14 AM
Two CBP agents identified in Alex Pretti shooting
Minnesotareformer by J. David McSwane, ProPublica
New information:
  • Confirms the identities of the two CBP personnel who fired at Alex Pretti by name and position, beyond generic references to a Border Patrol agent and a CBP officer.
  • Adds detail on their specific roles and assignments within CBP at the time of the shooting, which goes beyond prior references that only said two officers fired Glocks.
  • Clarifies how those names surfaced (through government records obtained by the Reformer), tightening the evidentiary chain that advocacy groups and civil litigants can rely on.
February 01, 2026
10:51 PM
Alex Pretti shooting: Federal officers who fired shots identified in records: report
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Howard.Thompson@fox.com (Howard Thompson)
New information:
  • ProPublica, citing government records, identifies Border Patrol Agent Jesus Ochoa and CBP Officer Raymundo Gutierrez as the two federal officers who fired the shots that killed Alex Pretti at 26th & Nicollet.
  • Customs and Border Protection had previously told Congress only that two agents fired, without naming them; their identities were being withheld from both Congress and state/local investigators until this leak.
  • Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche has confirmed DOJ has opened a formal civil-rights investigation into the Pretti shooting, with Homeland Security Investigations leading the review and the FBI supporting.
  • As part of that federal probe, DHS is examining whether a federal agent accidentally discharged Pretti’s own Sig Sauer after disarming him, possibly triggering a chain reaction in which other agents believed they were under fire and opened up — a scenario first reported in detail by the New York Post and now acknowledged as under investigation.
  • Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty reiterates she expects to have enough evidence soon to make a local charging decision, underscoring that a state prosecution is still on the table alongside the DOJ civil-rights review.
  • ProPublica explicitly defends publishing the agents’ names, arguing CBP’s secrecy breaks with standard law-enforcement practice after public shootings and deprives the public of a basic accountability tool.
January 27, 2026
5:36 AM
‘Nothing about what is going on here is normal’: A fight over evidence in Good, Pretti cases
Minnesotareformer by Brian Martucci
New information:
  • Clarifies that the state and local plaintiffs are seeking a broad, case‑consolidated preservation framework covering both Good and Pretti, not just a one‑off order in Pretti’s case.
  • Reports DOJ’s position that many of the detailed preservation and access demands (including third‑party escrow/control of evidence) are unprecedented and would interfere with ongoing criminal investigations and officer safety.
  • Introduces new legal arguments about federal supremacy and investigative privilege that DOJ is raising to try to limit Minnesota’s ability to dictate how DHS handles its own records.
  • Highlights that judges are openly wrestling with how much authority they have to micromanage DHS’s evidence practices while Metro Surge is still underway, and that whatever they decide here could set a template for future federal‑state clashes over ICE shootings.
  • Notes that civil‑rights and defense lawyers see this as a test of whether state and local actors can force some sunlight into a federal killing when the feds are the ones holding the file cabinets.
January 25, 2026
2:57 AM
Minneapolis shooting: Lawsuit demands DHS preserve evidence in Alex Pretti's death
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Jeff.Wald@fox.com (Jeff Wald)
New information:
  • Hennepin County Attorney’s Office and the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension have jointly filed a civil lawsuit in U.S. District Court seeking a court order barring DHS, ICE and CBP from destroying or altering any evidence in the Alex Pretti shooting.
  • The suit names DHS, ICE, Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi as defendants.
  • AG Keith Ellison publicly stated, “Federal agents are not above the law and Alex Pretti is certainly not beneath it,” and Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty emphasized that her office asserts jurisdiction to review the case for potential criminal charges against the agents.
1:18 AM
Videos show deadly Minneapolis shooting and political leaders reach different conclusions
Twincities by Hannah Fingerhut
New information:
  • The article synthesizes multiple surveillance and bystander videos of the Alex Pretti shooting, emphasizing sequences where he appears disarmed, on the ground, or not actively pointing a gun when shots are fired, sharpening the factual dispute with DHS’s narrative.
  • It details how different political leaders — notably Gov. Tim Walz, Minneapolis officials and federal spokespeople — are publicly reaching opposing conclusions from the same video evidence, with locals calling the shooting unjustified and DHS framing it as necessary force against an armed threat.
  • The story underscores that these videos are expected to be central evidence in civil‑rights litigation and official investigations, and notes growing public skepticism online as residents circulate clips that appear to contradict federal characterizations.
12:44 AM
Minneapolis shooting: What we know about Alex Pretti, the man killed by Border Patrol agent
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Kilat.Fitzgerald@fox.com (Kilat Fitzgerald)
New information:
  • Confirms the victim’s full name as 37‑year‑old Minneapolis resident Alex Pretti, a U.S. citizen with only traffic violations on his record and a valid Minnesota permit to carry.
  • Details that Pretti was an ICU nurse employed by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, a member of AFGE Local 3669, and is being publicly mourned by AFGE Local 704, which labeled the shooting his 'murder' and praised his service to veterans.
  • Adds personal background: graduate of the University of Minnesota’s College of Liberal Arts (2011), avid outdoorsman and competitive cyclist, deeply engaged in protests against ICE and prior police violence, including demonstrations after George Floyd’s murder.
  • Includes interviews with his father, mother and ex‑wife describing his politics (Democratic voter), history of protest participation, and the fact he obtained a carry permit and at least one semiautomatic handgun about three years ago.
  • Shows that a memorial is forming at 26th & Nicollet, with community members gathering at the shooting site.
January 24, 2026
8:40 PM
The man killed by a US Border Patrol officer in Minneapolis was an ICU nurse, family says
Twincities by Associated Press
New information:
  • The man killed by a U.S. Border Patrol officer in south Minneapolis is identified by family as an ICU nurse who worked in critical care.
  • Family members provide biographical details and describe his professional and personal life, including his role supporting patients and relatives.
  • Relatives challenge aspects of the federal account of the shooting, adding their description of what kind of person he was and why he was in the area.
7:06 PM
Minneapolis shooting today: Reaction pours in after man killed by border agent
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul
New information:
  • Confirms the latest killing involved a Border Patrol agent, not ICE, though protests and political reaction are still focused on ICE’s presence.
  • Documents on‑record responses from Gov. Tim Walz, Rep. Ilhan Omar, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Trump adviser Stephen Miller.
  • Elevates public framing that this is the third Minneapolis killing by federal agents since Renee Good was shot Jan. 7 and explicitly ties it to the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.
  • Carries a Border Patrol Union statement asserting agents are 'trained extremely well' and framing the incident as a response to a 'supposed peaceful protester' brandishing a loaded handgun.
5:23 PM
Another person in Minneapolis shot and killed by feds
Minnesotareformer by Madison McVan, Michelle Griffith
New information:
  • Confirms this latest killing is at least the third time in a matter of weeks that federal officers have shot someone in Minneapolis under Operation Metro Surge.
  • Details contradictions between early federal leaks (leg wound) and subsequent reporting indicating the man was shot in the chest and died, underscoring reliability issues in official accounts.
  • Places the shooting explicitly in the pattern of prior federal shootings (Renee Good and a north‑side case) and explains that it further escalates calls for independent investigations, with local officials and civil‑rights groups saying the surge is out of control.
  • Reports that protest response after this shooting again involved chemical agents and aggressive crowd control, deepening fears among residents and adding fuel to lawsuits and impeachment calls targeting DHS Secretary Kristi Noem.
4:55 PM
LIVE UPDATES | Minneapolis shooting: Federal agents fatally shoot man Saturday morning
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Kilat.Fitzgerald@fox.com (Kilat Fitzgerald)
New information:
  • Confirms federal agents (reported as Border Patrol via FOX reporting) fatally shot a man Saturday morning in Minneapolis, making this the third federal-agent shooting in the city since Renee Good was killed Jan. 7.
  • Pins the location to the 26th–28th Street West and Nicollet Avenue South area and reports the man was shot in the chest and has died, per FOX 9 sources.
  • Reports that protesters quickly gathered at the scene and that federal officers deployed chemical irritants on the crowd; at least one man was detained during the protest.
  • Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty says her office is coordinating with the Minnesota BCA and publicly demands that federal authorities allow the BCA to process the scene.
  • The City of Minneapolis has scheduled an 11:30 a.m. briefing with Mayor Jacob Frey, Chief Brian O’Hara and Emergency Management Director Rachel Sayre, and Frey again publicly calls for ICE to leave Minnesota.
January 15, 2026
3:10 AM
Federal officer shoots person in leg after being attacked during Minneapolis arrest, AP source says
Twincities by Steve Karnowski
New information:
  • AP, citing a federal law‑enforcement source, reports a federal officer shot a person in the leg during an arrest in Minneapolis.
  • The AP account corroborates earlier local reporting that this was a federal use‑of‑force incident, not MPD or another local agency.
  • The piece reinforces that this shooting is separate from, but follows, the ICE killing of Renee Good amid Operation Metro Surge.